Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1890 Page: 2 of 8
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COLORED BRUTE
Atuults a White lady anti is Rid-
dled with Buckshot
Iw Iowa. Itebraftk* sad. Missouri jot
mm |mi i hole la a (tick of ■ firewood
plug H op after fitlhiy It with powdet
aad leave It where a thief may get ti
aad Mott hie house up. These ere th*
only three states, however, AH th<
others have laws making such a thin;
a misdemeanor.
By a Mob of Citizens Who Take the Fiend
from' the Sheriff.
era, |ad e difficulty. They were both
armed. Hanson with a shotgun sod Sher-
rod with s 88-caliber Winchester. From
the beet tafonaatloa obtainable, Henson
did nos shoot at all, but eras advised by
bit brother to ran when he sew Sherrod
advancing Sherrod shot at him seven
times; bitting him twice The wounds
an not r on side red dangerous Sherrod
came in and suirqodcrad to Sheriff Perry.
A Rais Ss TerrtSc N Stop, tti« Fstiaft of Iraki In
Wnt Tsxas.
Czab Alexander drinks five quartr
ef champagne a day. This shows how
utterly without cense are the nihilists.
If they h«<T a particle Of sense they
would cease plotting against the cxar’i
life and destroying their own and give
the champagne a chanco. As between
five quarts of champagne a day and a
bunk of dynamite we will copper thf
bomb and play open on the "lizz.”
Cora Tanner, the actress, has tak-
en the world into her confidence and
confessed with enthusiasm that she de-
lights in easting aside the trammels ol
skirts and donning the bifurcated gar-
ments of man, commonly called trous-
ers; which leads naturally to the con-
clusion that whatever may be the ar-
tistic attainments of the actress, sh«
has the true instincts of a woman.
Aw interesting aerial contest w >«
witnessed at St. Augustine, Fla., be
tween an eagle and a fish hawk. The
fish hawk was being pursued by the
eagle, and in order to make its escape
had to drop its burden, which proved
to be a large flounder. Theftch foil in
a yard and wan taken ih and a meal
made out of it. This story is absolute-
ly new, except that part of it where a
meal was made out of the fish. That’*
very gray.
The real wZrk of census enumera-
tion will begin June 1, the time allow-
Texarkana, Tex., April 28.—Ca
Monday Ust s burley negro went to the
borne of Mr. Silas Jones, a respectable
mill man living near Cameron on the Cot-
ton Belt, elglil tnffes euFM here, during
his absence, entered the house and made
an essauit on Mrs. Jones. She gave an
account of the affair and a description of
the negro, The alarm was at onee given
and bands of determined men were Imme-
diately scouring the country in every di-
rection. Several negroes were arrested
and taken before Mrs. Joues, who pro-
nounced them not the one. Tuesday
evening late, however, a negro answering
her assailants description was erptured
by the officers and taken Into her pres-
ence. This last she at ouce declared to
be the guilty person. Knowing the tem-
per of the locality the officers at once
hurried him off as they thought without
(he knowledge of anybody to a school-
house remotely situated, where they
placed him under guard to await the next
south-bound train, upon which it was pro-
posed to bring the prisoner to the Jail at
■ his place. At nbout 0 o’clock Tuesday
night, however, there was a crash of fire-
arms outside the school house window and
the prisoner fell to the Hour (lead, bis
head and breast literally riddled with
buckshot.
ad by law lu which to compete the
enumeration being fifty days for the
towns and oitloe and thirty days for
the country districts. The collection
of the statistics of jrpautati^m wiii be
completed by June 30. and if Mr.
Heavy storm Oat Weet-
Ejo springs, Tex., April 25.—One of
the severest rain storms ever seen in this
locality occurred Wednesday evening
about six o’clock. The town was lllter-
tifly flooded with water. Railroad bridges
were washed away and cellars were filled
with water. The east-bound passenger
train is being held here and the west-
bound passenger train is being held at
Colorado until the bridges are repaired.
