The Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
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Vol. XX.
Graham, Texas, Friday, January 24, 1896.
No. 25
lawyer, in wrjtiog to us about the ' qumng, "What is a Cyclone?
gMachine
in the pit of the stomach and dou-
i
Ar
•A
democrats who favuted the tax to
recogqize that the larif must con-
somelyBulit,
$
Ufa storm—man him-
81
of
X
h
A
A
road and every other political ques-
mony on the lauf which he con-id-
to follow them.
When the demo-
r.
I
lower aeroertolhe next lot atfd hioww up
ACrza
pondcnt Gov. Gibbd to-night said:
favored.
It is safe to predict that
he tari of 1897 or 1898, the one
hind me, for this campaign at least.
neither attor
ney
congress wilLbe lower than that, of
and all he asks, is, when the gover-
be kepf on svgar, but the general
5
J,
■ =*
obeE no.
YOVNA}
you.
It usually happens, too, that she
/ "1
isness.
id-puHs down the blinds;
I
use
Xt •
<
81
ADELPHI LODGE
Y
lea
K.‘ OF’ E
i
Oceasihnally a teacher discovers
a
haired correspondent of the Dallas
hear of the nt range
‘.‘Did you
busy bag killing now, and there is
ever
-
chief executive for re-election but
GRAHaM,
TEXAS.
of the granite pave-
tb
/
I
hey carried away.
*
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e.
J
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-ebr
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um"
em'anar
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cratio party is defeated it will be
recognized on a basis of honest,
U
t
ring which whines like a lost
andering through Chicago;
dog which strikes . like a cal.
-4,
—
i, ’
republicans and silver men demo-
cruis.
This is the view of a very intelli
gentman and a careful student of
[ author and' finisher. He made it
whie serving out his sentence in
the “pen,"and designed touching a
tender chord io the governor’s heart
. presentation.......The story is
up two churches,in Dallas and then
hepped over T the Free Thinkers
Leog*+'-fbin-e zhah dresses a
At first promises shade and
ing breetes, soon bursts on
i of the young with (be fure
—Parties iof the ruture.
A prominent Texas democrat and
4
1
I ITS MOW
NSION,
DICATOR
ON RELEASER,
useful devices eve
ng machine.
)
4
>—-
\ i
I
4.
— What Isa Cyclone. s
Many of our exchanges are in-
She ha, it in store,
■WFfrtrrfr she, nonn
a a small duty will
A"°o THING - PUSH IT AtONG
mbling promoters are determined
7 have a candidate for governor
gainst the present incumbent,
wo of the members of the “Flor-,
(la Athletic Club” are now spoken
a rare gift of condensation in 1
child at school. One teacher in
silver men were in a hopeless mi-
nority in the house, both in the
democratic and republican ranks.*
The democrats have a decided ma-
important an individual will ever
have any of the happenings that
teach.
She means well, oh, bless her,
yes; but bte lil very "wearing" to
mortals who come in her way and
have mislaid their- wings.—Phila-
delphia Times. -c
heah and bon’d in heb'n.”
Thirty nine members of the pre-
sent congress served in the South-
ern army, and sixty-seven served
on the Union side.
... * ,
'gaper the whom it bus goes
saling avovnd to (be newspaper of-
fice to make a kick and protest that
he has been uojeetly offeoded and
damaged, but let the paper give
tempest. Tne serpetft winds
hisjwar toroogh-the gayfoliage
and. beautiful flowers, asthmighhe
— DENTIBTS.
F. LEWIS,
— DENTIST—
... a.a/2 -r . 111. free wool and other raw materials
_— ------or deet h ue acs The republicans would
f
i
Intemperance,' like other view,
isdeceitul andtaeductive, Mst^y
young menarechormed and cheated
- by it. It often presents a beautiful
! wreck of democracy in the recent. Their editors have never been hit
' elections, says that parties will soon in the pit of the stmach and dou-
an<I if you
2 it out on
es for shelter.
muLMe hke the uiou
of humanity, the work of God.
Invke the assistance of"God o'er
head” and do your duty well.
Wellwisher,
\
nd Unrivalled
d. Popular
took. .
Kntemperance.
Tofheud-cnen
"At the list it bitoth like a merpent and
stingeth like an adder." •
if as candidates for governor on
The Republicans of North Texas
are rapidly approaching the har-
monious state of the famous Kil-
Know It.
