Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 24, 1890 Page: 3 of 8
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v*
1 from the state
at we, the fans'
utlfy the forogo-
oa tti the school
that the edufi^-
egtststors or late
dljr neglected on
old kpow, other-
md unjust law*
ted—law* which ✓
med to rob Itafi^
to give the
to the rich and
t soon bring our
country to the
J
The annual report of the Poe body trust
far ilia maintenance of good homos for the
workimr dasse* in London shows the birth
rate u the housos kept by the trust to bo
^ iJ per 1(K 0 above the rest of Loudon, and
the death rate nearly t per 1000 below the
Mreruir,, while the infant mortality is only
a little 6ver half the uventgc. The trust
SUTOA! SCHOOL LESSOR
kMon IV- -April 27—Parable
8ow»—Lake VIII: 415.
1
of the
WravenuK men smoke -’Tsuil!!', Puncn.
novel* their
When girl# pine out of
friends say they are bilious.
hAsiwnt over fit,000 In providing build
in&i lor 20,874 persona. "
- . ------ The average earn
ings of eueh family am about to,7ft |>er
week and the uverugo weekly reut about
The rate per room Is 62)^ cent i>er
Week-
d^^fleorge L- Newton, a wholesule grocer
r of these resol u-
cy, the governor
5 of the resrpecta.
and adjoining
Hoston, promised to pay John Lankota,
s New York drummer, #100 If he stopped
dripklhg and smoklhg for one year. Lah-
kotd carried out the agreemeut, but the
grocer refused to pay. The drummer sue<J
'him and the superior court ordered New-
ton to pay #100 ond costs.
*«•■# Solution: The lower, The Seed,
Tbs #oli-Ths Wayside Hearer: Koeky
Ore and Hearers, Thorny Ground Hearers,
Froltfol Hearers. — Three Conditions of a
Oood Harvest
lop ted directing
ips toward form*
r union in this
ir convention for
wrORTtNE.
•11 H« Crlat for
isssaeei
13.—In a battle
ro boys several
colored lad of
the head and
l'welve*year-old
boy, was ar-
tone that caused
ie several day#
prisoner at the V
e result of the
i has been In «
iy and night he
ing and moan-
id cannot sleep,
r has been with
through a earn*
of the ofi-
the colored
me hysterical. -.
ying his cudgh
unan’s lap, *
d then ’faltlnr
woved in chlM-
3 the gallows,
andy and toys
g his mind, bat
ngs he begged
; to haug bint,
is were so un-
> body shook as
till. One mo-
th* fatal result
ixt moment his
h fright aud he
marily hanged.
A very eccentric character died at Hemp
stead, L. I., a few dayB ago. It wan Mrs.
Elizabeth Hewlett, a member of one of tho
oldest families in Hempstead, who foij
more than fifty years has lived alone in i»
carpetless aud almost unfurnished hut.
Her eccentricity is said to have due to dis-
appointment in love, a'young dentist who
had paid her a ttention having transferred
his affection to her sister, whom he mar-
had. This caused her to practically aban-
don her family, and not long after the
event she went to live in the hgt at Hemp
She was 84 years old.
A Noeasalty sr Health.
!t*ts s prim* necessity of health that the s<v
tlon of the bowels should be kept regular. But
(the way to overcome a temporary lit of con-
stipation, or to remedy chronic costiveness, Is
not to deluge the stomach and drench the bow-
el# with purgatives of violent and painful a»
tlon. The happy medium between an Inopera-
tive and violent cathartic Is Hostetler's Stom-
yf ach Bitters, which acts Just sufficiently upon
the bowels to relax them, without pain, and
which being a wholesome tonic, as well as
aperient, ha* the effect of strengthening both
nhem and the stomach, and promoting the w*tt
•being of the whole internal economy. The re-
tnonal of bile from the blood, Increased activity
of the liver, usually dormant In cases of cos
• SS**?; S'0™ digestion follows the use
tills beneficent medu*lnef as thorough and
genial in Its effects as ft Is safe and pure la
composition. Rheumatism, fever ana ague,
•kidney troubles and debility are also remedied
by it.
•f bis
The only time a man oan be sure
/friends is when he has burled them.
41 Ypu are not sure of a reward for yowr
good deeds, but yeu ere absolutely sure ef
punishment for your bad onea.
The meanest look in the world is to be
found on the face of a sensible womae
who has married • silly man.
