Southern Messenger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1896 Page: 6 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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ENAMELED IKON
CBOSSES.
Beautiful and lasting monu-
ments for departed friends.
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TBm» create* are covered with ttaae
* tent of 1200 degrees. The cruHaa
have the color or polished granite; the
Savior. ang»L». flower*. ernametHa, a-d
iMcriptloo panel* bare tt>* appearance
of white porcelain. The faecrlptioa
cannot bo erased and neither Saw nor
weather affect it.
No. 1.3ft. fl In. Ugh..............$U
No. 2, 5 ft. 2 In. high.............. a
No. 3.5 ft- 3 In. bleb..............X*
No. 4. 4ft-«ruclflx..... ...........10
No-fi. 0 ft. and 6 ta thick Gothic
nMSisnW't................. 40
No. 6. 4 ft. Rowan menu meat......3B
I hare cheeper create* aterf Iran ard
**i*tad, 4 ft. 2 in. with bean.**; and »
flL X fa- vMft tana, W- WBteut to-
Mrifrfae,*4«»d«S.
AIM ■•>«••• *»d grate* ■Mtenrateaf
all fast* *ad Wyiro.
Star tatter parlfaataa writ* *
C A. Stuebben, udl
aoafliwauwi,
Smi AmI—in, - - Tex.
CITY
BEER?;
Of COURSE.
WHQ.DRINKS
im
Alamo Cement Co.,
MAXUFACTVIlEItS OF
Natural [Rm] aid
PORMB CHBH.
Dealer* In I in ported Cement, Au Kin
White Lime. Pix-ter Paris. Acme
f 'emenr Planter, P>astering Hair.
Sewer Pipe, Fire Brick, Fire Clay,
Coal Tor Pitch, and Roofing Felt*.
NOS. 207 ANO 209 MAIN AVENUE.
RATlWn TIME TAELE.
731p.m.
RAILROAD
, 8 30 p.m.
. S«an-
. 7:15 p.m.
__________________ . B-.5fip.in.
Leave for Laredo and Mexico #^15 a. m.
Arrive ftotu Laredo and Ma-
lto....................
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
lutlnM.
Leave for Galveaion. Hotuton ’
and New Oriean*.........1130 a- m.
Leave for Hons too. Gal vtutoo.
New Orleans. Waco, and
Kansas City...............10 MO p. m.
Arrive from the Beat.
Arrive from New Orleans.
Galreatoo^omiCon^nd K*n-
su City...... ............ Ttifi*. m.
Arrive from New Orleans, Sal-
veston,and Houston......4rt5p.ni
Vat Baud.
I^ave fur Mexico and San
Francisco............. ■ ■ ■ 4 36 p. m.
Arrive fram ths Vast.
Arrives ftotn Mexico and San
Francisco..................11:00 a. m,
S. A. A A. P. K. H—MISSION ROUTE.
Iziw dally except Saturday.
for Boerms at <1 Kerrville... 830 a. m.
Gn Saturday............... 100p.m.
Arrivedally.except Saturday. C30p. m.
Arrive on Saturday ......... 8:30 p. m.
Jxave dally for Cuero. Hous-
ton, Galveston, and Waco... 9.00 a. m.
Le»ve dally for Beeville. Kock-
port,and Corpna Christi... fltifip.m.
Arrive dally from Cuero. Hous-
tou,Galveston.and Waco... G:f5p. m.
Arrive daily from I'orpos
Christi, Rockport, and Bee-
ville . ................... 1:40 P- m.
LJtG.Nl RAlIROAD.
Leave for Austin and Hearne 5:00
Leave for Austin and the
North..................>30 a. m-
Leave for Austin and the
North............ ~
Arrive fro® the North..
Arrive front the North..
Arrive bom Beam*.....
HERALDRY.
500 VOLTS
A rtwysi trrsn.msn.
The late shah of Persia wo* an exet
lent draftuman. On his visit to Englu
seven yearn ago he «ketch<xl tho art
of The Graphic ns that gentleman u
sketching him, nnd the royal drawl
was dashed off with a keen yet nne»
derated power of caricature not cfi
mat with in an amateur's work.