CYCLOPEDIA
ITE FACTS.
gave.” -
He-eoneludes hisarraingment as
feHows; '
"Some of these one-gal I used fel-
1VA
sze
The Wo1°Nho Gives Advice.
She is a very winsome woman,
the one who gives you advice?
She does not wait till you ask for
it, orshe thinks you need it.
RY 1st, lew. ‘
CENTs.
Il,) ? •
ORLEk ‘
New York,
Edit”
in the Bep
S. ObUUs UweB
it, and wish she would keep still.
She has sharp eyes, as a rule.
They are not bright and pretty, but
restless little beads, that look as if
they were threaded with a pin-point;
which pricks you a every glance.
If she looks, it is to critiaise; if
she listens, it is tn auggeeir; if she
speaks, it is to relate her experience
and explain her way.
You may meekly suggest that you
SECRET SOCIETIES -
“ M/SONIO.
B. A. BOTTS CHAPTER Na 167,
K. A; M., meets Friday night of or before
the lull meon of each month. Visiting com-
panions invited to attend.
------Jo. W. AXIS, H. P.
A. T. Gay, Sac. ’
Tows in the crosB-timberskapwas
much about what constitutes^good
government as same of these politi-
cal dudes who pise as statesmen
andteachsrsofdemociacy, andget
on both sides of ibe? silver and rait.
py children around him, he will
play one tune on this rough fiddle
and think pf a cabin far away in the
mountains in which is a family cry-
ing for bread-and listening for the
returning footsteps of their bon vict-
ed father?
Preses a A. T., is now the near-
est approach to the New Jerusalem,
as it is described Tn Holy Writ, as
« 4 the streets are being paved with
gold. It is true it is not a degree
of fineness equal to tbat to be found
1 in the next word, but iris the beat,
that can be done on this mundane
ay-sphere.oldsbawaser. is one of
E*
a most engaging
invet l» a
print except when they got into the
police or some other court.”—El
Paso Times.
----• « 1^1 » "I—-
” Col. Bill Sterrett, the auburn-
J =1
el .g sj .Y •
mhmnmaue
-
-
Lalaa5.4 a” d --
Texu, ba saya: ——m———
’‘Populists couldnot give alany
tiling worse than die effiewl fee sys-
t-
■ ,«
commission in state politics, and in
national politics no more extrav-
agance and demoralization and un-
equal taxation than the last demo-
cratic and republican congresses
different tickets. There are many
revenues. This wi‛l necessitate a
lowsesjeofdaliesaad the abolition
of thefrre ist, tor no other sort of
a tariff could raise money' enough.
There will be very little thanes he
thinks, for a contest between re-
pqbhcsns and de mix'rats in tba id-
ture on the ta ff or on the negro
jority in favor ot free silver. The
silver sentiment is' also strong in
the .republican par y. Nowthecoli,
onel is forced to admit that the silywho might, oppose the present
. ‛ • - -
memm e#“ 22
g
. -__/ when you een?t
it, don't want it, wouldrt have
nor inftuentiat
-------
AEA
'Texas Sandwich.
--------
of the county seat. A .cyclone is
something that—strikes a palatial
odies to the queen's taste- During
, their unique race for governor Bob
, and Alf did not actually carry their
ting there he played one tune on
the rough fiddle. Far up in the
monutains there was another hearth-
stone bright and warm;.the pardon-
ed convict was there with his child-
ren op his knees and his heart re-
echoing the strains which the gov-
ernor played on the home-made fid- 1
die:. - ■ ।
Be it ever so humble; I
There is no place like home.
_______________
----1--------- dt------■ —-----i-----—-----------
. Entered at the Postoffice at Graham, Texas, as Second Class Mall Matter.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________' .
said; I have becu implored by a
poor, miserable wretch in the pen-
itentiary to bring you this rude fid-
dle, It was made by his own
hands with a penknife during the
hours afottedto himfcrrst.ft
is absolutely^ valueless, it is true.
e s oi .,-n
• * ’
- tsms
=-
primary school, the other day, told
her small pupils the story of the
ass who put on the lions skin; and
then she.commanded each child to
write down and hand in a moral for
the fable. This was the moral
which une little girl, aged six,
- octward appearauce, but within it
is as loathsome as a sepulchre full
of dead men’s Lones.
‘ 1 You have seen a cloud in the
with business men and
fleathe streets with tin signs
ir roofing; something which
i not in its mad careetfer the
live member or the trickle-
dude; something which Waits
. ■
dasiternt breedsin other climes we
kjein/w nothing. They may be a
Hr‘ter article than the American
pi, isduction, but, if so, slap on a
L4—;h tariff and keep out foreign
woupe trti on.^Tr'x Sifter. -
fat/ 1-----
js a case in point for woman's
rights people to "resolute.”