If yon think you are well known and
learned go three miles from home-end yoe
will find people who never heard of yoe
who know things that you never heard ot
How hard It is to laugh at a Jose on your
•elf.
who examined *
remoypd oat of
- - - * ^ 4--r~— *>. -V.,.-.
i;iuni| uuuo VO
ome hopelessly 4
i to hts home.
Udn» Have Triad It.
withe ut for many times its cost. They re-
V .commend it to all who are to become moth-
- ■ St
v»a., lur particulars. ijyKh £
»■-, *or Particulars, tiySui urugglsta
Charity that is paraded is no charity at
d Qold.
I.—Mr. J. W,
izen of Davis,
in Covington,
! his bride of
in gold. Last
) gold from the
1 for the benefit
•as away from
tw MMdlblMJ,'
ho was living
uncle, took the
r, and came , to
iage ceremony
» disappeared.'
»n Is using vigt
money and hl^ '
_ . * Ralbioh, N. C., Feb. 30, 1888.
Da. A. T. Shallknbkroer,
- „ _ _ . Rochester, Pa.
. •Qar' *<*■••—I wish to say a word in be-
half of your wonderful Chill and Fever
FUls. Some months ago a friend, whs
knew my my wife had been afflicted for
- months, sent me e package of your pills.
I gave them to her and they cured her at
on.^ Aneigtabor, Mr. Perry, had suffered
,my wife’s case, be procured a bottle or t>wr*r »»—
Very truly, Hrv. J. D. Davis.
It is never said A a man who la execu-
tion proof that his word is as good as hts
ftOnd.
Ineiiasfi.
-Qov. Thayer
sr, president
united In an
tlined for aid
the counties ,
sr and Sootts
that on the
oa wind and
on# of thape
w earth, to-
thousands of
ud pleated,
letely ruined
How’s Tlusl
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward
forany' case of Catarrh that cannot be
transactions, and financially able to carrr
obligations made by their firm.
Wmt ATruax, Wholesale Druggists, To-
O,
A Mary,*, Wholesale
Drmffista, Toledo, O.
HaiPgC -—^
Golden Text. — Take Heed, There-
fore, How Ye Hear.—Luko8:l8.
Time.—Autumn of A. D. 28, a few
weekb after the last lesson.
^ Place.—On the shore of the sea of
Guiiiee, near Capernaum.
Parallel Accounts of the whole
parable (Mult. 1.1.1-2:1 Mark 1 1 _'u.
Jmijs.—Nearly 3*2 years old; near
the close of the second year of his
public ministry.
Interesting Historic —After the
anointing of Jesus’ feet and the para-
ble at the Pharisees’ house, Jesus made
another tour of Galilee (8:1-3) accom-
panied by his disciples anil some uoble
women who were bis helpers. Return-
ing to Capernaum, he healed a blind
and dumb demoniac, (Matt. 12:22-37),
and answered the acoasation of the
Pbaeisees in reference to it Then his
mother and brethren came to interfere
with him (Mark 3:31-35; Matthew 12:
46-50). Later the same day (Matt
13:1), he went out of the city to the
sea-shore, and began Vo teach in para-
bles. Our lesson to-day is the first of
the eight parables often spoken. The
day on which this parable was spoken
was one of the most busy and eventful
recorded in the life of Jesus. First ho
saved a demoniac, (2) He answered
the Insulting scribes from Jerusalem.
(8) He answered the interpretation of
his family while teaching, (4) He left
the city, and went to the sea-shore, (5)
He began a new method of teaching, by
parable*, and spoke eight of them, (6)
He went on a vessel across the sea of
Galilee, and encountered a terrible
tempest which he calmed with a word.
4 And when much people were gathered
together, and were. ume to him out of every
city, he spake "by a parable: (Mail. 13:2.
Mark 4:L)
5 A sower went out to sow his seed; and
aa be sowed, some fell by the way side; and
it was trodden down, and the fowls of the
air devoured It.
fl And seme fell upon e rock; and as soon
** ■ sprung up. It withered away, be-
cause It lacked moisture.
7 And some fell among thorns; and the
thorns sprang up with tt, and choked it
8 And other fell oa good ground, and
sprang up, and barn frait a hundred fold.
Aod when he had said these things, he
•rUd, He that hath ears to hear, let him*
hear.