This Is the first rain since last October
Porter’s ligfhthThg calcii35TorS~worlc~aa
fast is be promises, the principal re-
•ults will be known not later than
August 1.
If the American people worn to lparo
that their army and navy during the
past year had lost5,282 men in engage-
ments with enemies, and chut nearly
26,000 of the soldiers and sailprs haa
been wounded, they would be horrified.
In fact, so great a destruction of life
and limb would wipe out our entire
army and navy, us tho-e branches of
the government servioo are now con-
stituted. Yet that it» the extent of the
havoc which was yrought last year oo
the railroads of the United States
peculiar fumiel-skapetl cloud passed In
sight of town .and was wMncssed by hun-
ureds of people and no one seems to know
definitely what It was. It extended from
i. dark cloud that was passing to the
ground, and a great volume of ctthei
smoke, dust or water followed in its wake.
No reliable lntonriation has been yet re-
ceived as to what it was or as to any dam-
age being done by it It created quite a
commotion until it passed beyond the
town.
A man born and bred in the Uni tod
States' fails to realize how much slang
he uses in duily con veraaLicm, He only
ttpViTveTfHea these blemish”s™*when EF
J
returns to 'America after having had
Intercourse with well-bred persons in
Europe. As heard in America, slang
seems to add force und expression to
conversation, but this is oniy seeming,
for when contrasted with really simple
and. consequently elegant diction the
difference in strength can readily bv
seen.
Ky« Knorkcd Out. ,
Baird, Tex., Apr I 28.—A difficulty
occurred at the farm of John E. l.ee, six
miles northwest from lialrd, Monday af-
ternoon between John Lee and Calvin
May. It seems that a stick or club played
a prominent part In the fracas, and by its
use John lee lost an eye and was other-
wisc bruised. The eye, however, had lost
its H^lit from the effects of fever
during the war, but in the trouble
the eyeball was knocked completely out.
The trouble seemed to have been caused
by a eow that betong&l ♦<> May getting in
flee’s field. Iajc is in town now under the
care of Jits physicians and resting moder-
ately well. An officer has gone out to
May’s house to hrhur him in.
iOwit* HmrMkMk.
Decatur, Tex, April 22.—News has
Just reached Ibis place of a difficulty near
Onm, In the western portion of this coun-
ty, between two young men by the names
of Will Jsniagln and Andy Foster, which
resulted In the killing of the former and
the wounding, perhaps fatally, of the lat-
te* The difficulty grew -out of an old
feud that was first caused by Foster’s as-
sisting a young man In the neighborhood
to ran away with Jarnagin’i sister, he
(Jaraagln) being opposed to their mar-
riage. Wlille returning home from- a
school exhibition at Onm. Foster tried to
ride past Jarnagin, when Jamagtn spoke
to him and received no reply. Jarnagin
again spoke and Foster told hltn that be
did not want anything to do with him.
At that they both drew their pis-
tols and fired about the same
time. Jarnagin shot ’five shots and
Foster three, but after the first
fire their horses began to run with them
and only the first two took effect. Jarna-
gln’a horse ran about 100 yards when he
fell from him with a wound from a 88-
caliber pistol ball, which entered Just
above his left triple, passing through bis
body and coming out a little below his
righlshouHer blade. He only lived about
thirty minutes. Foster’s horse ran about
h mile with him and stopped in front of a
farm house. His groans were beard by
parties wftftln, and he was earrled into
the house In an lnsenslb’o condition. U
was found that a pistol ball of the same
caliber bad entered his right cheek and
passed through his head, coming oat in
his left temple. A physician was called
and It Is now thought that he will prob-
ably live. They were both regarded ss
quiet and peaceable young men, end ell
regret the unfortunate tragedy.
THE BRAVE TEXAN.
Who Gave His Life in Defense of a
Southern Woman,
Own Grave at the Command
Negro Soldiers.