WANTED
* Catholic inchsr. lady or gentiew* ,w
teach English and Goman fa a fa fty
achnol. Would Hko for taasbar to k nw
a little mcuic. CWMC pay a Mg P he.
Please addreae J. A. Hefatab. Hn m
Mr, Waller Co, Texas.
PHOTOGRAPHS
Cabinet sian, 9AM per ta.at<
US AM SomMsi Mat.
fahMktaMffa
Dox‘7 Worry about your h*>sla|.
Keep your blood pure by taking HorMs
8araaparills ai<d joa nc»d nit tear Me
grip, colds, bronchi ii*,pneuinot.iu or ■-
piloid fever. 1
Boon's Pills are tho favorite f.uA'
catbartl .easy to bake, cssy to upt-rM-.
COLEGIO SANTA MARIA, MON 1
TEREY, MEXICO. ;
This institution, founded by anthos y
of the Right Rev. Archtisuop Lo( a
aud under his Patronage, aims at off r
ing a complete training In the modi n
languages: English. Spanish, Frets i,
German, and Italian, to young men If
Commercial aspirations. "
Ample provision made for the stdiy
and acquisition of the ordinary rclml
branches; tire three H.'s. Book-keeptM.
Mathematics,
Suburban location, unrivalled clM-
ste, constant vigilance, and the ffpe
preference given to tire inculcation |f
sound, Christian morals, through CaM-
ollc faith and practices, .
Charges—boarders, per month
(Mexican.) ’*
Vocal and inatrumentm music, draw-
ing, palming, Ac,, extra* at moder^fe
chargee.
Arrangement* have been made.wheff^
And as co rl:>- tendency of the growth
Of great citii s to enervate nations, there
in no proof --f ;i at ail mil<w we idem
tify the life ef great cities with the
passion for idlcoess and pleasure and
aelf indulgence which sometimes, bnc
by no means universally, accompanies
theirgruwtb, Wlirnyouget a large pro-
letariat living, os that of ancient Rome
and pcMiblr of NuievHi and Babylon
did, on the alms of the rich and power-
ful, then, no doubt, you have the con-
ditions of a thoroughly unnatural and
unhealthy life, and no one can wonder
*t the rapid decay of such cities and of
the natinns if liicb gloried in them. But
where the honest working class far out-
numbers the proletariat; where the mid-
dle clauses of distributors and manufac-
turer* and professional m m are labori-.
ons aod energetic; and even the class
that lives on it* accumulated wealth
contains * considerable sprinkling of
•erious and disinterested workers, we
do not beliene that there is the manifest
svidance of any pvater danger in the
life of the city limn in the life of the
agricultural village or the pastoral
tribe. Indeed, we ibould regard Olive
Schreiner** picture of the life of the
modem Boers a* indicating a condition
o£ things more prolific of morbid ele-
ment*, with its almost complete ab-
sence at any stirring or active intelli-
gence, than any kind of modem life
that is honestly laborious st all The
Boer life fa too sleepy, too destitute of
atinfag thought or effort, to be alto-
gether natural. It need* at least the old
element at danger and umeesary vigi-
lance to render it ms basfa*«4sNfa
and tvenlng at their respective clsnsfa,
st the Eccie*i**llc*l Seminary, in
city, having all the privilege* of the ]|A
•titution. whether attached to *
Children'*, to the Commercial aud LM
erary, or to the Ecderiaatical Drpaw*
menL Director, Santiago Healy,
tSpfritusl Director, Bev. Fr. Antoine, i
M Wbsete Ara Osis IDs®
So many bfayolfate have been observed
saffaang from dogged chains that a
word of advice miy with propriety be
repeated: Oil the chain ■ nothing fa
natne mniamry, bat bo sure not to hare
it wet. Each'link should be thoroughly
lulafaated, and then tho chain should be
rubbed dry. No amount of rubOdng, it
should be reraembsred, can remove the
tel from the parts between the links,
where it fa needed, and not a particle of
tel i» required on tbs exterior turface.
