Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 26, 1877 Page: 2 of 4
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IT
■jc,
GRAHAM, TEXA&
foafeteUtr M^ToC IQ77
murfliy, o/r»
So, while lbs Whiskey Bias's bad
{8»mU1 » tk* tmUm NinM.
Lownow, Mt| 19.—Tbs Hessians
•aui two thousand workmen to repair
the bridge aaer'Beecei..4 It will Uke
Railway authorities at Bucharest do
t kA*‘
.ur
of the President who ntede that bad
record poaeible ia kept ottU—Sun,
Colonel Mike Sheridan will, in a few
weekar alert for tbe eoeno of the Cuater
■a—rre, for the parpoae of disinterring
end removing tbe remains of tbe mem
here of tbe Seventh Cavalry who fell
in that fatal conflict.
r~!:»>■ ■ 11....
Kentucky editors will held their an*
nual convention at Fisukfort, on the
!8th of dune. Dr. Woods, of
s^lhe Glasgow Tir/icr, and the Courier*
Journal poet, M^jor J. JE. Hatcher,
V will measure ve^for tberrw-^- , '.t
u- ■■ ^____
Bemarkable twins are reported by
, tha Wright eowaty (Mo.) papers.
They are united by a ligament an inch
nnd a half in width, commencing six
thousand troops left Couatanti-
nople yesterday. 'TJbsir deatlaation ia
uokaown. Thera 1* great enthusiasm
there over Sukhum Kalipb*> victory.
The advance if the Russian troops
Into Little Wailaohie causes the great-
est excitements " Heavy firing was
board yesterday at Beiouta. It is her
. llevsd tohon. wrest baffle
Tha Standard’s Peath correspondent
sdys: Some ssiresee Hungarian papers
demand that Count Andraety should .
treat the approach of Russians to the
neighborhood of Austrian frontiers as
a eaurtu belli. Military men consider
I hear from Zempha that the milita*
mm,m »■,. «! whim, com msuciug sjx i rjr preparations of the Servians are now
inches below Jhe colUtbon^d #*.* :quit« evldfn‘h Prince Milan to day.
ri
tending down 4h* side of safch |« the
hips. In all other respects they are
perfectly formed. , S
iSj*e »•'*»* cm^iomm. 5 .
** *1 a . k.. ’>
P-- — Chicago, Ma^ 16.—-The managers
of the Chicago, Burlington and Quinoy,
th® Missouri, Kansas and Texas, and
the Texas CentrM railways have effect-
ed a Mat freight combination for their
roads, which is to go juts operation.
June ffoiV mad regularly run two hun-
^ - ' dred con and seven Sleepers from Chi-
- r*H9 t® Houston and Galveston from
; that date. ■ ~ ’ l +'
•wiOMnw Methodist JBlriteps.
nominated Colonel Dragoobivetch chief
of staff, and ordered General Ollyropis
to resume command on tbe Pina to-
ward which artillery are marching.
•* Widdiu dispatch yesterday reports
that sfe thousand Cireassians are join-
ing tbs Turkish army as volunteers.
"The Russians appear to have crossed
the Danube between Revie and Ibrail
in spite of the Turkish monitors, mud
now awaiting development of the
, _____ „ jn— _
following Southern Methodist
F. visitations for the present year are giv-
M «a by the papers,.£.■/
,____.______ . . •- simsm • r;_ - it- - .. ?
Bishop Marvin, to the Western St. 1 view to immigration, to the effect fori apart.
Ismis, Mo., goutbwesttmMissouri and ------******* •• • ' -
Indinn .Conference; Bishop Keener,
EL*
B
that an individual may live here .with-
ont labor. With a full appreeiatioi of
Western Virginia, North Alabama, *11 the advantage! whUb TeXO* pre-
Memphis, North Mississippi and Ala- tents,, we have always hsen careful tin
hanra; Bishop Tltege, NorthGeorgfa, 4i*»bu»e sli such pifBonsof any |m-
South Georgia and Florida; Bishop —-1---s-
Daggott, Tennessee, Virginia, North
Carolina and 8outh Carolina; Bishop
June's assignment includes LouUiaua.-
^ Bishop Weigbtman holds all Texas
' 'conferences. ^ ’ jA'
• - -OCCB--
V4'*
u pv;
wP'V-a.
