Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1890 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 40 x 26 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
J
[ICALS
, Oils.
Also
tc.
Toilet Article*
ins.'
:xa£.
& CO
h«Hr
Goods.
e have a
of
rice.
i are cer-
stand,
Ci-
ON
rEXAS.
♦i ii d
Oils
< ■' ' tff/,''..W^
fir,
PrV. :
■ ■ v?
i
i+L
>
graham
k
4
vol. xrv.
Ttie Leader.
_‘w,/Z t. — °fZal,lnhan--552.
leader
PUBLI.SHK1) WKKKLV BY
J. w. I'.RAVKS,
TER 1H3 OF SUBSCRIPTION.
"*® *°Py. ono your, - .. $].6(
1 •*** months, . ji
roverising rates,
yne inch, flret insertion', • - $1.00
■n^b suhmiqijortt insertion, - . 50
A reasonaMo reduction made to rwrular
advertiser*. Term* furnished on applicntion.
Dwri notices 10 jnnts porUrieflwt insertion,
• cent per line each subsequent insertion. A
raertl rod action made to regular advertisers.
GRAHAM. TEXAS. MARCH 27, 1890.
J. POUTER & SON,
^ Munufattftmt-ina and Dealers in
dm68’ ft. Harness
<£ £ am te
PP uiBum Mi ti Order :i Slort £
lIlL:„.l..~r_____>- ' .L . ’ r,
|8§| pg
ml. -live ft™, h.M to mouth‘ ‘“T®8 “f,mi*hty empire. £
and aro more wasteful,and extrava* ^Pf‘ng fT"iaalone, no country in
who have accumu- i°-f C°loQia,.P(¥8ea8
------ u.uu wueuuui ,ann extrava-
gant than those who have accumu-
lated through denial in their indus-
trial nursiiifs Tl>...,_____1____
because 'they are Wt able "to iit
what is termed “a start in life ”
■sdgsas mmms,
^ iri A^HVL, : rn-pv A‘ I principle- of business success, and
-........r " "• ± -A lHave nothing and therefore have
m*-, nothing and cannot borrow money
xT. (D. ^BFIOK'F
la the Boirer Brick,
ill Wi Itf I ir /»« L „ ___1 _ «'
1 hard up” and complain bitterly fiHdTfh'\ rich wheat
because they are not able to get made 0de8«* in Russia
what 18 tpj-iii^ greitest gram mart in the world
the cotton hplt* urk,^___j .
—r wi afl imimni-
We man. you don’t lxdicv6 it, but
you will use your influence to hear
* UP Uie false report and pass it into
fimcurrent. Strange creatures are
ineu and women. How many rep-
utations have been lost by surmise?
How many hearts have ' been bled
by whisper^? How manv benevo-
lent deeds havo been chilled bv the
shrug of shoubler? How inanv in-
dividuals have been shunned by a
gontle mysterious hiut? How manv
chaste bosoms have been wrung
with grief by a single nod? How
m tny graves have been dug by
false reports? Yet, you will keep
it above water by tile wag of vour
tongue, when you might sink it for-
cver. Destroy the passion-for tell-
ing. Lisp not a word that will in-
jure the character of another —
Rockwall County Now*
Southern 8tates of the Union; the
Will keep constantly on hand a good ’assortment of
S rAPLEAND FANCY
- - Ufikt Werk.
Mmmy maine,, Jr. it seems, has
fired ol the soot, gfiine and toil of
the ear Hhops. He started out some
time mm with m-i.. _____l-.-
the desired start in Wrings" life
1 hey keep their “nose to the grind-
stone” and are at the mercy of the
shaver and pawn-bro&er.
They will buytheir furniture and
other goods on the installment plan
and pay double what they Are worth
where if they had saved up through
. deniaLthe cente, they would have
nad the dollars to have paid ready
leash and rha-p fin iL*.
-—uenc uaiu reaav
cash and save 50 percent* The
working classes—the bone ind sin-
ew fW the Innrl__rn o ___x_ 1___1 —r
He also keeps on hand:
«W <H the land—to a grtat extern
.have no one hut themselves to Wame
. for the immense amount of money
f locked up in corporations and under
control of the rich with their in-
ricn with their in-
vestments in bonds, mortgages, etc.