The drier that la the better. The oil,
tf exposed, picks up and holds dust and
adte griutly to the friction. Th* same
advice applies to all aHiug. If so much
fa put fa the bearings that some over-
Another Feat J
in railroad gymnastic* is the opening of
the through BuffctJDrawltig-rooui.Steq^
ing-C’ar Line between Galveston a^d
Wasblngton, D. C., via the *'
huctbexx racinc— buxhet hocte, 1
This sleeprr^eavu* Gslvestoa dally 4t
S p. m.. and goea through witbgac
change to Washington. D. C., Wa
Piedmont Air Line. Passenger* for
New York and Intermediate point* Mgy
*ecur* through lerervalfaM with prag-
titelly no change of ears. This 1* foe
plows? and only through sleeper ssr^ge
between Texas and extreme Euftf0
points. A telegram sent to tldlfat
sg>*nt of Southern Pacific company at
either Houatou or Galveston will reo^e
reservation of apnea.
Following the Election .i
Tbs famous " Sunset Limited" torqfea
betwsss Na* Orleans and San Frundjbco
will be rosutnsrf, making the tastert
time and affording the most luxuilju*
service aenua th* cootlieot. Two tfatns
a week in each direction. No emtn
fare. £
The change of time aid on SepteMer
24th, ISM, for daily train*, ibortseMbe
time to all Northern and Eastern potets,
and places toe Southern Fsclfl: Ic. U po-
siUou to oonttvl the p* men gm ti Be
east and weet bound.
*bet baa am wd." No* sin Ariogbae
MBA far fa fa meted. M*m*ffte*gpeot
•amdfam.1* Sfaumhm telefax * thM
IM U |T~ TfateaM to n hag
JtemngcTtNbMfa ’*•*■»**••*'*
n* arara imm ^usnuM
WlUh DMbMiiM* <MMWtes
The Greeks dealt with IL and Attue
Xhwi gwwrned by a democracy, dfaho
<red itself by putting to death it* fas
meet efttoen. Socrates, who taught tl
pMtet morafa god who, aa has bei
odd, anticipates! Christianity, wae jl
to death by the''eleven” upon the abM
ciiBTge of corrupting the youth.
When the Roman empire felL it la
watwfiwg an aooepteble ayatem of eos
Hrealdry awn make the wceid * glori-
ffed world. It fa a quasxy where every
cme may he* and a sea where every on*:
may dip hi* oml and if heraldry bm
^ms again au fine art she cauld be once
num the bride at histoey, while art
with her tumult of enthusiasm alone
CM deck her fittingly. Without art
heraldry fa an uncouth and dead thing:
with art she tirech for every ano and is
truly * science.
Heraldry create* intelligent cariosity
and atimulnte* historic imagination
She awakens fatmat in generations
gtme by and aboaild be taught; any* Mr.
.Raskin, to tb* young men and maidrmi
at tbs street and lane, for heraldry
i helps to decipher the forgotten band-
t writing on the wall and tho gforic-is
; record of cur ancestor*' doings and
| striving* and progress and upward
[ climbing in the long crusade againtt
i tyranny and slavery and ignorance and
I intolrrsnce.
I That heraldry fa the shorthand of hi*-
i tcry and chronology ar etn a to be now
allowed, and heraldry, in a sense,
should be the application of the fine
art* of sculpture and painting to family | government
history. It is the silent language which
Christendom adopted and developed at
the time of the crusades. In silence and
in hope she spake, through the eyes, to
| Che heart of Christendom, of the noble
< deeds of her children, and tho is. alto-
I grther indispensable if the beraldric al-
] Insion* in Dante, Chaucer, Spenser,
] Siiakeepeure, Scott, etc., arc not to be
entirely lost.
Heraldry has received the sanction of
centuries, and a heralded the true strain
fa neither finicking, fretful nor faulty,
bat full of goodly joy and at times even
at pions mirth. And if some peep and
matter at abuses, forgetting that the
abtute of anything is no argument
against its proper use, others tee and
learn that heraldry has educational
value, is to many a race a wayside sac-
rament and blares broad it* potent in-
fluence—namely, that nothing must be
dour- to tarnish the family escutcheon.