Q A »»d W* *-.. ► » •
..i—i Maou urm, mtyinjr
What might this parable be I (Matt I3;id
Mark 9:10.) '
10 And he said, Unto you It Is given to
know the mysteries of the kingdom of God:
bat toothers in parables; that seeing they
might not see, and bearing they might not
understand. (Is. fi:ft Mark 4:19.)
11 New the parable Is this r’ The seed is
the went of God. (Matt 19:18. Mark 4:14.
19 Thoee by the way side are they that
hear; then cometh the devil, and taketh
away toe word out of their hearts, lent they
should believe sud be ssvecL
' <*rt they, which, when
1 11K VK XMB, W VOM I XL.
In the t'ougr.-Hsiimal retM>rt uixm tho uUiiit*
Zion or W’-umlpK. many f»«-ts w. ro jclvou
|T"1hk to show ht*r a.-, r1< i«>r in resuurcet thaii
any of hoi olstors an.l no tarriLoy ov«r op
pitocl tor «tatoh(HKi mi thoroughly ouallfloil
This roport »liow» th«* 1 npiiui. Oil t vi:n aij.
to ho 0110 of tho vvoalthli-Ht cities of her size I11
tho world, its she Is tho most favorod ami ,,ros
porous. Tho Union l’uclrtc Kullwuy is j|,>w
coiiHtruotliiir shop, ther*». to cost >0.<*’*),(DO and
employ 10,000 toon. This fact, coupled with the
rtes$'x' as sajMkyj?aii k*
Wt* lui\ fi the is— t residence property in t ),<-
city, und offer liberal inducements to those
Who Will build divelHnj/s to supply t It,, lmiue
dutte demand, and which will net twenty five
|s*i cr>u|. To induce a utifclt resposo. we will,
oil a limited number of blocks, take two fifths
In clear lauds or chattels, a small cash pay
merit, haluni <• in one. two and three years
Call at our Cheyenne office, or address Interior
I.aud aud Immigration Company. Department
H 'Denver, Colorado.
I *
Hunt Warm of Chur.
Wheu a proprietor knows he has a grand and
good remedy for the many Uls that flesh and
hlood are heir to It pleases him exceedingly to
rec eive such evidences of appellation a* fol
low!.
, " 1 Nlle#yillc. fi. C„ writes: “1
have used Hofunio Ill.ssl Halm und llud it to be
all that It Is recommended to be.”
D < lilanton. Thoi)ias\1lle. (,u , a-rites- "I
have used Botauic Blood Balm In my family as
a tonic and Mood purtffer w ith highest satlsfao
lory results
, .K O. Hoffman, ydltor Times. His-kv Mount
' . ',,IUV «* to say that Botanic
lll.KKl Balm Is ;i,e best app. U*er and tool.- r„r
delicate people I ever aow. it acted like
ebann lu my gum*
^ Uli’KGy, I’jiw Main nil>m.|. I*yiu*bt)iirtr
\h wrtt^n: “I was bruki* mil all rtver with
MW*, and my hair wm* faiiiiiK out. After
Uslik^ ft few hot;Ifs of Motanit MtiNxl Haim my
thy Well.1’
Don’t think because a nan is a bad
hia plans will not hatch out.
•KK
“i Hava It, eu AlMlete<t"
with an affection of the Throat from child
hood, oausod by diphtheria, and have used
various remedies, but have never found
anything equal to Bbown’h Hhoxi hiai
Trochiw.”—Kn,. G. 4T. F. Ha .tptoti, Tike
<*'•*, A'v. Sold only in boxes.
When a man learua a little Latiu how be
like* to use JJ.
fl« True, >TU PIty.j rity ’Tis,’Tis True.
More than two thirds of our sick folks
are treated by ignorant aud unskilled phy-
sicians, and were it not for the wonderful
recuperative power of nature, a much
larger proportion would be hurried prema
turely into the grave ou account of errone-
ous treatment. People are mostly them
selves to blame. They are a long time
getting sick but demand immediate'relief
Sofordyi 1 - •
-----B wwuiriiu luiiurtl I tt tAJ ITJllOl,
for dyspepsia and Indigestion the doctor
prescribes a cathartic pill, for an acidulat
ed stomach some alkali, for pain some hot,
.liniment, for sleeplessness some narcotic,
for skin diseases some external ointment’
and so might erroneous treatment be enum
teratod to greater length, but enough it is
to show the doctor aims to give quick tem-
porary relief, without hope or ex|>ectation
of any permanent good. Now nine times
out of ten dyspepsia, weak stomach, aches,
)>ains, sleeplessness, nervousness, skin
diseases, etc., owe their origin to a state
of defective circulation and blood impurity,
and the use of that scientitle remedy in-
vented by the eminent Dr. John HuHy of
Louisville, Ky., would offect a permanent
,curo. It is called Dr. Bull’s Sarsaparilla.