Burglars robbed Edward Welch
at his home in Holton,' Kan., ar
then cut off his left hand, which
timeast, but not leasj,aaqmething
Ptionh digsup the flowery land-
se2ntu with the jugged plow of wrath.
“0tis is the American species, or
Canctnis hellofabreesus. Of the
nor shallsitathis ownfrestde -
on Christmas eve with bisown hap- "
ig Piece for
10 Cents- a
/vu% t
'* .ado
2 tract the youth of our laud. He
having raised ,the biggest pig. A
Kentucky former of Scottsville
seems to have the record so far
with a hog weighing 800 pounds
and measureing 6 feet and 6 inches
from nose to tail, 3 feet in height,
and 2 feet across the shoulders.
Hogs weighing from 600 to almost
800 pounds are not at all uncom-
mon this year.
The report comes from London
that Mrs. Langtry’s daughter it-
tracts much attention. Her beauty
is said to rival that possessed by
her mother in the days when she
was first called the "Jersey Lily.”
The Boston Globe thinks there
would be no financial panics if ev-
erybody bought and sold as much
every day in the year as they do on
Christmas Eve.
A-Florida man had his mother-
in-law arrested for flogging him,
and that too on Christmas. Here
after column of “sluff1’ to his paper
on the assewblog of congress show- -
ing the utter helplessness of the 1510* begins to look like the Dan
silver cause. He showed how the$ 4w< rt crowd of prize fighters and
have to divide on new lines. Three
great gnastinns -the tariff the ne-
gro and the finances—are before
the country, he declares, at the
present time. The supreme court’s
decision on the income fax, he sees,
has destroyed all chances of making
Democracy must be defeated for at
least once. There will be enough friends to plead for him] he is poor
‛ wl
' re
for the issue that will be made on
him by the presentation of a Flor-
ida -Athletic -Club-Prize -Fighting-
Candidate. ' This issue will rally
many to his support that would
otherwise be lukewarm. —Terrell
Times-Star.
When the dust is on the counters,
and cobwebs on thershelf, and ther’s
seldom anybody in the store besides
yourself, and your stock is getting
shop-worn and the groceries getting
stale, and hills enough are coming
in to make a banker pale; oh then’s
the time a fellow is a feeling blue,
and is puzzled with the idea of the
proper thing to do. But in such a
situation one remedy applies, .if you
want to get the customers, you have
got to advertise—Baylor County
Banner. --
"The pleasure of doing good is
the only pleasure that never wears
out.”
ites have it nil their own way 4
the senate.— Baird Star. A
-—-—tt Jr
"He is worth so much” is a ve%/
common way of estimating a ma».
But to measure a man by his “get-,
ti0-,2 is to use a very poor stand-
ard. His real worth in theworld
should ( be measured in another
way. "The accumulation of wealth
does not neoessa•I1 y carry with it
the growth of solid worth .in char
acer. The highest excellence at-
tainable may be found in an hum-
ple home or beneath a rumiie coat,
and the unassuming man or womin
maybe worth a thousandfold mo
to the world than a millionaire.
Some are always talking about te
way a man loses interest in a wonen
after he marries her, but they ill to
mention the foot that the g*l who
is sweetest ou her lover is fvquent-
the first to give him the "yo buy”
when he becomes herhband.--
fish found in NewZealanu that fives
upon frost?" asked one traveler of
another at the Morton House re-
cently. . ■
“No, of course not. Blitin Mich-
igan everything relating to fish
‘goes,’ I am told, so go on with
yourlying."
“It comes out of the sea and eats
the frost early in the morning. At
times it becomes stranded, when it
can be caught. It is impossible to
take it when in the water; It ii.a
great delicacy, and sells for *i?'5
per pound."
“Now, old man, it is my turn.
Fancy will do most anything. A
colored gentk 'man in Kentucky went
on a visit to another colored genlle-
man. Before going in to dinner he
fastened his mule to a erib filled
with popcorn. While the owner of
the beast was absent the enb caught
fire" and burned’down. The heat
made the corn pop, and when the
white flaky corn began falling
around the mue he fmagined itwas
snow and froze to death.”—Michi-
gan Artist.