In England ahm, m the absence of
hereditary rank, coat armor is the only
distinctive mark of birth vend high
blood far the rihtitled nobility.—Ninu-
teenth Century.
into Che middle age* and practiced in
way Chat we might tqsm occasion in
fate with profit to oarselves. This *u
fact is dealt with at large by Gnfaot
his "History of Civilization. ” He te|
ns how uptm an appointed day each ye
the electors of towns were summon
by the tolling of bell* to a place
meeting where they elected their d
cm—magistrates they were called—
■erve Ono year. But if at any time 1
representatives so chosen happened
go wrong—to form themselvei ir
"nine*” or “sevens,** no matter h<
solid—the bell rang out again, and I
rncalcitrunt magistrate* were depot
and their «ucc< —s-jts. chosen upon t
spot. The admirable *y-n-m of tot
t so long prevalent in Ni
England was borrowed from old El
hmd—transplanted by the pilgrim I
there.
i*
. THE SOUTHERN MESSE GER, NOVEMBER 19. <»*•
iji
afatvttell*
fate ten* spue*
■r
< i'
P I j'
Lr'’;w9
KS
J
l!
h
p'
w rwwey granttag xwir r**-
jn ~ set* Art VM X>*1«A ty
•■■MS Am XsAmsu. A Csw la fl fat
An exoeltent taea fa fund-died to men
tf means whereby they may perpetuate
tfatir family bshm* and at tho serac time
etaterr great benefits upon their town
fy William Ckunstou Lawren in tho Oc-
tober UppinraXC's.' Hr says in part:
Uwenjy way towin by wealth the
wall foanded popularity and lasting
(■■a which all mm desire is to intveat
thut yrealth at Sane in tnounmaots
that; while perpetuating the name of
the giver, shall be a blasting to all the
gausrarioxis who shall arise after ua to
toUand Mrive and wither and pom. as
VS shall do so suon. * • •
Ii»ny Aji.-.-rican community, asuo-
ubsto else - :i earth, that opportunity
staoda wairii g. Nowhere fa wealth so
quickly wo-. Nowhere fa each man
moss frrv to Kp» nd hi* own a* he will.
Norwtwre. p-rhops, in Christendom, at
least; are citie* and towns so bare of tho
worthy public monuntmt* which the
cnsumnnity is capable nt enjoying and
■ttlfatng in f-.lii-Ht measure.
It is prr.r- til to illustrate this doc-
triue as ecn- retrly us poi*sibio by a par-
ticular chough thoroughly typical ex-
■mple—one ot oar older eastern cities.
In the earlier history of that town there
was much to gratify a healthy civic
pride. A* the center at a peculiarly
hafawdcaw and sdveutnrowi industry, its
uame was a familiar ooe in every quar-
ter of tb* globe.
Within the city itself or in its esvi-
nras au extraordinary number of emi-
B*nt artists have their birthplace or
MiUhood’shome. In a circle of honored
families wealth, with tlx- resultant re-
fluement, ha* been hereditary through
Mteestive generationa, In many private
homes luxury, taste, art, are worthily
represented. For advanced education,
lor the endowment of a free library so
that it may provide scholar* with books
they can neither afierd for themselves
■or ask from public funds, for furnish-
fag the schools with pictures; music and
other oeevwitte*. u generous example
wmset by rwo legacii-* many years ago.
Yet this braunful city has no place
fa which to set up the numerous notable
pfctnea, by her own son* or by greater
artist*, which private owners are more
than willing to intrust to public charge.
Though the unique and picturesque in-
dustry with Which the city's name is
historically ansa-rated is pawing away
with the present generation, no attempt
ha* been made co gather and pm servo
relie*, records sad memorials of that
earlier time. Though remoter from col-
lege or university than perhaps any
ether equally wealthy conumcnity. its
center of local higher instruction his
Straggled on tar nearly a generation
with one properly paid inssrnctor. with
no sufficient endowment to justify
aM*e. The Jyceuin bae flickered cot, as
almost everywhere else, and no fund,
no proper wgssuxatiou even, is st hand
to suable the visiting scholar, the re-
fbcfacr, the pbifoaopbor, the statesman,
to reach the «*n at the citizens fa the
Itmg winter evenings of these stirring
^an*. Tyra* puinring and aenlptam do
ute beautify the school buildings in
wftfch future citiams are bred, chat no
public music hall renders sweat sound*
*■ ffae a* air and san tofan, that tew or
su toaertfnt mownment* or civic build-
ings Osaka the street* a daily sduauticn.
