Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 6, 1890 Page: 2 of 8
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9. W. GRAVES, PaoreieTo*.
fttham
Te;;as.
Th« part that boodMag play. 1.
Municipal and legiaUliva affair, would
Mtound the country if it oould bo
knowu just bow much of the public
indebtedueo. i* due to oorrupt in-
flueuoea
It «. really excruciating to bear the
every-day office hunter protest that he
”1. not a candidate for that or any
other office in the sense of entering in
to a ^ramble for place, but ’’etc.:
when everybody know, that he would
move heaven. *od earth to secure the
nomination.
Ous aavy is not very young. but il
•wetn. to have .truck a streak of growth
that is opening the eye. of our foreign
relative.. Of oou-sq this is somewhat
encouraging to, national pride, though
just what use wb have for a navy in
these times of international arbitration
it is hard to telL
Minnie McGrath Shoots Edwin Firth
for Alleged Seduction.
Adelbert Brown of Indian. Does His Town for
Thirty Thousand Cold Dollars.
Dsmt* Her Lut and Elope* With Her Flat tova-A
Unien Trauurer Gone Wren..
fr one half the energy that is dis-
played io the selfish pursuit or amuse-
ment were devoted to the improv6me.it
of sooiety and in providing for the
rainy days of this life there would be
a noticeable increase of reai ouyoyJk,,*
of Itfe and the world would be vastly
improved for all. , *
Thb average man overburdened
with dignity can fall harder by^terZ
ml* ba-----
piagonla banana peel pr a slippery
walk than any other ipdividval ex-
cepting a highly respected bank cash-
ier who ••borrows” a few dollars of the
bank’, fund, to take a gambHiig deal
in the grain market.
->■
- 1,081 newspaper is that one
which gives it. readers the mpst in-
formation and the most enjoyment.
The advertising columns are by no
mean, the loast important feature to
be considered. A prosperous commu-
nity advertise, its advantages by its
liberal support of. He representative
papers.
rfat it
Tno\, JL Y., Jan. 30. Thurads) last
a woman giving the name of Minnie Mc-
<*rath applied to the police In thU <*fy - f>.r
•aalslsnre to find Edwin Ffrth. 4ho -he
said had wronged her. She said that she
resided in Chicago and that she had there
secured a divorce from her husband in
order to inarrv Firth. Si* months ago
Hrth suddenly left Chicago and she
bought a five-shooter bn+Wng- pistol and
followed him to Troy. She wrote a note
to him asking him to meet her at her
rooms iu River street. He did not com.
and she started out to tin.) him. She met
him on ^Congress street and followed him
to the Corner of Broadway and Fifth
avenue where she shot him in the head.
!*he then started for polil-e headquarters
to surrender herself, but wAs overtaken
>y an officer. To Superintendent Willard
“he told the same story that she had nar-
rated Tim rnday about Firth'wronging her.
She was taken to jail. Firth was carried
to his residence. He has a wife and two
children. His wound Is not regarded as
fatal. Dr. Finder extracted the bullet
Hrth denies that he ever promised to
marry the woman. It has been learned
that the woman’s maid in name was
Mamie Drath and that her married naim
was Mrs. Henry Warndr. She has re
for a number of years. HU victims are
coming in by the score and have claims
for from S*»0 to $250. The departed
worked many -ebonies. His most ahame-
ful trick was pliiyod on Mr*. Cooden,
who-e hu-haml died not long ago leaving
a life insurance |M>lley of 81500 In the
New Ki.gl.nd Life lusi.nu.ee company,
for which Brown .a- agent /!U» monov
'•oming through |.i- hands Brown per-
-uaded the sorrowing widow to loan it to
him on his unsecured notes. Now she Is
penniless with four rhildrep to support.
■Vveral Insurance coinpanies represented
l.v Jj.ui are out about $1000 each.
A rigtirl.1. FMTior.