A breathless stuinero tor a >
meat prevailed. The command fine WO* 'v#»i
given-a volley rings out and the I
Texan faHa dead to bis gram, amid "
deafening shouts qf the mulUlfdr u*’
behind him the grandest tribute
era chivalry — that no othot aas
under the son rear MB who gtri
their lives to pro toot the hour Ot -on?
known womeu. D- A. Dicxut -
LAS VEGAS BULL
TOWELLING MEN’S D
W THE EARLY D
- *
fowl Methods
of Advi
Fighta by Indian Pant
At tto CsMmsad *1 "First” Mm Tan Hsrs Falk DeaS
IsHlsfimve
A W|| Spill.
Da mas, Tex., April 24.—One pf the
two large tanks at the Waters Pierce Oil
company works sprung « leak Wednesday
afternoon about 8 o’clock.______tanks
have a capacity of 20,000 gallons each.
By the managers’ prompt action ubout
7000 gallons were saved, the loss being
estimated at about 13,000 gallons. The
cellar was flooded and the men worked
knee-deep in the nlL Three of . the em-
ployes, C. 11. Hoffman, G. W. Reeves and
Percy Carter, were overcome while en-
deavoring, to save the oU. the fnmos seem-
ing .to have th® s$m*» effect tLM 3P OWT-,
dose of langlilng-gas w ould have on a den-
tist’s patient Mr. Hoffman is still con-
fined to hla house. When the break oc-
curred. one of the gentleman compared
the sound to that of a rushing train.
Nrwarar, 8. C., April 20 —A little
mound near the cotton mills In Newbury,
8. C., covers the remains of one who haa
left an eternal monument to the South’s
chivalry. His name ts unknown. Im-
mediately after the close of the war the
negro troupe’s of Sherman’s army were
marched by different routes to.Port Royal
end-' dhurleston, there to be disbanded.
The night of which I speak a regiment of
negro troops were encamped in Newbury,
near the railroad depot The town had
beei) plundered and her citizens subjected
to all the indlgulties that a drunken negro
mob could offer. A government train
was then running from a point twenty-five
miles north of Columbia to Greenville to
carry soldiers and refuges as near their
homes as possible. This night as the
train slowed up at the depot It was Imme-
diately surrounded hV a druken, howling
crowd of negro soldiers. On board the
train were two ladies. The negroes
swarmed through the cars like a set of
demons set free from the infernal regions,
wlille white soldiers on board were help-
less and at their mercy. What a place
for two helpless women without friends
or protectors. In the coach with the la-
dles was a soldier, and from his dress and
demeanor one would judge him to be
from Texas. He was tall and stately,
with piercing black eyes, while his
MASSIVE IIKAD OF HAIB ,
The Injunction Was Denied.
Eu Paso, Tex., April 24.—An import-
ant suit has been decided by Judge Maxey
in the federal court, the suit of the El
Paso water c< mpany vs. the city of El
Paso. The company asked for an lnjunc-
tipn to restrain the city from issuln
•txmds for the purpose of raising funds to
have artesian wells bored and building
waterworks. Judge Maxey refused the
injunction, basing his decision on Bren-
hatn vs. water Company, 67'Texas, as
conclusive against the company. The
company appealed to the supreme court.
The cjlty -will proceed at once to erect Its
own waterworks mid bore for water.
tsr
An old convict, just released from
the Auburn penitentiary, boasts of the
fact that he was conducted to that in-
stitution by Grover Cleveland. He
was convictod of murder and sentenc-
ed to‘imprisonment for life at Buffalo
in 1871. “Grover Cleveland was shei*-
Iff at the time of my sonteneo,” ha
says, “and instead of sending a deputy
to Auburn wi^h me he went himself,
saying that ho had never been in tho
state prison and wanted to Improve the
Opportunity. I believe 1 am the only
m n in tho world who has been escort-
ed to prison by a president of the Un-
ited State* The very last paper Mr.
Cleveland signed his name to at Al-
bany as governor Was my pardon to
take effect March. 6, lttlMJ. and here J
am. - v- • *
M.nor Not***.
MAlton. Tex., April 21.—Yesterday W.