A Tennessee mule grower says
that a mule eats less, lives longer
and is better adapted to the south
than any other work animal.
ment used in (be "‛cily among the
pines,” and one may not be sur-
prised some, day if the panicky
times should ever reach that locali-
Ay, to see the pavement run through
A quartz m>U to secure the gold that
might be extracted by the heachivg
process. Each ton of the rock used
, contains •< in gold and 20 cents in
I silver, and this typical winiog city
[ -- enjoys the proud distiaction of be-
I ' 'ing the only one in the world with
1 -gorden streets.—Pbomix Gazette.
A. The great ations of the earth are
‛ in a state of unrest? There are war's,
B * and rumors of wars. Can it be tbit
H theve is night if so, let the per-
S' -formance begin. There is one sol-
V tary, blissful consolation t the
■ * ppr hanit can’t be a bit worse
■ , for bim than it has been.—Texas
I , . Harpoon - .
- 6 lmunnun"gwemdunctimaaaanwmcszuamanseumasaammumn
sunlight were beautiful to bebold.
You heard a diaLsrft, i utnbh ng
anise, which see ore d like m e llow
music; but es it drew nea er the
scene changed. From its silvery
edges shot forth forked Jigbtoing,
apd what seemed to be mellow mus-
ic noon developed into harsh and
terrific thunder. Every thing is
a. qneifieh, bu'. pi'llee will npHt on
the finances, the gold men becoming
JOHN C. KAY,
- LAWYER.—
Office in the (lourt House.
.. -
I ‛
utution./Lutwhen*povertyisihe
result of diwking or gamb mg it
covers its victim with a robe of
shame. Poverty is sute to follow a
course of intemperauce,for God has
so o^ained. f.
Intemperance not only destroys
the physical constitiion, but it
sapa the mind as well. ’ It produces
idiocy and madness; the mind be-
comes entirely dethroned and loses
all power of self-control. Soon the
-amais in delirium tremevs. Satan
with all his legions appear befre
him, and thiosends what Oftceprom-
ised to be the leading man of the day.
«hen let us arise in all the vigor
Uh kit down
MMk
■8 also would like to come by your
' knowledge through experience, but
she seems to be doubtful if so u’n-
-__ _—Ne.261, I. O. O. F.,
meeteon second and fourth Satry nights
in each month in KnighU of Pytlaias hail.
—W. J HaxiT, --------- EvauKxK,
__N,G. b81-'-
T
““A tRk ■
- -7 1 T
)04: -
pedi
gaaihins _ _ «
CIWT: •
^Before.
—-esid63ng atdtthzahem
ES.‛
TOPICS.
I have burned the bridges be- but it is his petition for mercy.
He begged me to say that he has
beet told in Gov. Bob’s own way:
_________________ _________ "One day just before Christmas
tion, and expect democrats to make a state official entered my office and a
steps in And takes a social glam, * ... ca ,.0
and"atinstibjteh"like. sepentfeonetedby-tkerepebHese 6hy-fifth
A recant letter of the comptrol-
ler’s shows that the last day of grace
oh;taxes_juthe 31st of March, so
that those who have been unable to
pay them up to that date need not
be uneasy for a month or two.
An,exchange truthfully remarks
that "the girl who mgnufaclures
biscuit without a trace of indiges-
tion in their depihs is more to be
treasured than the girl who writes
poetry."
----- -u-e —e ..... 1
Christmas day was once called in
France the "day of new clothes.”
It was the custom to give court offi-
cials new cloaks on that day.
A colored pastor in Texas, when
dempanditg"his salary, gave as his
reason: "Brudern, I can't preach
was as barmlees as the birds that ...
flit from branch to branct over’bis ere near at haad, each party would
head. But aoonM has. bitten a -have lo surrender sometbing. The
little child who came to gaiber flow- democrat would hove to give up bis
~ 4 a nci A .. d cike • am -- a--:, )e
Ma Articles,
■e you up to the fall •
...
‘AMTLDiaJunocce-
erma. Addrena,
MACHINE co.g- ,
kOyO.
C BY
RISSEN. J
EDGE
33,—-—-
I
every town the people would hunt
up a couple of fiddles and insist on
hearing them play. *
When the election was over And
Bob waa occupying the highest of ---
fioe in the gift of the'Tennesseeans, -
aeenvictim the penitentiary sent j
himafiddle. Itwas a home-made |
instrument, the convict being its
time__past, and nil tha
... u.. .0 uu thereabouts are worked up ov^r
ng which mops the aide- the wondrous pictures of the land
of promise presenied to thm. It
+dependent democrats, republicans
and populists to, unite and teach
the so-called democracy of to-day
a lesson by taking affairs out of
their control, at least in Texas.”