\kw Orleans, Jan. 27. _
day aftsnssm Mr. <teor*W W Dupre,
editor on the Mate-, met Major Nat Bur-
hank, the managing editor of the New
Orleans Picayune, in the large barroom
under the St. Charles hole!. For several
days past Burbank has been publishing
paragraphs In the picayune severely re-
flecting on the manhood of Mr. Dupre
because be had refused to tight a duel
witli the editor of the Item after denounc-
ing the Item severely,
Mr. Dupre had -aid that he would give
Burbank satisfaction, but would not digi
nify him by lighting a duel. When Dupre
?aw Burbank he walked up to him wifh
arl offensive paragraph posted on a sheet
of paper in his hand and slapped Burbank
three thnes In the face with his own para-
graphs. After the third blow he pulled
Ills pistol und galled on Burbank to draw
hut Burbank thro* up his arms and ex-
Hahned: *1 am unarmed.” Mr. Duore
hen put Id- pistol back In his pocket and
left the. place. The affair created a great
deal of excitement. 6
SI ruck a River.
LeaiiVille, Col., Jan. 27.—Saturday
after the men engaged in the drift of’
To estimate lightly^ what it ooats
New Yorkers, and ‘.hose in the vieinity
of the city, to support seven tracks,
00* might put the expenses at about
•a.000,000 a year. It costs about a
quarter of a million to keep the tracks
in order, and about one million dollars
we epent In car fare to get to and
from the track. -
' ."‘n,y "anidr. She has re »ftor the men engaged in the drift
^ Hr
a Nr»,„-P.r K,„.,r«.. r Sent Up ‘“I'1 , ,‘aS‘‘(1 ‘•“’y from
Philadelphia. Jan. 30 —Dr. William * r‘Ver ronnlDB out of
15 Tir “ T:::
indictments charging bln. with the larceny \ZZ an^tha/wj th ^ WaS.enCUm-
of money furnished Mm to purchase Dost- I ^ tb* °P*n,n8 was
*ge .tump. (or the mailing department .,r b,r lhe sh<^* 11 b"r*< Uirnugl, a thin
•he weekly P,e„. ’ The ^e,7d uld m « “ >»™
ged that his mUapproprlatlomH has been the rule hcmt/ifor* i ,v
“i'" I'* '*''"''-'' ‘"“M SL~I?f '» pumped oiit” In ^
The Marquise de (lalliffet, one of the
most beautiful women in Paris, is suf-
fering from a strange form of insanity.
Bhegoes into eofifYulsiona whenever
•he sees her face ip a mirror. Usually
women are affected the other way. and
in twelve cases out of e dozen would be
hysterically mad if there were not a
mirror in the hduso. i
f i I • -
and 80000. Evidence was presented-and
the case given to the jury, but before a
verdict had been returned counsel for
Bradley withdrew his plea of not guilty
and entered one of guilty. Judge Riddle
then sentenced Bradley to fivp years and
six months Implsonmeiit in the Easter
penitentiary.
Sea Itrjirat In Sight. -
, Nkw Yonk. Jan. 30.—Aj 1 o’clock
i gS 11 s a
t.on was on the head, and saw coming to- | when met by a police officer has 1^,
Stabbed In 11.*. Back.
Chicago, Jan. '2s.—George Rogers, a
stranger who had been in the city several
days, was stabbed In the back four times
by an unknown assailant on West Madison
s.’reet just across the river last night and
will dip. He claims to have met a man In
front of a lodging notlse who attacked
him withbut provocation. Patrick Dunn,
JIM STARS DEAD.
The Notorious Husband of Bell Stwrr IMye
in • CeJL
Fobi Smith, Ark.. Jan. 28.—Jim Starr,
the notorious desperado who was shot
nine miles from Anjinore, L T.. last Tues-
day by the pos-e of United States mar-
shals, died in the United States Jail Sunday
night of his wounds, Jim sprang Into
prominence as a criminal aud desperado
about two years ago when he became the
third husband of the notorious Belle Starr
and has since made quite a record as an
all-round criminal. He was conscious to
the last and died without a murmer, being
buried yesterday in the potters’ field.
f*- *** A.* plosion.