M. Arnold and Ben Eppright, colored, go!
•do a difficulty, the funner striking the
latter with a knife, inflirting a painful
but not serious wound on the head. They
w re both arrested and placed under
bond for thuir appearance In court to-
day.
It is rumored that a joint stock company
•s being organized for the purpose of
erecting a large gin and cotton seed oil
mill at this place. This little city Is on a
big boom, real estate being quite active.
A continuous rain lias prevailed here
lor tho last three day* Farmers will not
be able -to work their crops before thfc
latter part of tlie week.
SttuK to Kite no Horn.
Laredo. Tex., April 22.—IV. W. Fly,
ins|>eetor of United States customs, collid-
ed with a couple of petty .Mexican simtg-
gl< r< Sunday, ohe of whom f bowed fight 1
himvo rilJVOT"*^
Bill Nte lectured in 0..g!nnd, Cali-
fornia and the Times rqpypter gave
UkT following unique criticism : “A
pvellnoss in tho person oi
from be-
m
Judijff I.j nffTt lloMff i’odrt.
San August ink, Tex., April 24.—
Judge Lynch held a dark tnntem session
of court Tuesday night Result: Slm-Gor-
r. tt and Jerry Teel were found guilty and
-xecu’ed on the -p<>t. The jail wus torn
Into atonvji and Sim Garrett and Jerry
Teel are dow hanging In front of the
butcher shop, and Col. John H. Brooks
and family ho longer apprehend any dan-
r of being poisoned by them with
rmc.
anil after being welted over the head with
aslxshooter several times Jumped into the j
Uio Grnndo and. pulled for the shore of his
native country, but the current of the
liver was too strong for ids exhausted
condition and he snnk to rise no more.
Tins oilier one succeeded In rulanding him-
self on the Mexican side in safety.
Firmer) Up with Tli.tr Work. 1
Dodd City, Fannin Ca, Tex. April
28 — Fnimers in this section are pretty
well up with their work, which ts a very
fortunate state ol affairs, as Ihe continued
rains of tb$ past week havestopped every-
erything In a farming way.
All eastbrrnnd train* passing through
Dodd City since last Saturday have- been
loaded down with witnesses. jurymen.
ffl£eJ2. for th* federal court crowd and hn
weU became bis brawny face. He plainly
showed that he had been a determined
follower of the lost- cause. In their wild
carouse one of the drunken negroes came
to where the ladies sat and commenced to
offer insults and indignities to the young-
er too revolting In Its nature for rehearsal.
In trying to release herself from his loath-
some embrace she-cried In despair: .“Mv.
Hud. hxtff FhoTrlend; will no one protect
me?” . In a moment a voice was heard In
the rear end of the coach: “Yes, I will
protect you If I die for it” The tall form
of the unknown Texlmj was seen rapidly
approaching atong tho aisle. His eyes
shone in the dim light like those of the
wild beast ready to spring upon its pr-y.
The keen blade of a knife was seen to
glitter above his head and with a mighty
ktaw was buristL to i- the- breast
of the black ruffian. With a wild yell bo
leaped from Ihe car and Jell dead upon
Ihe sidetrack. The stranger quietly
walked out of the coach at the other end,
and kUtpnod a few paces away, umlor
cover of the darkness, and awaited devel-
opments. He had not long to wait. AH
the imps of darkness turned loose
could not have equalled the uproar
and tumult this deed created. Word
flew to ‘ camp that one of their comrade:!
had been murdered by a Confederate sol-
n^r-jTwTTr ruHTwAS■ made for me
train, and for.a few moments It looked as
if all on board would be put to death.
Search was made for the murderer, de-
claring that If found, lie should lie shot at
onoo. The stranger stood but a few feet
away, quietly listening to his death sen-
tence as the soldiers madly rushed by. At
last one declared he had found tho man;
he se zeil one of the officials of the rail-
road, and others coining up, with equal
posit!veiiess swore to his Identity. Vio-
lent hands wero lain upon the Innocent
man, while the drunken mass that crowded
j around him seemed as If they would
crush him to death.