Demand it of your-.druggist. Take no
'other.
When Baby was sick, we gsr* her Castorto
When she was a Chad, she cried for Castorla.
When the became Miss, she clung to Castorla.
When she had Children, she gave them Castorla.
writes: -i have suffpml TsroarsVlth^eczema!
uud was at times conllned to n:v lw<l The
itching wa* terrlhle. My sou In law got me
•one half doeeu bottle* of Uotanie Blood Bklni
Sy* 1 you to pule
nsn thin for tar benefit of others HUfTerliiK In
like inMiuiei'.”
August A. Klages, HIO St. Charles street, Bal
tlmore, Md„ writes "Frum my youth l »uf
fer«d from a poisonous taint In my MO<hI Mv
face and body was continually affected With
eruptions and sores. I am now 4* rears of
ege, and had ts-eu treated both lnllermanyand
America, but no remesly overcame the trouble
uutU I used Botauic Blood Balm. I have used
about twenty tattles, and now my skin is
clear, smooth aud healthy, aud X consider the
poison permanently driven from my blood 1
Indorse It aa the best blood remedy.”
Tho whi|>pings a man raoeiv?s on the
outside never hurt him much as the
whipping# he receives on the rnside.
^j^CO„v0^
It *{ i
ftEto
e'bv.-p
AlN
Ctfxza Pro atm.r akp Pxju*A.vum.T
,lttmbag6,
Rheum at i«m. Headache, Toothar h
Toothache,
SPRAINS,
Neuralgia, Swellings, JErost-bite*.
hruises.
THE CHARLES ». VOOELER CO.. SaJIUaer*. BA
JPHNgLiNljS
Unlike any Other.
OrigiuM by u Old Fully Pbjsiciu.
THINK OP IT.
In aa* over 40 YBARB to mm PaaHy.
Da. L S Jomomi tt Co. -it Is sixty yean dace I flrwa
> lehrs ted rented; for the com
There is pretty sentiment in the thought
that a man never forgets the fcmg# his
mother sang him to sleep with, but is there
u man, or was there ever a man, who ro
uiembered the songs ids mother sang when
he was a baby.
ssfflffiSaMi:'BSni
Every Mother^x¥s.^^2Ss:
•* bouse Tor Ooup, Ckdds,
WEBSTER’S
March, April, May
UNABRIDGED
are
the Months
when the Blood =
should be renovated
with
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
and
’ *_ , _ r,
the System fortified
for the
change of Seasons.
Prepared by
| OfiTh^r Aycr & Co.,
Lowell, Mass.
trmm a to a, is « on
mh, sl the sfiiBoasf
Its tMJ. strIoiMo
IAHCIERT EDITIOji
A itooalltfi “ Wskstar’s UsstaHra
DictkMurT” tobdoqofteradteths^H
rtjassp py is*
MU
th# 9 —w—" ■ * —^ w
MMsa. win afcw
tfttsuttsr. ft#
«i fists asa last
_ It has probably been said of every man
of recent yearf'that he looked like Na-
poleon.
TOtf W1LLSAVB MONKY
Tins*. Fain. Trsaftls
aad will CURB
CATARRH
hr osing
Ely’s Crsam
.ad
Apply Balm h*to each noatril,
KLY BRBK . Mt Wamn Hi V V
O. « G. MBRBIAX Jt CO.
” * SPRINOFUCLD, Ran—
WfooMof Umsystem.'
nrw*. Price 75o per bottle. Bold by all
Druggist*.
Luxpriss tbst ywa cannot afford soon be-'
CQJ»BMestitiM that you cannot do with,
pot.
-The San M|S
nder t realm etR
with a view to
1 been advised*
: bis increasing
■ee ot dSHBR-
iltb. The fa*
ting treatsd by
ject in vietji
pass
iinas
Knits .
t Getzenkerob,
•ric. ' * r ;. -J •
l tho eter fast
KnjdNosi * JiJssrsn
Mtosssq# "itfiSSE!*wa.