PUJihtnjT, Pa, Jan.' -»._a gahg of
Italian, Poles and Hungarians, employed
In widening the rtjad bed of the Shamokin,
Sun bury and i^wishurg railroad from a
single to a double track road were at work
yesterday In a cut near Paxiuoa, where
blasting the rock was necessary. Shortly
before noon three blasts were set, and the
gang of nine men retired to await
the explosion. Unknown to them only
two of the blasts exploded, and the nine
men had gone Lack into the cut and were
at work shoveling away the dirt and brokeu
rock when the third blast exploded and
the men were hurled < Iu all directions.
One of them was picked up dead. An-
other had his chest ’ crushed so severely
that depth is a question of only a short
time. Pour were dug from the mass of
debris with broken arms or leg>j and two
of these it is thought will die. The other
three men eseajmd with slight Injuries.
It is impossible to give names, as the men
went by numbers. The Injured were
taken to the^miners’ hospital in Ashland.
Railroad Wr^ck.
Ivdiahapoms, IntL, Jail. 28.—Monday
morning op the Monon route near farmed,
a village sixteen miles north of this city,
another of those death-dealing railroad
wrecks occurred, in which seven men.
women, and children were literally crushed
to pieces nnd then burned to a crisp bo-
* their remains could be rescued from
burning debris. There were many
passengers and employes injured. A lady
passenger named Mrs. Oldham was res-
cued from a burning car with a child
clasped to her bosom. It was almost im-
possible to keep her from rushing back
into the Jaws of death to rescue her two
small boys. She appealed most pitifully
to bystanders io rescue them. Mrs. Old-
ham said: ‘’Thank God I have you left,
but I have two other children In that fire
God be merciful.” Her two boys were
iZSi * heav?. s!°ve atross their, bodies,
both dead.
Origin of tho Wealth of tho Aatora,
the Vanderbilts, and the Lorlll-
eros. »’
An old lohabjt&nt writes io the New
York Times: John Jacob Astor hud
his store iu Vesey street in the build- ^
lng in whieh Dr. Hulleck lived. Fit/.
Green Halleck, the doctor’s uon, was
one of Astor’s clerks. 1 Old Astor got
his start in life by .hiring out to
furrier to beat fqrs -koepiug the moths
out ef them—at $1 a day. He was j
economical and saving, and presently
began to buy cat furs nnd muskrat
furs, and when he had accumulated a
lot of them ba took them to England
and sold them at a large profit. Then
he established his own business here,
and extended his connections west-
ward and northward until he became
the largest dealer in the country.
Commodore Vanderbilt was at this
time running a-“perry-auger” (pefi-
agua —a small f«irry-boat carrying tw«s
masts and a leeboard) between quaran-
tine station and the city, and was be-
coming very popular with boatmen and
others who were thrown in his way.
Fulton & Livingston owned an exclu-
sive charter to run steamboats between
New York and Albany, and the monop-
oly was paying immerisely. Two old
Jerseymen then started" an opposition
line, but as they could not run direct
between New York and Aibany they #ol
around the difficulty by going from
Now York Lo Jersey City and making
vhat the starting point for Albany.
They encountered all sorts of diffi-
culties, however, the monopolists go-
ing so far as to willfully run their
boats down and otherwise crippling
them, and they were threatened with H *
bankruptcy. . :_ .. ‘T1..
One of the proprietors was at Now
Dorp one day, when he asked old Mr.
(fuion if lie know of a man who wan
competent to take hold or their line ........
and make a success of It. 'Yes ’ said
‘] k,lt,w f'w.ii u man. His’naipe
ir (Tirneel Vanderbilt. He’ll take
your boats to the mouth of hell if you
want him to.’ -That’s just the man I
want, whs the response, and in a little
while the bargain was concluded , and
Cornelius Vanderbilt took CRnrge oF,
i "
the
in 5
pliU
ocas
Item
be in
spp]
wet*
Was I
that
Intel
sgaii
sou.
lowe
was
two-
ioll,
nient
in th
f
,,
V
I
!
.bee
cov
clti
lor
wh(
auc
the
wff
A hei
The time was, and Rot so very long
ago. when the prosperity of the oouh-
try was governed by the affaire of the
Atlantic states: the time came when
odtton was king, and then corn was
said to be the ruling monarch. Time
has changed all this, and oo one seo-
Uon, industry nor product rules the
material welfare of the nation.
TU Y ’ -4.