HIS VAIN PLEADINGS
of Innocence wore drowned by the wild
yells Of the surging crowd. Ho vras being
carried away for execution. Where was
the unknown Texan? lie had shown his
courage, now would he waver In the face
of immediate denth? With his hand he
had protected the person of defenseless
woman by dyeing it In the blood of her As-
sailants; would he stAnd by and sea an In-
nocent man die in his stead? With calm
deliberation, without any emotion what-
ever, he made his way to the maddening
t*rqwd and with a loud nolee salcj_: “Turn
this man loose; he Is innocent. X ara the
one who did it. Now do your worst.”
This gave now Impetus to the drunken
Tsrrifle rtflMw e«p rose
Lebanon, Pa, Alf1 '•—At 8
yesterday morning the people throughout
the city were start’ed by*au explosion of
one of the Coicbreok fumsecs Ti*"
were four reports lu quick ^accession.
Buildings were shaken and windows rat-
tled, . The JMknt at thJL.l5.ll*®?. ‘ ‘
was blown out and the sheetlron tow
blown Into the gin Wm. P. Wright, en-
gineer, was knocked down and severely
burned. Thousands of people ran to the
scene of the disaster. The fire depart-
ment was called out and soon extin-
guished the ftnmea The damage to the
furnace will amount to several thousand
dollars.
T
Vcg>» was once a
wBdbull-tig’hts, but most <
Burret
A lO-Yaer-Old Shootlsr.
Indianapolia Ind., April
special from Brazil, Ind., says:
35.—A
Yaster*
/
day forenoon while the pupils from room
‘ mm.
No. 9 school were on the play-grouud
recess a 10-year-old boy, Ben Lorboy, pr<^
duoed a revolver and shot little Cora BfS*
bach, sbout the samo age, the ball taking
effect In the hand and the aide of the faee.
The wound Is not fatal, but bled profuse-
ly. The reason for the assault it that the
girl had previously given the teaeh£.J*A
formation of his misconduct He left Ike-
ground at once after the-shooting eod
city marshal Is In pursuit.
Tooa( Lady Drops Doad.
Galena, IH. , April 28—-^uoxUy A*
ter noon a party of young ladlea started
out on foot for their homes In SInshisro
Mound, Wia After spending a pleasant
day with a frtepd at Hazlegreen, In the.
midst of a lively conversation and nsttoh
merriment. Miss Murray, one of Ifce/niodt
vivacious of ■the party, suddenly stopped,
threw up her hand* and toll dead lu- the
road. It Is supposed she ruptured a blood
vessel while indulging In afitof laughtw
which'a humerous remark Of her ay
panton had provoked.
The Damsel to Bwdjr ffUlitSfi
Pittsburg, Pa. April 26.—Mre. EUsa
Lins, a widow who resides In West Bell-
vue, Allegheny county, Wednesday en-SC,
tcred suit to recover 820.000 dAinagcs from
Edward Mlniek for breach of promise......
She alleges that an engagement was one-
ed on Saturday,’' si
drummer to a Kansas C;
man. “Every drummer w<
Mexico would make if i» po:
Laa Vegas Friday night c
morning. Of course he cc
" fhere io wl rfieis every flgl
could count on his not n
when it was possible for h
the ring before the fun begi
“The bulls were usually j
ers, aud the spjrt was n
Did you ever hear how the
advertised? Well, it was a
The day preceding each 14
Indians of the locality wot
through t le town and inh
rounding country, and by d
, pantomine convey to the pec
to formation of the coining tig
™ “It was amusing to see ti
and observe tltfe peculiar wa\
vcrlised the tight. Most of
on their war-paint, and a sti
Ing tlpn would l«ave ima>j
Wefts oat to piling and torti
“The bull-ring was right i
and the lig’its were always
*‘^ronuffd. In fact, it was <
"■quite the proper thing to t
bull-ring qud witness the
hones and slaughter of bulb
“There v. as one fcatujre
iigbtx- tiiat was uot pleasant
anticipate or wiinesj. Tin
wefe succjeeded by a row,
guns and ki.ives were used fi
one could tell jiist why the i>
precipitated with.such r°guh
theyuAialiy r< suited in son
eeivii^r juurc lead tliaiehe to
aiul Ji#e.