.ARC great pmjpjily M UuMystkW
f monopolies — —- ’ • ■
I : ,
i-,.-,.. O A It Jr Rwil li f (t*i 1
■ Iiuav Itnilkl uuiim V. ill VM V I limf^rf) m0nop° Ies art: owned by .those who
4 J ' f wlUVUOf I IIIIfdl C were onertpoovand in moderatecir-
• SagiSii . •&rsssm3s?a* *
Which he is selling at Bed-Rock prices.
e------- . ^Ul on a 8UR
rtade of coarse but durable bed-1
tmking and went to work in the1
•hops of the Maine Central railroad.
He pounded and knocked and ham-
, mered and rivited just like an ordi-1
ttftry "hired man, and for a while i
■eemed fond t»f the life. But this
......u"Mfctur*1 desire for hard work soon
collapsed, and Jimmy has peetedl
Off his working clothes ami hied
him to Washington «rh*re Be ha,
^ IGV/O.
graham, tezas.
The Now Diacorwy.
j bon» talking aWu
I be ona of the mni y whrt knbw from pcr*o.1H|
e*p«neno« ju»t ht.w ?ood a thing fti«. If
S. R. JEFFERY
dealer in
r n u ■ wsn,nKl,<>n wnyre helms
IMPORTEDIDOMESTIG
ft]—WtllCC—t Ifllinpo^lnn ;
exp«rienc« ju.t Uw good a thing
£*wk OAJwas
pla« m thr bouta. Jf ylM1 have never uaod
—ftssjee^
r »ny Throat, Lung__
*¥ “*T
the far-famed sugar districts of
l^ommana and the isles of the Pa-
cific, are matched pr overmatched
n varying degree by the diverse
l^nds, deposits and climatic influ
ences of the Southern Empire State.
Ti ■^0ne8tari8*^0CkT*t«’- In
its light the -Texan ship of state
sailed proudly into the harbor of the
L nion laden with privileges not ac-
corded to any staunch three-decker
n thl stately fleet that stood as con
wty from the Mexican port. A
Htate embodying more acres of land
than any four of those already oon
stituting the Republic, Texas was
| given admission with reserved rights
such as had not been accorded to
«*neof the original thirteen” nor
to any other of the accessions. The
milRons of acres of public lands,
which m the case of other States
became mainly the property of tfce
government weredn tbirm£* -
^anre re<Vi*ed as the property of
the incoming eommonwealth, and
I1!T‘ a?*!* hav^ b«en the fortune
>f the State. From their sale, Tex-
as has in her treasury the largest
school fund, and has erected the
hnest state, house in the Union,
while keeping her rate of.taxation
the lowest in the Republic. More
thijn thirty millions of acres of these
rich lands remain the property of
the State, Awaiting future sales and
ffteiByKSfeteg
incomparably the wealthiest.
Texas now need* only to'have
" wondrous resources fully mads
Bin irk »w *
bpign Aiturs. U- pay, him
a » year. He now wears biled,
•hirts, the callous places are disap-
- - Pwaiulg frmn his bands, apd he sol-
--apn* haa ..anything heavier.tw’frfrj
than a nun ... U: . ______.11 . 1
j . •^■7'*!^ «veiy lime, or money lefun-
^ Trwl Bottle, free at GralumVWg
noavier-trrtm
than a pen or his^ monthly salary.
If you have a little farm or busi-1 r*T> A
AQ(1 iro out of debt says | ^-K.xX
chailiffi. (L) not. frnf AP twxa.L______ is
the bloody past.
A .rrfbl f—niml „r Wilb.^r’. b«,k
AM,
!•:
ness ana are out of debt says an ex-1 ^kiVl, - - • . TPY AQ
oryour’lDwl wifeI K”p‘™I—“Mt>■"h-n.)th.folloMn,Wui„b^,d,ofIJ,U0„.
e^r Tal/n' tTr % Yanne™* o. P.
land _a l.p. XT' l RTlOr and R«llfi nf a____ri. ? ’ . *
------- r,uW nr. Wilbarger’,
T>»in^aimoiSTST«M,” re-
veal, a long lut of the bloodi«t baUl« and
auaaacrc, ever recorded in the pioneer hiatorv
of any country. Tho»e who am 1:.*
* #;■ Vannessee Rye. ft ,. e
't*,<’i°fS?m£
datiou or more miu,u tt.u • I HZ _
desire to po«rV.-# Wv varan, 10 grab
•verything in sight, is at the foun-
QAtioii df more misery than any
tiling. Wealth Alone will never
Swgotte* ^ you
F
R L. RICKMAN & CO
DEALERS IN .