Positive people
■ pleasant people -kb
with. There is a commodity called
are not always
comer trr nofft&gV
- '• tr
courtesy that costs nobody« penny,
but it is an exce lent and profitable
thing to mix with ihe every-day affairs
of life. It had bejen the financial and
social making of thousands of men.
and the lack of it has caused untold
poverty and misery.
f>OMK great improvements la trans-
porting lumber from t^e joreata . to
■ ^ow York and Boston, and other
Atlantio seaboards will soon be made.
The builder of the Joggins raft made
so much money out of the eeoond at-
tempt to float the lumber down by sea,
that two companies have been formed
for the purpose of transporting all of
the lumber needed in this way.
*
The subject of irrigation bas^ for
many years reoeived a great deal of
attention among congressmen, but
mainly that Of irrigating the aliment-
ary canal. The hope is general la the
west that there will be a fair amount
of time devoted in future to the opn-
sideration of measures for flooding
good, generous sized irrigating ditches
in the boundless prairie regions.
posed was some lumber from a schooher
smith of the station. On a closer view he
discovered It was a sea serpent. The bead
appeared to be like a pig fish or sea rob-
blu, and was about sixty qr seventy feet
on#- There wan a iar^e hump on its
back. It went to the north slowly like a
snake. It was seen aliout 100 yhnls from
the beach. It came in over the bar and
went out again. It was seen by four of
the crew and they will vouch' for it
" -T- . ' ’ --—------
F r,t ^n.d Lmat Choice.
-—lasTirmini V v Jmi. bOj Mm -
Norma,, ‘Baughton has eloped.-wiTi^
first husband, a man named Finch. Finch
has Just been released from the .state
prison after serving five years. Mrs.
Hnughton leaves'her'second husband and"
two children behind her. She is 35 ye6rs
old and is good looking.
when met by a police officer; has been
lo<ked up as he told coutradictoiy «*torie-'.
It Killed III* JWuthor.
FHirAoo, III. Jan. 27.—Frank Block
alias Woodruff, confined In the county
Jail awaiting trial 6n an indictment for
horse stealing and complicity In the' Cro-
nin case, received a dispatch yesterday
from San Jose, CaL, announcing the
.death pt his mother, She had been more
or less of gn ■invatid for some time,
but especially* so since visiting her son
but especially*' s
here In prison.
Military May Ue Needed.
The A’ronln Trouble.
•Chicago, Jan. 29.—One of the wit-
nesses for the defense in the Crouin case,
Robert Gibbons, was shot last night by
I olice ( aptain Schuettler, who has been
prominent in the prosecution. The shoot-
ing was the result of an altercation In a
saloon opposite Hie city hall, where the
two men met by accident at the drinking
bar. Gibbon* is dangerously wounded,
the bulla* having entered hfs left breast
two inches above the beatf; Each of the
men were accompanied by several friends.
I hose with Gibbons were Thomas Lynch,
a wealthy distiller, AJderman McCormick
and ex-Policeman Redmond McDonald,
the latter of whom teslified on the stand
to the alibi for the suspect. Daniel Cough-
lMh Accounts of the nffair are conflict-
ing.
Bla< kuxilled Ills llrnefitetor.
Kaxsasas City, Mo., Jan. 30.—Ar-
thur, Blake, the alleged adopted son of
Arthur Gorham, themillionaire cattle
dealer of Kingsley, Kan., on trial at Kings
.....w. on iriai at Kings-
ley yesterday for attempting to blackmail
Mr. Gorham, pleaded guilty to the charge.
Sentence was reserved.
Me ftklpped with the Kunda.
Kansas City, Mo., Jan, 30.—Christo-
uir D. Woods, treasurer of this Switch-
mens’ Union No. 4 of this city, {has disap-
peared with'81000 of the union's money.
He was a switchman in the employ of the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railway.
Or course there’s money in printers’
log, but the iqan who makes the most
indigent use of it gets the most
money out of it It does not>ay to
advertise nomethlng ydU have not got
or anything you oan not Jo and do welL
The man who advertises a ft-aud must
have a -good” fraud, and he who ad-
vertises bargains in goods must be
/repared to satisfy his customers- Any
-dvertiser should undertake to present
soiae sort of a claim for patronage.