**■* a* atiy time in the peat
M pant* » tingle milliou, whither
nfaed by general snlncription, bentowad
for legacy fate* the tend handorctae
gift frees th* living, had hem paid m a
ns* tbM* • dMiiltar tboagfe faM
jmm^C tertrojw fairf b«m dtroteL
sealer th* bae* nfvfce. to the higfaaet
■MMMent wulfsre at th* fast growing
ladtoir'il riUMsnUr ~ftai Tgliaiina
tatisd fcMtetinM would hare taanlt-
«dU amo to tham peehap* bearing
jnodiy And. pKjMiMtiag? Hv tbCNWAd*
*f jnare th* ustn at maunmr already
f^rtHul A hundred ttan—i doUrn*
, wanMhsrvemtiiilii a nohfa buiMii«
* te*nus«a *f local an I st alite te ■
gpUMjr <C HbK that mmcbwC
wmbM Jtaw tenddbttl * ^prifexy of oats
aDi cte <iMcf MaMttpAvM* of
Rk'-
NMfant and modern art Another bin-
tetil thc^fand tegtat ban* given th*
^ifa Blroy m wUffan that would
fawuMownad the bauntifal attf an loft-
ily a* the Low Htongy will crown Mren-
* ■■ ■_* ■ - t—A—ILAs- ----- —- - ■ .
an naoeh, wouM hour waifa a paassn-
anti bad whereby the M wfoat and
I
J, ' ■ •
LOCAL PATBIOTISM.
*- ' THE HOD' OF IT IS FELT IK MMY
Pj|i COMMUNITIES.
d-r'' ■ KfafaWMW CMs* sad Tswm task tka
P-■'
fd.-’
n
It-
F-
it1" I
I'
[i n •!, F
t'-
r1
: '
fc".:
Bi!:".: T
Kt'- '
Ip;___
in aft** fasten a
lff|, F tfotolM' Ufaannti 1
hte tnausgurt in
Ml ’ " va*nedate*a*to*»f
!■■{ -' tetenfa
Mi " InianMairt nil.....I
anO«*n***ttan*p
|
l jlffSSXIw"
M '»U£ WiiMM! ******
H E’ It ■
:;rm"**■* is MSMfaswn
''o>e i.r^|||i't;hl*i^wte«tew^-|i*te^*wfa»*ffi
. i*H-if■ - llttei’ r;ii'(-**»te<.wsr-*Li>irv--te
■ r- -t:.*>;■ ri;r:|«('y:**.siStJ
— I -- :"s». ' ind-WJiWl ’-i-riHi-Hic- stiwii!■-''"<( 1)w::sa'L'
- 11, '■ ' -jjl;"<t"*i ;
* j*' '' . ‘IIil & '■r Hi-1 1- i" inir; ,i»wT*T*s
•rtf.. r_
»l i Av-iscnkieil SMUUr
■ :.:r
St.
URSULINE
to **
INCABNATE WORD SCHOOL
cmrancTEU by tee s;ste?is o^tseicbmejty cf tee kcaeia’t va
106 E, COMMERCE ST. ;Deutsche Apotbekcl San Antonio,Trt
Foe pr q*p set us sad fortisr prtfo
<.
Fi
toot
riiJj;
LT;
Term* Modems For pArtlcular* Apply to the SKer Superior «r r M
PRlXf*lFAl* HOLSH ifoljolhlj’n; S.*,rt.i Kokh, Inrirw.RTv«
WTLLCW 113 .30SSY ETffiB
SAN ANTONIO, TP
'wllrfasgi i
-olid «te*.i
■dated adnmriw.
Cteaes will be resumed on September 1.