of any country. Tbote who 7rt t6-day^li7
taring to the chiming (.f church bell, and are
in the Akll enjoyment of peace and plenty
can scarcely realty that lew than half a oen-
t«y ago the warwbm.p of the wild Comanche
could be heard upon the streetoof our capital
city. Yet euch i, a fact. Many thrHHng fr.
cidenta an narrated in Mr. Wilbarger*, book
which occurred within a radii* of twenty-five
piilea of the city of Austin. It i, from Mich
* work that we learn of the hardship, and
peril# through dhtoh our anoeMor, pawed,
and we learn too, H htatory of our Indian
known to the world. Her enter-
prising people are embracing every
opportunity to aid in this result
*md they will B cceed. The great
I ex as edition of the Colorado Ex-
change Journal.will contribute more
UltrgelyJn such advertisement ttrtn -
«nv other mMn* ♦ ket l.
* ---- ■« » U VJPQU
any other means that can bo em
5!ffL; I* «« f»«y >I«criK and
ifcOitraie, u> «• iandawa h,ne.
|r""d rawure* and attractfen
the world its opportunities and its
requirements. It will be a peerless
publication, meriting not only the
support but the gratetul app/eda-
Uon of the people of Texas.
SSSSSSfeaift
irsaj?* - Tf
----W and
>y timriy um of
I JDaetitc fihtan
ZLwl Tl * htaU>T7 °i our J«undtar, but wM mi
warmrv which haa hitherto been known muM- tfci« nwdicin*. Am aattafiad
lj by tradition. The hiMorv of Mm 1 hia HA.1*' * .. . „ ’ ”
^wmfaaion of Col. KldrWge.'who wa, «ppoin- P^1, W»CC«ou,ef Bom Qav^ gy„
Owl. Ram P. Bee, who kept a Jpumal of Upf
perilous eiDcdition - ia w»n u ATL
i-X*A
Ml mune of Prince Bis-
JaArck’e successor is George Leo
De Caprara De lionte-
m wan burn in Berlin in
---in 1849.
• • ij*. .
tv
v
President.
ictions made
gftiifg&gSftaEB
imintea nuyor. It su not until
Frarico-Pritehiau ihrt that
Be rwcivttl tjw awpoiiitrtont of oo-
ff9*, ,Ik4w he taminanded a
’ ^>«rdedtfciertin^ Itfai ‘
»■..
1 every claa, *W
attention riv«e
Dealer,.
•id*;
!w‘lwww
...., yimiaww and otter
, FARMIKa IMPLEMIETS.
andtIJ®n^acturferB of Stoves,
^ . wJTuba anfl BuckOfi^ Metatio Ftaes. and Cor-
■ "wiH wni, witn in, 1 TTglMI l UDfl fl
«d Wdl hUa.E^M.
r* kept a Jpumal of top
perilous expedition, 1, well wt>rtb the price of
, of the book. Gen. W. T. Sherman*, tour of
irwpectfon along our.oorthwMtam border, to
gethcr with the history of tfc, capture and
trial ot the noted chiefb Satanta and Big Tree,
cotaprtae an jnterwting ftwtun, of the work.
Thoee who love Texh* and her paW htatory,
glorious by tN>r, lor of Kfih lillortiT
ken>n aaAd Gillwpie, Tho,. J. Reed. Gen
Wward Hurlema ,„,d . h«M otl!LnZ
Oumemua io memion.'Ctfnnot afibrd to he
without the hook. It w„ In d^lwe ef our
frontier that Geo. AlW Rydoey johmew,
woflff fHVHilr^ now fHFt in
r^wltwl hk Srrt wouiui {q baMhi |q walHft b
kftown Ma th« *f!b«rok^ imr •»
.9 BiWof Qixhaav k ^iW
thla valuable hook, and kaaa let ea kaad.
Gall on him and teour« a caggr.
wfll ward off, m well ae
--and hr all Kid-
Drug Store. ^
Thg new Harrison badge that far
meI? iwbo tb the B2.000-
I°r protection) are mow
weanng U turu jaticlma
o hre«cbto—Ex
T'
never show up
1. Mhamed et ‘
1Vrumlfjtc JVfgfM
^w^erwnRwett a'brSTSKmJ C&fiS
IhwWs', Iron MJttt-em.-----a •
kM trade mark and croe^t iwdh^eawS«eea
.ink ■iiftiitt« a ». - «*> ..............
-Awwar ••‘"m nw'-.ftr TJjHaww . . »s<mwy'
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1890, newspaper, March 27, 1890; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1116161/m1/1/: accessed May 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.