“I presume the sight of
in the ling inflamed some of
taton and left them in a kidi
These .itilc side issucM did m
- render the sport any less pofu
- s trifling unn%~eburageous,
had not been for tlie march o
hen the bull ring Won d a
^drawing card at Las \ egas.
tcred into Oct 1. t»98. that since that ah»
lias remained single and unmarried and la
ready and wilting to marry yet;
fendAnt .^absplutelv^ ref use*, Jq.
rr-
I"'"'
th^ de-
rm, tract. Mr. Mlniek Is a man of wealth
and the suit lias caused a senwrilofi.' ",
at 1’ariS.
-•
Heavy bnmt(m Hoed For.
Gainesvvme-, 'Frx . A-prrlb 2*.—1, D.
[>*nenbcrg of (’.rayson county filed suit
In the district court here yesterday against
!tc Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad,
company for 875.000 os damages occasion-
ed by the loss of his right hand, whloh he
got caught between two can wUUe coup-
ling, them st Whitesboro last December
whlf« in the employ of saki company as
conductor of a freight train.
SbMtlvf WscapA
Mas Wall Tex, April 91.—Tfca sday
Phil Man son and John Sherrod,' (Wo fann-
Ilmkrin ii.', Fuat Cut OIL
Whitesboro, Tex., April 22.—A
brakenian, “name unknown,” bad his
foot cut off here Sunday morning In trying
to throw a switch In front of an engine.
He was riding on the pilot of tb« engine
and Jumped M to throw the switch, whan
he fell with one foot across the track and
the engine trucks ran over It He was
sant to tha hospital at SedallA
A drumhead court martial was convened
and lie was condemned to be Immediately
shot While be was being tried word (lew
like lightning over town that a white man
was iw im snot, ana every negro that
could possibly go cams rashlng’lnto camp
Bapr Wills Hto Fithw.
Paris, Tex, April 28.—Barrington
'HCnffitaKI Who was slii.r bybls eoh Mon-
day died Tsoaday qlght Tho boy had
been ln»*haJtor some time and waakopi
eouflnod, but managing to escape bo oo-
oorod a londo*1- pistol, and whan hla fa-
ther came within roach gave him Its eoo-
tenta
UmVmtlm Court-Martial P-gup \
New York, April 93.—Tbo'chdll
and aurfounded the bravo Texan, offering .?°.wn!^n HeColla of tbo J
TMm every liuall and indignity
wicked 1 souls could Invent Tho iragfb
Women outdid the men In rejoicing over
Urn fate of the -prisoner. Even the blood-
thirsty and cruel Queen Esther could not
have rejoiced mprt over her captives. At
lOiOfr eepwijhrwar ghton thw eendeinueil
and Ordered to dig hla gravx Selecting a
ipot near the brow of the hfil. he pon-
mebeed 1|SS kdartren4Iag jook of digging
hie own ffrffrw • Spadeful after apodofu]
was thrown hto nktfi Qum toft (s
rattojiod: Then , standing erect and •froteb-
iag «wt Mi afwut hn flMdr *T «# randy. ”
Will Smother the Fire. Jg-
Cheyenne, Wy. T.. April 24. —Jt haf
been derided to smother the tire raging
in the Union Pacific No. 4 at Rock
Spring-,, and hundreds of in£n ate at
work closing tha entrance. Tfoey-vrill
main closed for Rt least four montbt and
should the fire not than be subdual the
mine will be gtxxlerl. Of tho flfteeti moot
ijUUHNl bv the llriLqploslnn. .all bj^ tfW;-
will recover. No further lost of llfe l* .
reporte.L Some twenty ChlnaDaeu
imprisoned jn tho mine ........ >. ;^ri
W
“There were no theatres in
Iry we worked in thoso t
da«oe-hotioes were numerous
remark iucideiitaliy tlmt no
travelling man eyep v.sjt,
places, especially if he bad th
m at heart. He wi
to,be sent whei-e g
/'*>V Witrtri, ir cab
jiia kind.