Twenty negro "families, number-
is believed that Pseveral hundred
more negroes will follow the pio.
neer party. They are to go first to
Savannah, and ship thence for
Africa. -
--------a <i —.....
The United States senate is com-
posed of eighty-eight senators-
will be ninety as soon as the two
from Utah are elected and sworn
in.. A majority of these ninety
are for free coinage of silver. The
house of representatives is compos-
ed of 356 members, but a vast ma-
jority of them are republitans, and
consequently the majority against
the free coinage of silver in that
body is very large. A free coinage
bill can be passed in the senate,
but-it can’trunthe. gauntlet in the
house nor at the white house. -=
Farmers all over the South are
] early moving rising in the heavens. ... , -
At .inure H Wrtidtwintttlil. Ahin A.poszibleanu deotrerenne.
Its slivery edges gliseuing intbe and will force souihernand western
a A - n. • - — a e L. A f• a . - 1 a . A 8 A re a -
B 0^11
poisoned his soul to its death lor
all etevuiiy. The deadly cobra has
1 60^. coiled itself so om-pletely
mdt the victim that escape is
mEsnn-— 1'
•“UTPet bundreds ot or young men
are tampering with the social glass
until they are brought down U> pov-
- erty, shame and min. Poverty in
itself is not a crime. No disgrace
belongs to the man, who by peverses
a
itf
O E. FINLAY, "
— ATTORNEY AT Law,—
and Land Agent.
" Graham, Young County, 7 via*.
l “enP man, woman or child, but
»f Ps every body to the matinee
,, beputs them all on the tree list;
Ofiee epposite College building in Erawy-
ford addition.
Operative and Mechanical Plat Work
A Bpecialty.
GRAHAM,____:: TEXAS.
R. W. A. MORRIS,
/ -DENTIST,- /
Office over Beekham Nat’a'I Bank building
GRAHAM, TEXAS. T e
DR M. H. CHISM,
DENrIST and rHorGRAPHER,
—Graham, Texna.—
West side of the aquare, one door ioulb
_-ofGorrissen‛s
mdPHYSICIANS,___• '
DR. R. N. PRICK,
. Physician. Surgeon and ObatetrCian, •
• . -6raham, Texas.—
Calle promptly attend to in towb or oountry. ■
o"e at Orhe” "rd “P
$ MDH
'••♦ at his uwn fircstdo surtritritided pouts it most fffeily.
by his own happy family, andsit-
sp
the
ba'*
■4
Freed by a Fiddle. 7
Pittaburg Times. /.
One of the mot remarkable pol-
itical contests ot modern days was '
that between Bob and Alf Taylor
over the Governorship of Tennessee
some years ago. The brothers
were both violinists—in Tennessee
they are known as fiddlers. 'Alf is.
the superior,performer. . Bob plays
lefthanded. Neither neisa finish-
ed master ot the instrument, but
they both play the mountain mel-
" scr-2
--
E)
residence and explodes it, dances, economical, equal goveroment.".
To the -etabe-DemocratCOFFes-
structure,and seriously interfering juwpiagjacksof themselves-n try-
with the original plots and surveys
ing together 100 perspns, are sched-
uled to leave Lonoke county, Ark.,
m,,-m“*kib very soon toprthe AfHeA Canaan.
id howls like a nail factory; A representative for t>4 African
Celenizatien Society has’feenat
work‛tMat1neigdorhood for some
of youth and monliqess and arrest,
. if possible, the tide of ruin that is
mgweepingever our land. What we ,_____
need is warm hearts atid wilingeNewe AFwashigtamgwrote column
hands. > . Come, then, to the work *
tbat same man a nice complimen-
tary notice and he never thiks of a
cAHig at the oflice to thaok the K
writer, indeed the bumb of concetyEM
(rated vani y imagines ii is the p« I
pel’s.Joly io boost him up and let 7<
the woild about what a grest muk g
he is. If I bsd my way those fel- f J
lows* names sbald never appear iu
and siingeth like an adder.” It . ,
has slung him tit f y B Hnr 18 ’ audPe a}
4- .
(da. -uau
emseimem-d= - me) , ?. ■
• F i
bled up like a portable cot bedstead.