■' -:.a
with ft-
too elms
•boat #lMMfi
1 ■«?! .
.. _ —- - ,1 nunn
tosy bear, receive the word with Joy; and
too** have no root, which for a while be
Msve, and in time of temptation foil away.
14 And that which fell among thorns are
they, which, when they here heard, g0
forth, and ere choked with oaree aod riches
and pleasure# of tXu life, and bring no frait
to perfection.
15 But that on the good ground are they
which in on honest and good heart, having
beard the word, keep it, and bring forth
fruit with petienoe.
8DQOE8TION8 AND ILLUSTRATION.
The hnrvest ie ot the same kind as
the seed. If we sow bad seeds of
thistles, thorns and apas trees, the
harvest oan only be thistles, thorns
and apas trees. There is no escaping
this law and it helps ns to understand
whjr good men do not always reoeire
■o much of this world’s riches ae some
bad men do. Good men sow seeds of
character, of usefulness, of love, of
spiritoel joy. of peace, and they reap
Mthey sow; all worldly blessings which
we consistent with these, naturally
fiofif from them
The wheat aod the thorns are hav-
ing a great struggle in our ltvea.
The wicked one eannot take awfiy
the good seed nates* we let him. He
dooflot destroy the seed if the soil
good.
It ls toid of Thorwaldses the great
work* of art whioh have made hi*
name immortal, the servant* who oa*
thw statuary, scattered upon the
froonfi An straw, whioh waa wrapped
nKMmdtheaaa^woHnt. TberswWe
nneoen seeds fat that straw and soon
limw wefo dowers from Koae bloom
fiAg In the gardens Of Copenhagen,
line artist unoooaciouohr scattered
iw«#t flowers, whose beamy aad per-
refresh aod riodd** bis
Yht CELEBRA1 ED
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Station ar _
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you iMww th» e#e*r#l
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H. W. HUBBARB,ovA^ u-
. mma oscch
<■■■«. ft. Ntnn
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**M» MSWUtMOlr tow, it m BOB-
“*3^^KM
'OSGOOD*
fitfifiderd
LIS
♦J
1AIS. Ou. South orn
3.11m. To— Also—
-oil OMaolD* will*.
---u
The artist unooaaciouoly scatten
bwegt flowers, whose beauty aad pe
fume wen to rsfreih add gladden h
nnhve aily yearn after hie Land was 1
aott na jh* chtoePlt- eaee eo magi null
magically
»dd seeds
moved; so. we should sow good
everywhere. But we also aie uaoon-
setonsiy sowing seed by our lives, by
■fifir obardeter, by our word*.
A MEK0BY OF EARLY DAYS.
t°Tj*u£hoo<ri tsaOsr years,
0hat of ell inward Ola,
Huge and griffing old blue pills i
a contrast to the mild aad . gentle action of Dr. Pierce*#
A Brand Opmiti
ONLY $1,60
hr the Peerlett Allas of the World and Tht
Chicago Weekly Time# One Yew. 1 ,
as * c—is# (etoUie— seism# ot to*
world tha NirliM AtUa to Equal to a*x Sio oo
AM**,
*0 rspressat toemosTS
Ssesair"*,.“"w~“
Jtpmrtozit town* and most of to* vUlacw
------ aanaaMh ahafiem.
• wu,e -
... r- —? —»«*§wv«*— u* nm world. Um
gyBBfswii'Wgis irtas
m St»#t RUM ot laRretRM ttiiiliil |*
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MM ana* IMlMSUW tWUll Ukmmro tm
flAt papa totoip
HE WEEKLY TIRES
| awrtslo* tot host ud moot ommlom kotoOo ot
Mto«ay«hla#o*y ottko worts, ud la d—
I T P— wecy Ml off Mo *r—
iRM*.ii. nan men* ■iu*,.a 1.00 • m>
<■*•«» WtMld.
MdBMM THE CHICA60 TtoCt CftrfiWdg*, W».
/-
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nausea,-
twrrout _____
tot E elUnr esr
pounded by an eXpori
adapted Aa woombV i
PurOy fosnUhte aod
any condition of the
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Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 24, 1890, newspaper, April 24, 1890; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1116336/m1/3/: accessed May 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.