**When j we struck a tow
tttore was k scarcity of ami
we usually gathered around
l ad toyed with a pack of can
tesential that a man should f
means of killing time, and c;
ing^at times fills the bill. Still
fdOeter was afflicted with enr
carrying my grips into-the
towns. Maybe this was due
atmosphere, possibly to the cha
•- Hum Mid IUJ«r Ur«wi)«<A ,
Atoka, L T.. April 2A^-Chapay.LoJjHk^
a full-blood Clx clow, in fHiiigillj tilllt
two other parties aliempled to ftmlMld*
die itoggy < n horseback Monti
at Nelson's Crossing, a point thltti
Irntles southeast of tltls place,
horse proved unequal to tue dec
his strength, and horse and
drowned. His companions" naiTO^fh
cape<t the same fate. The bodjt kgs*-.
yet been recovered.
?
Will Xik) a Boston of |C
Chicago, April 24. —-'Flifff,
paper hanger* w ho struck a^Afftf
duct Ion of wages thirteen wspSg
still out The arbitrating c<l
the employers yesterday, buj
bring about any Settlement of
ty and the then expect to be (Mlfjttffi
maindcr of^the season. Mnafrof:
doing work on their own sceod^
stmosphei
, the in huh
“While I have travelled ti
'ttf'tnlb's by stage, ami throng)
the toughest under,the
_fe never to <1 myself i
Tilango^ from the crowd I w«
'j- have had a good many thril
fvr' perlenceS in tuow storms and
C^^fltars, but the whistle of butll
rounded In my ear.”
*--•——-—
h “How A,r Yon»
r: - JxThff lack of conveutlonality i
(j^Pffetbam’ii. court frequently re
Prr*me amusing situ at Ions. TI
, u<Jiy the judge was lu hia room
-Ptfriqnd building hearing an at
A, C. Harris'm an imports
Fotir Colored HtintneQ
Balt 1 mo he, April 93.--Tb4
E- L. Brluifield. Capt Jeha-aj
Rappahannock, Va.. sank ofl[
Poiut Saturday anti mate ft*
Seaman John llarkum, John
captain was rescued Horn the
Of the schooner In iui uncoosclou^l
tlon. ■’
SS^v-'
lifeaews. v
«tho Brooklyn nurr
ptefensd afe the ones 1
cruel treatment aqd vlolatloae«£
for the geveroment ef the nafy.1*
ffeen the d-pr opened and in
man from Harrison
r iresham’s oid home
was a well preserved a]
an independent farmer. L
.vet), was round and cbul
8 brftad white hat; he wi
roller, and hia clothing an
jd; fallow ©lay. He spi
fcr when inside the do<
t noticing Attorney H
gther occupants of the
Gresham
L now air you,' jedget
pj fliefoOteF I was in town on
Muineiat aod I knew the folk
pm woiM (ike «i» hear from
JTOD* opUo aee you a lltUe wh
^torpey HgrrU halted at a
t?®* Mglwront, when, wltl
• he was ah
» point; ha looked at l
i ttMrontr who had 1
klehM.lmd thenbeoko
JCuahal Ooawfy to hn
apparently 4
w-
K
•smeitt
Cikuso, 1114 April tt talM
Police inspector Iberi
to dose ail peon
The order went v Into
;. - (
fanitt
An! tor > i Null'
-1' *
t vA'
with t]
'T'
■if
(
1 *M|
' ■ - V . .. ^U*t
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» - 11
vn -jUr-r:- J*r *r*'
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j.
*r. -'a l .tv-.'/N
^y,Aisrhat»rt- ^ , ^ ~ -y —
wwa- ■
»en*v.- »
-!* 4 . ii 1AAV 'A'
A-a.wi'v
W .. ■■
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Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1890, newspaper, May 1, 1890; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1116521/m1/2/: accessed May 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.