Races tn RmssU-Whsre the Feeplc
Come Iria-li Ethaolegteal Tsrlety,
-I, P---- T"
- This ethnological ^Variety; is the re-
sult of a policy inaugurated by Cather-
ine II, So long as the Southern frou
(v tier was pushed forward slowly, the
—^quired territor|t^tn«.Jpgi!l.arl^fil led
“P by Russian peasants from thr cen-
tral provinces, who.'Were anxious lot
obtah^ «<*«* Jand and more K&>fiy
than they enjoyed lu their native vil-
lages; bat during **tbe glorious ag*"bf
Oatberine” the frontier was pushed
forward so Vapidly that the old method
of spontaneous emigration no longer
sufficed to people the annexed territory.
The Empress had recourse, therefore,
to organised emigration from foreign
countries. Her diplomatic agents in
western Europe were orderod to use nil
possible efforts to iuduce artisans and
peasants to emigrate to Russia and ipa
*8®?** *er« »«*t to various code-
tric^iln miifllbuhl Iftyjsflbrt^^fthe
diplomatists.
invitation, and were, tor the moot part,
eettled on the land which had recently
been the pasture ground of tbehomadio
hordes. This policy was adopted by
succeeding sovereigns, and has been
continued ia an intermittent fashion
down to the present day, and the ooo4
eequamoe of it has been that southern
Russia now contains a variety of races
such as is to he found, perhaps, nowhere
else in Europe.
Romm alone—that is to say,
of Ekaterinosalf, Tail-
....... '••WT^ "'ll mmtti'rnj™ —
«JJ|flLilessarabiar-enu-
ithe following nationalities;
Bossisms, Little Russians, Poles,
Mooteoegrins. Bulgarians,
inns, Geramns, English, Swedes,
■Iagpsvm
"r ijy
* fStn
irpn'Honjw^JmmM mmA Qyr
cm.
fie Bemarkable Belas Htseoverei Is the
▼alley of the Animas in Ceiwifa
prof. Hayden has given eewthwest*
w Colorado anew inj^reel by djbeover-
ing and describing the ancient rains in
that section, aud in southeastcru Utah.
B. GhA-iTT.
Land Locator
While Col. Tom Scott, Col. Hun*
tingtoa. Congress, and n good many ,
ether people are log-rolling and talk-
ing over a railroad from Texas to Cali-
____________ ______ fdgHfowlfraton has cooiujcuced build- _____ ..JBBBBI
meeting of Uoustou men at Austin J
In AMItlfn to tke Above Helaet List,
I aleo represent n Is*go amount, of land
claims for tnvfelf and ethers, suitable
for Stock Marie he*. Trad in a Posts.
GKAHAM, TEXAS.
Offers for sale In tracts lo suit pwr-
chasers,
that the time has arrived for ooneen-
tiating, a corps of observation in Tran-
pT
9 ........., j..
center and right wing op the lino of
the river. ' ~'S- : _...
the Animas wne densely inhabited and
highly cultivated by no enlightened
race ef people eenturies ago. The ruibs
of the houses corrals, towns, fortifica-
tions, ditches/ pottery ware, drawing*.,
non-Interpretsble writings, Ac., show
that many arts wers cultivated by
these prehistoric ‘people which are now
built
of ipost every kind of stout, from smell
boulders to the finest sandstone,
Tbe finest'of these ruins^ and the
nearest perteCt, are shunted ...nEbu
tblrtyrfive ailw Ulow Animas City; in
a large vnBey fifteen miles long by
seven wide, on the w«st: s^tber of the
river. This valley hot bteiS» covered
with buildings of every sise, the two
largeet being flOO by 6,000 feet, end
about 800; fret apart, They are built
of. small blocks of sandtone, laid ip
adobe mud, tbe outside walls being
four fee4< and the inride walls from a
foot and a half to three feet thick. In
the lower story are found port-holes a.
foot square. About tbs second story,
on4hw weeC-|We, fSgrc was once a bal-
cony along the length of the building;
Nd signs of a door are-visible id tbe
enter walIs,gant^the ingress must have
bedh from the top, in the inside there
being passages from room lo room
Most of them are small, froth 8 by 10
........... ........*>
Homesteads, Farias, Ac., from a few
acres up to a League asALaber.