* >
Mpotter* and CondiMitor*.
Kansas Citv, Ma, Jan. 30.— It is
stated that twenty-eight freight and pas-
senger conductors on the Hannibal and
St. Joe railway are to be discharged at the
red of the month by reason of revelations
made recently in reports of “spotters.”
Three Chluumen HiioWed l/nder.
•DTJTchflat. Cal.. .Ian. 30. — Three Ohi*
namen were killed by a snow slide yester-
day at Green \'allev. on the American
river. t)ne body was carried Into the
river and has not lieen found.
Munjr Creditors Mourn HI* Rera t*r*
Laporte, I ml., Jan. 80—Adalbert
Brown, attorney, insurance, loan fnd retf
1 estate agent, ha^ skipj^d for parts un-
J known, leaving creditors to the amount of
830.000. He has b6ei» in business here
is great excitement here over lot jumpers
and bloodshed is feared. A crowd of over
300 citizens pulled it house down on .Main
street Monday night and then’ burned the
wreck. Two serious fights occurred over
disputed lots yesterday and both sides are
organizing. There is trouble ahead and
the interference of the military will In all
probability!*1 necessary.
H»g and Cattle Outlook.' i, ,
Kansas Citv, ^ Mo., Jan. 29,—The
American IAV£ Stock Commission com-
pany has received reports from 150 coun-
ties in the seven principal live stock pro-
ducing states relative to the supply of
hogs and cattle. The reports show a
moderate increase In number of hogs and
cattle in the country, and a decided im-
provement in condition over that of a rear
ago. _ ,
Wyoming Cattle Doing Well.
Cheyenne, Wy. T„ Jan. 28. -Many
inquiries have beeu received regarding the
Condition of range, cattle, reports having
gone out giving th6 impression that dis-
astrous storms prevailed. Wyoming has
far almost escaped the prolonged se-
verity of cold weather and heavy snow
storms. Cattle geherally are in an un-
usual good condition.
, ‘ "Hr " ‘
Twrt Hoi Blown t« ACnmt.
riTTSBVHn, I*a., Jan. 22.-A.By the ex-
plosion of nitro-glycerini ' near Alton,
Bradford, county, about noon yesterday,
William H./McHenry and AJcx Connor,
two well known toi|>ed<> men, were blown
to atomx The men were unloading 825
quarts of glycerine.
Cora May Morris Acquitted.
Danville, Va.. Jui. 2^-Mrs. Cora
ay Murrlg.of Riddsville. N. - who Toy
several days past has iieen on trial for her
life at Wentworth, county soat«rf Roek-
Itigham, chargrd with the murder of her
husband by poison, was acquitted yester-
day. The Jury remained out bu.t a short
time before bringing in a Verdict of not
smilty. Mrs. Morris is a handsome young
woman and of good family. .Her case has
exeited great interest throughout this sec-
tion of Virginia and Northern Carolina.
Bruce and Marrl*on.
Washington, Jan. 29. — Ex-Senator
, -------.-.w.., —r.x-nenator
Brpee called upon the president yesterday
and accidentally the race question In the
the line.' ilie monopolists tried every ’
possible means to prevent the lino from
doing business in New York, and at
1,18l Put a sheriff on board with in-
structions to arrest Vanderbilt if ho
siiould attempt to move .the steamer
from the wharf. Vanderbilt pot all
ready to po. and then.stood by with qn
ax. ;iiid whan Abm-w-hoeis had bn7-1111 to
revolve and there was a good struin cm
the hawser hd up with his ax and cut
the hawser qn I steamed aw, y to Al-
bany with the sheriff on bonrd. A
eontlouation of his vigorous policy
finally broke uiAihe Kuiton <Jk Livinp-
ston monopoly and esUblisboi the op-
position line on a profitable basis.
Vanderbilt's daughters were a wild
kind of girls. They were perfectly at
home everywhere on Staten island—-
and were very popular. 1 used to see
them in a grocery over there, sitting
and swinging thoir feet
aud talking to th© young fellows who
were chaffing them.