-ulus apply to
SISTER SUPERIOR,
St. Mary'* Academy, Austin, T«,
- NMxnansNt.
The Old Adage - -
“»* comfortable as or oM tote”
ha* rost Els aOapfation -imv
- E. Retuse -
faC— discovered a
Sure Core for Cona
IT IS EASILY APPLIED.
AND VERY EFFECTIVE
vrirat more coeld you ask for f5"CTW
E. REUSS, - cn rare fl*
aculateconceptionacad:
San Angelo, Tex.
Dlmned by the Sistcn of tint Charity at tte Incaraau Word.
EBA2J1 JiG AID DU SCHOOL F8I YfflUB LADIES AH OHIJiKI
far an mMM I
I eXGLBR hop
. ^. uwggr SCENES DE3CS
* AMEKKfaM VISIT
SIDED THE DffiECTail GF TIE SETEK OF THE HALF C2E& /
ClaSsca will be rtnuBiad Monday. Sept. T, XHMi. The bm tetimroyfate
excellence of It* work t» the rapid iucrr**r-»r H>e putrouere ot thin pcqmlw
ttoool Institute. Every facility i» offered for * thorough craw:,aj
Modern language*, elocution, shorthand, typewriting, nutec. drawing anda^^E
*re optional studies taught by specialist*.
Wh ::
/ Il
Tl
a
f]
slljl
Young UuBm and little ffirfa. J
®telto *■ kg Mnaaad •ffTbaafogL***,
I II IR II MC „ j Jb, , ■ .\| ■■ . ■■ ■ . ■;\ j
rid
URSULINE ACADEMY..
**N A*(TCM*>O.W<XA*,
’ HIGH GRADE BOARDING AMD DAT 5
ACADEMY,
, i GALVESTON, TEX
asi»t. Mary’s Academy,
Texan.
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOL’NG LAMB
AND CHILDREN.
<_T**se«i wti: be re*i:mrd Maindev. r-rptenlber with tni—enw^1 ■
'mtitrting a Iborojgh cr>,ir*<-of tn all that pertain* tn a
U<ji u<J to the development ot th* Ixxlv. mind, and heart.
special attention given tn tcu-ic. phonography, and type-writing.
For particular* apply to
SISTERS OF THE HtiLY Cm®
| : Bo®rdiRga.nd Day SdRI
ESSSE®“*Wn4^j^ far Young ladies
Offers Excellent Advantage* for * te
fin**’. Solid Edoratloi:. rhe < nitta*
of Mora: Principle*, ard the Qm d
Health. Speedal attention i« giver, to LANGVAGE smt ACT. For retro te
further perrlcniar*. apply to MOTHER SUPERIOR.
Josephus A-cajrienray,
SEGUIN, TEX.
Directed by th* 8tater* at tte Charity at the Iromn Weed-
OMBTFDL CLIIift
Sctatot tor Mya fa the fanmoHate vicinity nteertte roro: Yuapernt O*
- nrorori <b Monday. September L hr farther irtwwrter addm*.
■»* Bsroti^
Xu* *te >*- *■""
^acro *teroB^m tiM T*(Tn
-----
Y**te*tetvX*pei>tat id
-Iro* mfate* town ahem :i
rjrohro wtofab fa in the ti;
trorerrithwtiJe and ext-i
^irta in the wrefci. th* «. J
yicb qaali^ that produr -l
•cldro tefo X etneri on
aod tn.Cvery
-IsafatfaM at tall hopJ
straight, ffzudy art
pw-u at the Vine tev-J
Tiimmirl th* g:‘Ut but J
Sow®, Ou a hillside *
tc the left V*«* the unite rJ
<6 the fa* teckffi. hko nJ
at ro aemy^-fte you mJ
fbe h-T jteker* aov not r> 4
^eighbochord. They rort.- 4
funilte- * large pmpcJ
fr® Landen- And. tx-1
majority ct the bap nick -J
(<£y port. The pay frn- tJ
qp very Jfalo that cwdy i
effort* of * family cf J
warkrue *• the rea-ulr rtf d
Worth the effort. Laar <-J
pie. the pay for picking d
fee xevm busfaelsi, an that
to complrte acvwi bmi <i
shilling waa earned, Tlu
tjnB«arra little bett-r.
hi-y pickin*: fa only proud
family has tdx or eight rj
hands to strip the vnir-s sJ
<J tiiewamen have rt-du-'".