That la the reason they have
strength enough in band to inquire:
"What is a qyelone?" But now
comes a fair anon, whose fine Ital-
ian hand rustles the dead leaves of
youthful memory, "’and she to, art-
laasly, and grammatically inquire
"What is a oy clone?”
,L A cyclone is not a soft wind from
the Southland which steals up and
curly tress in its musical whisper.
Oh no. A cyclone is not a balmy
zephyr which loiters in the wood-
land and sighs and sobs through the
flower-gemmed glades. A cyclone
is no relation to the spice-ladened
breese from the Isles where mango
apples grow. Neither is a cyclone
one of the trade winds which fill
the white sails of commerce, round
out the royals-,- swell the spanker,
and curve the bellying jib. Far
from it. No, mar’m. Nt in the
least. Certainly not.
A full-blooded, thoroughbred cy-
clone is more like a segment of hades
torn loose from the parent super-
kenny cats,
emenmstm-mam-i-s-amma
)
strong competilion lor the honor of ^*Bn8 it wp-on their walls, this old
-------- . .. world would be much better.
ed by such an appeal? When
Christmas eve came the governor
handed-in: - "Dont be what you ______
ain’t!" If all our false-color people ---. -Powerot magination. —-
would frame that “moral” and n:. ---------r--as=
a cottage, walucs over to the ver-
dant fields, crushes a brn and
shivers a school house; something
which grasps anarmfutof lighten -
iug rods and twists them into sam-
pies of the Atlantic cable;—some
thing which goes down into the
bowels of the earth and hands up
artesian wells, something without
religion that a few years ago, wiped
. -a-
-Aa
■ —
level will be above what, is termed
the revenue line. It will be a pro-
; tectiortffl» but not a prohibirive tar-
• iff. The free breaktst table—tbe
coffeaod tea pact of 1*.—will not
[ . r t a
be suvrendered. The eriicleswilG
"I bare aiwroticed," said an
o‛d newaper maq yesterday;tthat
is broughtdauntaders iy some elip an srticie not. com-
TTifnlsrv to-A person,gets itrtxrr
KK A F A A M. meetsron5MBem
/Yof or before the full moon of each.",
J. W. Axis, Sec.
Belknap" Lodge-No. 650
t F. A A. Mi, meets on the first Satuday
light in each month.
W. B. POPE, W- M.
M. N. HAKDI,Sec‛ty-,
I. 6. O. 5^- 7
remain on the free JiaL-.La’H
Globe- Democrat. -gA
,-p E-.
Twin Mountain Lopax No. 2202, Knigh-
11 Honor, ineot« on the 1st and Srd Tuesday
-light* in each month
. O. E.FINLaY, Dictator.
J R. HwMpa, Reporter. ■
K. OF P. .
AQ Corinthian Lodge; No. 143, Knights
6 # Aot Pythias, meets in Castle Hall every
KgMonday night. V isiting Knights in-
5 vited to attend. ,
J. T. Rickman, C. O.
Jo. W. Akin, K. of R. A B.
professional-cards.
ATTORNEYS. “ " ,
D A. Martin,
±. LAW-KER.
... PaeUw in *11 courts. Has omplete ab-
atracts of Young countyrlandtites. Notary
in eticee Bekham National Bank building,
ah aB AMr- -1^ 73n> ■ ar, , IBXAA.
T OHNSON A AKIN,
fj ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
— Graham, Texas.
Will practice in the courts of Young and
adjoining counties, Ofice up-stairs in the
Morrison-Street brick. ' . ■
A '? .8 1-3 . " .
n
-
======
7• .
- ( ■ - V'■ - A r1 7
au"a
Tl,« Hi. Sill, imtemparance. Wavesto absndon the free brenktaet
: ttec.-rriSn. Lr .to ..iZ to t»>aiiug
wo ehcemeuzggeogusemevmocaceenaroymeeraremarezurngzensvaraeemmmpgercomo-
Qibbs Quite the Democracy.
_ Dallas, Tex., Jan. 18?—Ex-Gov.
ernor Barnett" Gidds has quit the
democratic party, so far as its pre-
sent state and national pglcies are
concerned. He is outto-dy in bit-
ter denunciation of the conduct of
governmental affairs and the poll-
cies of the leaders. After review-
ing the course of the democratic and
republican administrations at
Washington and the failure of the
.democracy to priMium reforms in
•hmmmmum-e-ehadm-er
—'---A.
1 1
--9=
avS been touch-
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The Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1896, newspaper, January 24, 1896; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505898/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.