The Lorillards h:„i H snuff and to-
bacco business „nd they* ma^tl a pood
Jeal of Tironer mit oT it. ’ Thera were
three brothers of them Jncob. mill \ ,
1 etoi. ntpl t.eorge. Jacob had a '
l.iitcher-shop up near the Bowery the-
aler, I eU*r that ams the Dutch of ftr
t *im to be Pierre after it had boon
timlisplahted into French Kin| a few
montlis -IV,ter and fieorge werp the
snuff an.) t„b ecu dealers. After thoy"
got wealthy nothing would do but old - ’
Imrillard must have a carriage and a
eont-of-iu ms He chose for his
1 |l ‘u, ,hlli niiMle the people
iaugh so he cTiangpd it after a
w h tie, puttfng-ain.- in pi aw*. “QulJ
rides.’’ which means “At whm do you
iaugh? His , tobacco store" was in
fr
i
m •• * M” 1 IA
Chatham Etrerf
Knotth When He Didil Try
Driving over the hills of Western
Jersey, a reporter stopped, at a lonely
little cabin, in front of which an old
man was chopping wood, and inquired
Uho distance to Anthony. The lank
and aged citizen straightened up and
aLUmintAr) to r.,.,l., u~ a. i
B ‘ “■OV/ 11 ovi
attempted Ui ref.iv. Mo got asTar’ as
^M-t-t-ttl’ when his face grew red
south was mentioned. Mr. Bruce told
the president that he thought the salva-
tion of the south tfhd the negroes Would
beisecured by education. 'The president
expressed warm Interest In the race ques-
tion, which he said had given him more
trouble than any thing else since he be-
came president. He hoped the trouble
would be peaceably settled.
Admitted to frnlAt* ,
Philadelphia, Fa. Jan. 29.-i-Tbe
last will and testament of the late Adam
Imrepaugh; the showman.-was admitted
to probate lu tlm office of th# registrar of
Mills yesterday. t T
' Irrigation Canal.
Denver, t©»., Jan. 28.—W. C. Brad-
burry A Co., railroad contractors of Den-
ver, have Just awarded the contract for
the construction of twelve large reservoirs
and the Colorado Land and Water com-
pany irrigating canal. This is the largest
and longest irrigation canal In the world,
being 225 miles long and wllt lrrlgate
500 000 acres of land In' the Arkansas
... >*iiu m me Arkansas
i««!!ey,^ r" ,>u<,bl° nnd <he Kansas
‘ *• Two thousand teams and 3000 men
will go to^work immediately.
/ A Maniac’* Aot.
New York, Jam 29.—While Insane
yesterday morning a Bohemian cigar
maker flung his 4-year-old son from the
fifth story window of his apartment In Pitt
eU’M was seriously Injured,
Botb> father and child were tak6u to B«l-
lav.OO hospital. [
waa thoroughly mad now, nnd his dt»-
tortions were reW|y suggestive of u
?uddi,ref ttpopl<ixv- <>bl fellow
sudden y gave ft up. and brolte out
^ilhout any difficulty: “Dem ye
teliVvm” a Thy° 11 ^ thTe af0re 1
y*- The reporter drpvo fin.
* BaaRliai Bchretlsa.
A man’s dearest friend is his wife
_,A rhte * dearest, friend is bar mother
Slnceeaoh of the trio loves one of the threw
WS*S£S th0 who,e thr**,OT*
rn<,n*u’r who dares
"Wife’! e
me; mother %iftta
wr.
whs’s in lore with his wife.
His wlfs Wouldn’t be tu cyisteaoa
I A Bad Rrrar. ;'*■*
“See herb, Lyons, you’ve rained aa V
in this acodunt of the ball 1 said that ^
*n uiis account of the ball i said that
*Vra Bunksrton, the famoiia Isoturw I
OB dress Wore nothing that waa*wL 1
markable,’] You’ve pat
That #■
on dfon ______ __i
, -----a’( You’ve put it ‘lira. '»
•Wore noth leg. That wag rsmwWkue
You ma go to the cashier and gdtjwm
■oney. We oae’t stand ^
1 WO orpund here "-Lila,
V
■
A
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Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 6, 1890, newspaper, February 6, 1890; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1116656/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.