U au art, tile deft far:. "
tLvy take four or t-m fl-
Kitr-rlctely dewivirg ti-
Itaagriiea skill to bi- l :
Tfa‘ poles in a b-npS Id
s«t at right ungles that y
Q, vt> a uniiorm aw-jg- , .-
vu:-* ra wiraryvi-r dir-ci:
your eye*. But t'o.ts -ti’
*. r beauty rf oj-pt Hi-.. I! ■
I..-', f(.r a S.ld is j.: ,.u;
ws raooy b:!l^—p-
L;l.-—to a family. a.~r. to,
;ly bn* agrvvrl far half a
Th'-n-ftev, as yen y;;.^ ,
tiiat inrcrset-rs a bartwiri,
aur; UMTV at £x«! dwtsiir
d. fl-rent ii>’'t,pcndent go
th- ;r Canvas bins. w;:!i
raoutbx. all of regular
p^!--s and set os cr<-
of ; In-ir scctHTa, and wh) ;<
lit- r:srs a thirdaf tji «
and pulfa up tin- jsdrs
bin wde the v-rnui-a and <
rantly wcri: fr^jeu fl a. :u
save only for the half b< ;t:
draniT. Aod what a sig <
very <dgr> rf the fa-ld v
m-’.sr time rtxrs. raggi d
ivy draped tower of hu i
to Ik- the very first, and
oldi-or, al tcie Naraum tn
Tur^sque roma <jf which -
inn-lligixit visitor to re
Tins tower was built uy< -=
of Roebeater, aaDM*where a
Th:* abbrt-. by tie wsy,
etored and fa rtnov tncre :> I
At the foot thin old tov
rolled and Uuuhti*d a sod
halt naked, tartcrdrnrali-n
ages renningfram the inla
have been in arms to a jw
old twine, in peached, dirt
and with huge hraaseami
lobes rf tht lr tuKlean lit 11
did half barbarous young
up its idtwroly little fag* t
that still grim tiicugh dfam
built eight cwuturirti ago
atexulta rf those savagre a
Tunners rf the jnesent-day
And arooug the vines yu
motley graqurf pentone ti
Icttle fanmn blots apperta
any mean* as pktuii stpu ;
rag as Italian grape pteke:
the rich, dart beauty rf
types, but a different sort <
tacbes to there hopeJ«*ly
vagrant eintiui1**, wno h
tbi- Tucking—by donkey <-
°*i foot—tearing with tlx-
er*hie utenndt ftg cnokfag
in their rag* and their bit
of which they are not xti
ing Ly night in amt* if tb
tutaae, behind bragnt an
wigwamsrf bough*, if thr
ing fran d^y dawn to ert:
a nne pittance—yet not s
*y. not run*—indeed, g
when ytm nddraM faeax,
W*J jocular or in toy wji
tiv>. Hsia aarf tinre. to t
tirmg mans pretenooca, tb
rower nriddto rite* shift <
tet in ttan main a hop J
aa yuu tnaywitaen
yl* y°u wfart ptrifrf
*!■*! In ihimu roehrddeu t:
hr the propin aptetafcr rf t
*"■> wMch the curia
■tertta.
VW te te^lroftely r
tettich I have gtvro fa* i
g6— ttetflhtite wrsapn
*4 age swarm aben
*alk cteunghttafod
tte astro a til mu
"°fc tewn teen. Th
yten «■< tiiMna atripi
Aomm uuMtly faro
^tenrttemiMnmsq
re. fofonte rt
VW nr fcai*liming
am* tesu. at yoa bit
”*» jn* *** gtan it
fagsyfaUtfl
2*^*MBgMlM**d far yt
Oi*te ti* la n*wii
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Southern Messenger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1896, newspaper, November 19, 1896; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247389/m1/6/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .