The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 3, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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EVERY THUW&A1
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at
Y4ar, ,.
>y, Six MooltNb
'Ills
tHPf*'*1l, ’-'W"
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im way be those
-.£•
Entered at like Postofltoe at Graham.
Taxes, aa ssooad-eiass mall maWsr.
PRANK H. BOWRON. EDITOR.
h iK
For Infant
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The Old Order Ohangsth.
Civilised man is rarely content
with, things as they are. He
wants to improve and he real-
ises that as practically all
the benefit* he now enjoys are.
due to the intelligence and pro-
grewiveness of his predecessors,
so it is his duty to improve, to
the end that the world may be
the gainer for his having lived in
So H is that the cave and mud
houses have given way to the
comfortable home, the modern
accasoHes; flail has been dis-
placed by the threshing machine
and the stage eoac^bM, been suc-
ceeded by the passenger train
and the automobile. The old
methods stiff iced for oqr ances-
tors, for their needs were not so
great, but as demand-
crea.sed with opportunity, luxu-
ries of the old days have bS-
coms $h»- necessities of the pres-,
ent and demand has ever
step with the supply.
’ Ahd this spirrToTpyrogreiirhas
been of material benefit in de-
veloping the individual, lnven-
<***
AVrfeldWcfttpwionSrAs
similar
ting Us*
I Im \n- i
Mia.Kt
IVomotesI%slioa£kHfi*
MSta^inuCemains nrtwr
Opium Morphine oar Mi
Not Narcotic.
Apofrct Rnnedy for CamflR
tlon.SourSlomach.Dlarrtwra
Worms .Com-uLsioui Jevmsfc
ness sod Loss OF Sueet
NEW YOHK.
Doses - ly*-
of Wmnwu.
Tilt KM Ymi Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
: Of IIP
Use
For Over
......r. , . J.... W_ . - ........... •..
Thirty Years
mi
There may be those who think
only the good women and weak
men have been shocked by the
evils of theplquor traffic. If
so they would do well to rend
Robert Q. IngeraoU's terrific ar-
raignment of the drink ^urse.
He said:
'I am aware that there is a pre
judice against any man engaged
in the manufacture or sale off al-
cohol. I believe that from the
time that it issues from the coiled
m . f \. V-J 7£ja* *- WZ
and poisonous worm in the .dis-
tillery until it empties into the
hell of death, dishonor and crime
demoralises everybody who
tenches it from its source to
where it ends. £do not believe
-anybody can contemplate the sub-
ject without becoming- prejudiced
against the liquor crime.
“All we have to fk>, gentlemen,
is to think of the wrecks on eith-
er side of the stream of death, of
the suicides, -oif the insanity, of
the poverty, of the ignorance, of
the destitution, of the little child-
ren tugging at the faded and
weai^y breasts of weeping and de-
spairing wives, asking for bread;
of the talented men of-genius it
has Wrecked, of the, men strug-
gling with imaginary serpents,
produced by this devilish thing
wad whoa you think of tbi prii:
ons,_ the almshouses, of the
asylums, oft the scaffolds on
St Louis Rnsjtauran
First Class and Up-to-Data
-----
*r .
Beat 26c Meal in town. Meals served three
Short Orders day and night. Spring Chickens
Also a fine line oi King’s famous Chocolates, in
fancy boxea
Try qs and If we pleaae yon, come again.
BABB 9l WALKER, Props.
bulk <
y i
i
LIVERY ST
& HAYS,
Newly equipped throughout. * First-class Bigs'up-
to-date Turn-outs for all occasions. * Our transfers are
always ON TIME and meet ail trains. Your patron-
age will be appreciated.
-a*"Mlliai!nla>M
Gnbn, - • W - • . Ten*.
DOCTOR KING
y Jk rfr \ S ♦•-*•>** ______ .... ..... V
Nove, IM and Sir. " it (
■■Hm
Nervous Diseases, Vsric
Poison. Stricture. Hydrocele.
DlaMsr and Prostslto Trout
Skis Cancers. Special sad Friv
IktsauiUu. Cats iVt, and Ckrt
LY T&BA
T--
' Hastened the Inevitable
. w The discussion over the posi-
tion and improvement have tend- bility that the examination 1 of
ed to lessen the hours of labor
and have afforded to ns the op-
portunities to properly educate
the children. We have come to
a realization that economic con-
ditions must be altered in order
The Boy and His Dog.
There is something interesting
about the companionship of a boy
and his bob-tail dog. The dog
goes wherever the boy goes, squat m j*e
ting oh his haunches when the
the wreck of the Maine may dis-
close that its destruction was
due to no act of Sprfin or its sym-
pathizers1 but was the result of boy stops to talk to his comrade,
an internal explosion, may «**rv.> wagging his stump tail when the
to promote a controversy which boy calls him by name. The dog
to lighten the task of the bread- is of no real consequence. The will die for the boy if necessary*
winners and make it possible to destruction of the Maine merely end, if someone* wants-to fight
eliminate much of the labor of [hastened the interveiition of the j right how, dll he has to do is
women an<l children, if the honmj lilted States, but that interven- strike the dog: The dog never
is to be built up-and posterity | tion was inevitable, for this coun-j dissents froln a'singlfe act of the
improved., Any rendition whi4h j by .could -not- hove -much longer
either bank,. I do not wonder
that every thoughtful man is pre-
judice against this vile stuff, call-
ed alcohol.
“Intemperance cuts down youth
vigor, manhood in its
strength and age in its'weakness.
It breaks the .father’a. heart, be-
v«M| U» Hu luluftoua «rmg* u«
M»l tvtryvhw., (vm (row Soso i
■^HnMlMlnctol. TkwwM* of cooou
compels extreme youth or ~ sW [tolerated the conditops at its1 day out uncomplainingly, while
age to labor in order, to sustain ^°°r an<* tp# Pe0Ple °* ^uba were night, if nd^ permitted in the
life are now. recognized as nedleis not t0 be conciliated by any over- room wjth the boy, he will sleep
if not criminal and thfe tendency j turis from the Spanish gov- j outside, near the door, ready to
of the world i* to adjust con- ernme®t- _ . , .....-—pJkark oMdW any intruder. TIB
ditions so that all may have the 1 Taxation without.representation <jog ftt* jm example of affection
opportunity to get the fullest hastened the War °f Indep>end- that human beings would do well
out of life, without undue ti* onl^ but the P**1* o£ •?. colo‘
health and strength. * ni« wonld neveT have, be^ Jon*.
The old order changeth and!tent to acceP4 the rule of_^'
but fWtnwrlWin day in and ijfi^ ricBda, and ^ ^
reaves the doting mother, extin>
guishes natural affection, blights
parental hope and brings down
mourning age to the grave. * It
produces weakness, not strength ^
sickness, not health^death, not
life; i| makes wives widows.1 Phil-
.. X.
curing of a modicum of that lib-
erty came a desire for a larger
measure of liberty—a meature
which vrould insure governriient
of the people by themselves and
the opportunity to develop their
resources in their own interests.
we cannot afford to stand still
^or get into a rtit._ We need the
application of 'efficiency in liv-
ing, just as we do in business, an
after all, living is the most im-
portant business now on hand.
Perfect content ie not to ^*»jThe»e thing, could not be ob-
expeeted, for m,n i. nothing if !UiBed without a cj„h o{ >rmg
not dieeontented, but there U M ^ wUU minor incidenUU mav
rexsob why, with the prewnt d*y | hiw tartpned the conflietj atil,
opportunities end ndvnntage* that thfy were m n0 aenw, the r;al
each of us cannot give a little
more time to develop ourselves,
mentally snd physically— than
factors. ~r' •..
Study the history of all great
wars and you win learn that the
causes popularly ascribed |>ave
to emulate. His loyalty is un-
equaled, and His devoton is aub-
lime. He is satisfied with criimba
all of them paupers and beggars.
It feeds rheumatism, nurses gout,
welcomes epidemics, invites chol-
era, imports pestilence and. em-
braces consumption. It covers
the land with disease, misery and
crime. It fills your jails, sup-
plies your almshouses and de-
mands your asylums. It engen-
CmmmUm PrMi at
VRITEf- _
(DR. KING gSKgSBP Fort Worth.
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Citation By Pnhlkntk>n
THE STATE OF TEXAS. . ‘
COUNTY OjT YOUNG.
To the Sheriff or any Cons-
table of Young County-Greeting:
£ You are hereby com ended to sum-
mon Mary. M. Scbults, Mary M.
Schulte, the unkuowu heirs of
heirs of Mary M. Schnlte. by mak-
ing publication of this citation once
In each week for eight TMiccemhre
wefeks previous to the return day
hereof. In some newspaper published
With the eominfc of theTWW-.ttaD- land H*-♦ pewneoeiiey. *re Uken from the tiBB^aud
kind is in every w.y the gxincr. * demre for rel,g.ou. liberty ... ..........
The old had iu advantage, in re8I,on,,ble for m,,ch ° kth.? •mfr
the time in which it .ppUed.hnt'« “4*?.‘h.',*T
I riots. It
crowd* your penitentiaries and
.. , , , , ,. furnishes victims for your scaf-
hek th,_ hand Jh«t ytruck him. ^ -,f a m ufe-blood of the
no matter how much he is kicked
or cuffed, he is always ready to
When the boy is good to the dog
his position is to be envied among
animals, but when the boy is nn-
kind it is.patketic to the point of
tears to note the cringing of the
dog, yet with unabated love and
loyalty.—J. R. Hanson, Jr., in
Cleburne Enterprise.
Saved Twain's Old Home.
Mark Tw ain s old home in Han-
nibal, Mo., is tp be moved to the
town park and 'preserved as a
memorial to the humorist.
The modest welling in which
Mark Twain live has long been
of interest to visitors and a
source of pride to the town. How*
gambler, the element of the bur-
glar, the prop of the highwayman
and the support of the midnight
incendiary. - It countenances, the
liar, respects the thielf and es-
teems the innocence. It incites
the father to butcher his helpless
offspring, helps the husband to
massacre his wife and the child
to grind the paricidal Ax. It
burns up men, consumes women,
detests life, curses God and de-
spises heaven. It stuborns witness
es nurses prejury, defies the jury
box and Stains the judicial ermira
It degrades the citizens, debases
man and disarms the patroit. It
ever Hannibal has recently felt | brings shame, not honor; terror,
the breath of progress. And one n°t safety; despair, not hope
of the first things that this breath misery, not happiness; and with
.7.
4-
our fore fat},« m \:h! and thus
be in s f ’ ii to advance the hnd ^ Iittle bearing in fact A
generat.cu yet to corde. \ match can not start a conflagra-
The needs of humanity, df pro- tion unless eombustable materials
- kirns an of civilization “call up- have been gathered, and no na-
on us to get out of the rut and j tion can persist in oppression or
seek for improvement on K the in the meeting out of palpable in- threatened to do was to snuff out
things that are. The man , who justice to any considerable por- this particular building,
preaches the doctrine of “letting tion of its eittzenship without Fortunately, the commercial
well enough alone,” is not keep- running the risk of some minor ci0b of Hanibal was alive to the
ing step with the world. We conflict whieh might be delayed: c|ub of Hannibal was alive tbo th ruin* morals, blight* confidence,
roust either moyt forward qr Whether the Maine was blown commercial aa well as the senti-{slays reputation and wipes out
back, snd he is best measuring up from the inside or from the value of landmark*. So naUun honor, and then curses the
op to the nrrds of bani an.tv who outside is <f 'hiffc* little mo- when it teamed that the bow world and laoghes at ita rnin.
accepts nothing as being per- ment. It merely hades^d the was to be ton down to mike “It does that and more—it mur-
In your county, to appear at . the
next regular term of the District
Court of Young County, to he bold-
en at the Cqprt House thereof. In
Graham on the 1st. Monday In Sept-
ember A. D. 1911. the same being
the 4th day of September A. D _
tklt, the* sn d tbers lo assn Si «
petition filed In said 'Court on the
1st. day of July A.D. 1911. In a
suit, numbered on the docket of
A Smooth Graft.
' About four weeks ago a couple
qf clothing drummers came into
the McGregor country and pull-
ed off about the smoothest
ing scheme among our Gei
friends it has ever been our
privilege to relate. *They*
struck town hired a
team and demanded
man drivers *be sent with the
outfit. They were sellhffc im-
ported goods clothing, etc., and
only to Germans. They prp- J
as a special favor wonld ^ ' sell \
posed to sell this imported4 goods
in patterns, suitable for dreas-
es suits, overcoats or jnost kny J
garment; wanted. The proposi '
tion looked good, and as a man
wto follow and make up the
•aid Court No. 1356, wfaersin.James respective niHt**rial into the gar-
Cotten. Is plaintiff, and Mary M.
Bchultx. et al are Defendants, and
said petition alleging in subetanoe
on or about January 1st 1911 Plata
tiff was lawfully poeaeaeed of 'an
undivided one third lntereet t. In
T. E. k L. Co. Survey No. 2709 la
Yonng County, Texas, bolding and
claiming same In fee simple. That
on said last named date the Defend-
ants unlawfully entered upon said
premises and ejected Plaintiff there-
from and unlawfully withhold from
Plaintiff the possession thereof.
Plaintiff pleads the Statute of five
andten years limitation, and prays
tor Judgment for the title and allowed to run at lai^e
possession of said land and for coals
of suit
HEREIN FAIL NOT. but have be-
fore said Court, at Its aforesaid
next regular term this writ with
your risturn thereon, showing how
you burs executed the same.
Witness 4 L. VXughan Clerk of
the malevolence of a fiend it calm the District Court of Young County,
ly surveys its frightful desolation,1 Given nh<fer my hand and tbs
and, unsatisfied with its havoc
H poisons felicity, kills peace,
-i-e-
feet, but who takes each improve-: inevitable and if^her* had befn room for a flat bmWing, ft at den the ml.'. It is the sum of
ment in the world as but s step no r,it«*teof»h#
the march of progress, and ; bor early in Y
o is ever looking forward likely that 1
in
*.* who it ever looking
4 instead of back, so that he will
“ not stumble on his way. \.
r Jhert
If you alt In n cold draft when yo
ere banted and get a stiff back or
Lams neck you will be looking for
something that will esse the pain.
Fix your mind on BALLARD’S 8NO
LltaMHNT and don't be talked out
It Is th* beet pain
van* bar m sixty-day option villanies, the fit her of all crime
is not at all on the property and gnnosne-d the mother of all abomination,
.would tan th»t U. fcoay 9te tiu. ^ friand and Ood’a
l>een change^!- *4vebtioo in 19a2_ P ******** ** • worvi enemw "
Cuban at fHir« was forced upon nsi The building ftg t tvs Mary ......* im - -■ ■■
,iZ?£8SZ wa J* 3r>.TS^ l
fa?lu|n<T.^ ■™^indc aad BABY ELIXIR It may
tb'.United 3u»« l» »«* ?P"> »® f** fe — »he» the kwMen “^4
^ fePlwwmmor eomplelat. It fit a whole
F***^?^*^ "h "HR .S4,! h-I. soess remedy, cooleins no opium,
home of a sort of a Mark Twam morphine or iajurious drug of any
museum, the memorial vrMW ---
come doubly interesting.—(Vi-
rago Inter Ocean.
criticism even if the Maine was
destroyed by natural canara, but
it is rather to be commended for
the patience shown in submitting
to\intolerable conditions for so
many years. .
kind. Price 2Sc and tOec per
Da y*r<: **.k »*» v-l i-
Mi fey all druggtets.
•r hoi-
d>
(Seal)
Seal of said Court at
office In Graham, this
the 1st. day of July A.
D 1911.
J. L. Vaughan Clerk «
Distria Court, Young County.
FOR SALE^CHEAP—A 30-
hone boiler for sale at a bargain
See Graham Light arid Power Co.
Cotton Carnival.
On July 29th the Third Annual
Cotton Carnival of Galveston will
open snd hundreds of -.visitors
Hu nts at a ridiculously low fig-
ure their proposition looked es-
pecial ly enticing and we under-
stand they did a thriving busi-
ness. Up to the present their
follow-up man has failedxto put
in an appearance and our
man friends are beginning to sus-
pect that they will be left with
a surplus of dry goods on hand,
in a shape not suitable for wear-
ing purposes. We regret that
such a bunch of grafters are
........“ovetjl
Texas and we trust this article
may come under the vision of
someone who will be able to lo-
cate the schemers; yet we can-
not forbear to warn our reader#
against patronizing these peddlers
who go through the country mak-
ing glowing promtaesyand guar-
anteeing to do oertain things. It
always pays to stay with the
home merchant who is al]
ready to listen to your complaint
and ia ready to remedy anything
that doea not come up to ex-
pectations and their guarnatee.—
McGregor Mirrow. »
Thirty Years Twgtlu i. -—
Thirty ysarl Ot «SW*1afon-think ^
of M. How the merit of *~ g6o6
or the worth lessees of a bad one.
So there’s no guess work In this
will worship at the fchrine of King Evidence Of Thos. Arles, Concord,
Cotton. This exposition was plan Mch.. who witss: have used
ned and carried out by the public Dr. Kng’s New 'ftis-overy for If
spirited citizens of Galveston for
the purpose of increasing interest
in the South’s greatest staple _____
and- has been made a permanent {"/or*foKy years?
organization. Cotton •te^.^very
years, and Its I If MBt cough and
cold curs I eve? used.’* Once M
ftodantrsnee
pry It out.
In * home you canrt
Many famiii«« have uM
ears. It’s the most at
Miape and form will be on display JJthTn
snd a replies of tin Galvegton m . pm iVc> ,^00 w
wall will be an interesting fe*!8?W Ou^sitsi *
tore of ths Exposition MMa ' ^
4 .
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Bowron, Frank H. The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 3, 1911, newspaper, August 3, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth850002/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.