Call and see me. Offloe at Weath-
erford over Gant k Atkins’ Drug tttJro.
Graham Office Co Ftuirs in sL< Court
House. > ■* .....*r
oajtt.
,.;i~~ ----------- i 1 - L-
• • ^
who subscribed 130^)00,000 to the
road, and paid five per cent, of it do wt^
$1,000,000, We are also fold that
five huadre-l min will be put to work
on it immediately, nod that tbe road
will bead for El Peso.
This inurement nas su qflflW Sbd'an"
kuowu that the Sfafesiftanasked “What
640 aorea 8. P. R TC ’No t, pu Fish
Creek; 400 acres good form fond; bal-
ance timber and rocky prairie—eenve-
nient to lasting water. Price $1.60 per
acre, or for choice 160 acres $3. One
half cash. .
8. P. R. R.No. I, on Gage’s Urve®,
MAX BJXjgBI*,,
Wheleaalc nnd BcteB Dealer la
Books, Stationery
L»
*
oae
does it mean J" .^We are surprised, pj
the quesiiau after it saw what had
done.
liable
of Hooffon men Is beyond all prise.
They never undertook anything they
did not accomplish. They will build
this road, Whilst Congressional and
Legislative Committees are plotting,
scheming, jobbing, quarreling, and folk
ing oiver seetional’righw ai^djinteieats,
they propose to be chiefly mjuployed
laying down the track.-^Houiton Age
mile HoutLl frmajmv,
ler,; partliog wallow prairie; good poet
oak and poelfo limber; fide locality for
stoek ranche. Price $1.60, or if Uivi
ded into 160a, $2.oa r * : r J
S. P. K H. No. 1, on Oagels Creek,
near Clear Fork; lasting water, part
wnd”uuefgyfrimba>t pore -prairie**”i*ricirl
*nr
pF ALL KINDS,
’m* L.V 1 ... d- -
^ -v i
’ .Crotjue^' jBuo So.,
Funcy Uoods, etc.
BDTT»iHeK'8
M1U IBS.
. f’"-W
To #ur Patrons and the Pub-
lic Generally
•i'i:
:L
m SrrtlWirjjlHVUTtSTCSuT" ’*•'» V«W» vm the door, and
The Laud Agency Association of
Graham, Hilliard A Spillcr having
expired by litaitatiou, the business will
^ bo continued by tho uuilersigu^d, uq-
Jj der the firm name of ilmiara Spill-
U. 12 by 14 feet, thaldoor. WajVby **&"*&£*
4 feet.’ IW ftrehea MTUi* Ih. ,tnnn ...I her,toforo 1 .
Perhaps no influence has been more
detrimental to Tjriras abroad than that
poles two inches wido, placed across, on
which the masonry Ip placed. The
which has bad ks origin in the idea [steipers supporting the floors are of
with which a number of persOrtf Yilit cedar, about eight inches ihick, and
port-bple* of .m.M «d.r
tho State, either as immigrants or with
pressionf of this eharactivr.. It is true
that the mss would be, indeed, a very
silly fellow who would expect to get a
living without means to employ 01 la
bor to offer. -Yet we do really believe
that one very gfo** eource of discontent
among the disappointed, springs from
the foolish notion which some immi-
grants have, that, to express it jocosely,
"aon*, «■ »*« tnm,
And Im<u*7 trwi la Ui« br»i/ehM." . ~
Such pefoons never stay longer . than
they can raise tbe means to get away;
culstiug the most damaging reports in
regard to Texas and Texans*--—-
The "trath is that we know of na
country, short of Heaven, where labor
b not the price of excellence"in all the
callings of life. Thb b particularly
tbs case in a|l new countries, and Texas
ronaga. u.
I
- • ‘i-’1, t'.‘
Itc.ix'.-tfuUy,
K. 3, lliLLIAKU,
—ai‘plLtir^
* i,ei5l *cf« thc K*.t b.ir oour-lMusical Instruments
ghret Ldmoods’survey on hish t’.eok, £
on Telegraph Road, pWrt timber, part
musquite prairie-^-price $1.26 cash.
322 acres patented to heirs of Moses
Butler, on Brums River, in toe of Briar
Bend, uear Duff ftanche; all good Bras-
os bapJi lau^-^pyivc $3.00.
390 acres, part of J. Poitevent 640,
in ltatlifiFIkmd, opposite Mhrnflf Brooks | , ^ * ayja± ^
farm; part fi^at quality Brasos land,
part high meequite prairie—-price $J.50,
half cash balance one1, two and three
years with intercstfol tt) per sent-
320 acres J. PoiUVent on forfeited
Ralph Wright survey, on Braioc at
mouth of dim Anderson Branch, three
wiled from Belknap; about 70 acres of
first- elfrts Brasos laud in one body; some
firte branch bottom, timber and watery
price $1A0, half cash balance ope, two
and three yean with interest.
160 acne, part of h B. B. * C. ia
rk-wf RrWHKwnd-Clear Fork, paten -.
ted to Jss. H. MeCardlei. price $2.60.
Sitsated on road from Medline to old
Ash Marlin Kaiche—wouid take $£.00
cash for the $40. <
- r
^ u*xzn.tt^,.-n 1
‘ ' .V-i ' •
^ '
. g
tea. mil HJ te
'
..... .
AGENT FOR K
^CrJLZBRAtlP FATTUM^
25 Houston Btreefi, Fort Worth, Texas.
D.W. C.PENDERY/
WHOLESALE
Liquor Dealer.
AGENT FOR THE*CELEBRATED \
**
ROBERTSON^tntf 4WC8Ltt
froth 20 fo 60 foot long, lUnl ahoutthre'1
polss was thCfl placed Serosa the sleep-
ers, then a layer of thinly-split cedar
sticks, then about three inches of earth,
GEQ: 8PILLER.
Referring to the above, Tdo moet
cordially bespeak for Messrs. Hilliard
A BpiHer ail the good will, and favor
.so liberallyjyauijfested for the old firm.
Very RespeciTullv,
GC8r A. GRAHAM.
-4T—
urrwr No. X musquite prairie; price $2; |
......PRGFRIETOR OF -
pjfjmMxrs
half cash.
1061, undlvidedrhird of Geo. Wheel-,
ock, adjoining above- same prise!!
2131 aefos on Farmer Branch, two
miles N E from Graham.' Wollld make
j*-""*
U IlM-iauat haiMUon* nu<t brat ItjM
timiiutiti tur. it in IbU nouutr.v or Kar«i>c.
-h**lnr >4* nrr.iMt itnutb. rtrSncM -va4 »*!uui«
of Ion* rmabibtd wit i a turn LiUliltncj, cUwru*-* mkI
'-r.
illliSnrj, cluwni*
thrvnirb<>at thaaatlr* w&l*, wmt simra
th<- ^.iw*r na<l •Tin-
under tUo laoxt
sucks, men anoui rnrse inchvs ot earth, ^w W-FH'FTT V PI A N O I
the* •~l*7«f*f<*d.rb>rir> th*n an. flM i i I ■ -■■■ n-ija.
oib«r layar «f dirt, tbw a «arp«i of Grand Square and Upright.
seme kind of coarse grass. The rvoui Tl,,» i'>*«run»*tu i»n.-!.> .•» i>«nua.>ai« wu<i u«t i*u.
that have been protected from exposure
are .whitewashed, and the walls, are
ornamented with drawings and writings
Iu one of these rooms the impression
of a haad dipped in whitewash on a
joist b as plain as if it bad been done
only yesterday. In another room there
are drawings-of tarahtulas, centipedes,
horses, and men.
In some of the rooms have been
fell ■ •ur;>n>iu|r duration ofnound,
qulil, vf oliitli nmr dk _ ________
'aural* ut poni rful touch. S^wr* f«vbkl« • rull^rnnrlp-
li'.uof th« mayiiidi .iit ii.*4r.iui*«t, ^R«M#WiiKomU
(fi*»n «li«r* 1 kitf* l*i> nffrlit*. K*m*Uil>*r /</« tnk>'
n«» ri*h In pnrrhaMLV' .rac of tbcw> CKLKUKATKD IN
HrKUMkLiiiTS. If nfur (SI. 4v« tlajra t*at tH«l It
pniTM un*ntl«f**h>r7 tb- ■1011*7 b*T« paid will 11
I »funilr.1 U|H»M r*» jr# I.f MtCruui*ia *nd *li»r-
Kf" |WfW me tx.th ■■/•. PImo* warrants fatr aix
»'»n idCtk ■ j. -
DANIEL F. BEATTY.
Washington, New Jersey, U-.H. A
and the worst of all is, they go otfwte*' «or« g00^ «h» W*»» *»d all
found human bones, bones of sheep JOB-
Vta*re prepared to do1 moet kinds ol
colors and varieties of pottery wars.
These two large buildings are exactly
the same in every respect. Portions of
the buildings .plainly show, that they
were destroyed by fire, the timbers be-
ing burned off and the roofs caved in,
leaving the lower rooms entirely pro>
tested. The rock that these buildings
book:
;;ANp' _• ,\T ~'*r
b by no mead an exception. We
have no use for the idler, who expects tvere built of must have been brought a
to curtail our surplus resources by a
life of inactivity and sloth, consuming
Continually ind fietehl&odachjg.
Industry b, therefore, a universal
doty. It fosters health, contentment,
virtue anfl happiafl6s» sur comprUmca
and affluence. No one should*desire a
condition free from labor. The creator
jins imposed it in kindness.—FI. Worth
Democrat. ■ r 1 ■ —•>
■ ■■ v\ '
The aggregate corn crop of the Uub
ted States for 1876 was io round num-
bers 1,800,000,000 bushels. The crop
for 1817 is estimated at a larger acre-
age planted. We may safely estimate
thb year's crop at 1,600,000,000 bush-
els. Eight cents a bushel on this
.amouut would represent $120,000,000.
But it L also well to remember that
The official statistic* f40,000,006 home Consumers will have
to pay war prides for their supply, and
to thb connection is b interesting to
look *t last yearns average prices.
long way, as nothing to compare with it
can be found within a radius of twenty
miles. Did ditches and roads arc to
be seen in every direction. - j
The Navajo Indians say, in fbgard
tQ these ruins, that their forefathers
came tbere five old’men’s ages ago
(600 years), and that these ruifl) wore
here, and the same then as now, and
there is no recofd whatever of their
origin.—Ex.
flriigious are almost equally
Tb# statislios speak ot
Oribodox, Roman4 Gstbelics,
fi^e, fhiyin|g|foj^
wto* feeparatbforPiee
Jews, Talmodiris, Mo*
us Eussiau
Or«e$rlTimne- yiKiffll it tWoo#nr
try*—Bnt suppose aM^fteee 40
cents, it represcuts a money value of.
$600,000,000 mi a productfol oSTii/
600,00(5 bushels. Should the war be
come general in Europe/there will be
* demand Tor tbe exportation of all the
corn we can
would necessarily ge up to a h\gh tig-
the — •-
-------self r Il ia Hated that there are about $0,-
ilottby list 000 bead of cattle nnd 20,000 bead o:
j sheep ht McCulloch county.' T, +
Job Printing! £!
roati to town; adjoining lands h«ld at
$4; price $2.56 cash; would seB eitkeV
half at $3.00.
880 acres J.;PoifoVent originally 8.
P. K^R., No. 7, on Telfgrapi 8^
mils* East of Graham, East half of 64Q;
half prairie, half post oak; fine land;
lie* well; price $1.50. If desired could
also sell the west half. *
160 acres, part *fB. B. B. & C. 640,
joins the above on the sorth; price $1.50
646 J. Poitevent Mb. 1, joins above
on the west; lies pa eld Graham aad
Jacksboro road; a lew acres broke iu
1874, fine land; mostly prairie; part
poet oak timber; price $1.50, one half
cash, balance one, two and tbsee years
with iatcrest at 10 per cent./
640 J. Poitevent No. 8, ®n tenth
boundry Colony Block* some vicinity;
same price. • : j
SOUR MASH WHISKEY Ete.
- 1 ■ T I
Ho a* Ion Ht., between 1st and Aad
PORT WORTH, TEXiA
CMC
"jT ,
*3
«raf < Ira BIOW 7AIWTSW A]
TI.Hri«M i«uii Mitift'jM hin ois
Jratlac ^iMUMStoeVr**. -
DAMIKL F. SlATtV,
WMbington, H»w Artsy, S. B. A.
C. J. Ohrletopcr^
sues AB
The Kansas City Times says:., A
young mail writes about tbs hardships
he experienced on the overland trip to
the Black Hills. He left Cheyenne on
the 27th of March. He brile a doleful
tale of snow storms, want of fuel on the
toute, and the terrible condition of the
roadf, It sometimes took the combin-
ed force of men and teams to pull
through thn mud.; A snow storm ov-
ertook th# party when within ten
CARPS*
POSTERS,
LETTERHEADS,
BILLHEADS,
t - LEGAL BLANKS,
Circulars, Pamphlets, Ac., Ac.
A aa low prices and in m good style
• any office in Northwest Texas.
Parlor Organa.
THm* tMtrun>*nU i<ow h r*i«, m. * ht
nntlnil *V*ct« »■>! «i»prra»loti ««v*r Uhn nttaln«d.
■lUj It-d fo» AmtlMr «n4 w4 M ofa*
m<-nt ic anr r*rUic. ' . ,
Excel ia Quality of Tone, Thorough
. Workmanship, Elegant Design
'...... And Finish,
An* W.*»<l*rfn 1 Vnrlrty of U»*ir CoabUM#M Solo Himm
CF*dutiful u«vr ‘’"tnirtif iilw^w iw#r
-XSSraM.s ' '
DANIEL F. BEATTY,
Washington, New Jersey, TJ. 8. A.
head ofDry Creek, North ofGra-
U ham read; price $1.56.
640 acres 8. P. R. No. 1, Block D,
on Rock Creek, on Telegraph road,
timber and prairie; price #1.56, ene
hal fmah.
640 8. P R R, Jack connty, on head
i,:,
3vLA.OEtXITieT .
— 1
n- ■.. -_—j
- T-----■—•—*;rr-|
1
m-
.
- ^
:-^r- • —----.. .
' |
AND WORKER INj
...S' .'—i ‘ !r'1^' r' ^
•V
Brass,Copper,
ly poet eak ami bfollTjack timber lnnd
with some floe valley; price $1.50 or
<4
3yr2r4L_
■ ■—*......It.1
-i?
choice 160s at $2,00.
Z 240 acres in Collin jeoanty, Head*
right of W. W. Hubbe, half mile below
the Greentille and Dallas-orossiug on
Sabine, and on west side of Terrill and
Farmersville* road; good Bois P’Arc
timber; every acre good land; about i
or I timber, price A.OO—ditt cheap.
646 acres Iadianola K. R.f near cen-
ter of Haakell county, land all good
mHpe
v.e fW rt rty^fjvV-
r ___... At M* ------ ’<**—***•■-
rrr r rt»t m i
■IzZ
5 l IT
LEAD AND H 11E XT-1 RO N.
-J >, " '
»«WW" - •
-J-
t
- . >1 y-
-
-T7_
...
..r-JK-a
price 50 cents cash.
2781
rinn*,; Pistole, feeks, FtroOToef
91 acres, undivided third qfNych-
olae Lynch 836 acre survey on Teie-
-f—-
Blacksmith d Wages Shop.
Opposite the Lone Star Livery
miles Sl-lblOi
Stales, Aa
^ HIM of Deadwood, where the men and ani-
Maki*« liUsett«-paHl the hlghsst.price, J mals were detained two days. Many
95 cents per bushel, and Kansas the
lowest, 22 cents. Tbe average between
these two. figures would show the gen
persons were returning hom e disgusted.
Wages are from 68 to $6 per day, but
living is very high, and the hotels are
all full. Gambling is the rage. ***3W
TS4d over which we patscd7*ayt tho
youug man, ‘>as spotted with graves
and rifle pits.”
1 --**-•»**
Stahl*.
t the. undersigned
tbe public generally, that ws are pre-
rod to do
,Iron and Wood Work
ou short notice, and guarantee satiafac
tk>n. da eur-work-Uo pei
cent choaper than aay other thep in
.the city. Call |tt the old stand of D.
graph road, on first ferk ef Dry Creek;
prlee $1.50, half cash. *•'* >l
Land Gertifloates and Her!p located
and patented for ao undivided interest A TT A, KEBX3C A q
or for cash fee. Borne .fine lands .on
Wichita, Peas and Red River already
surveyed pad Field Notes oan be put ia
in 30 day*. ’
2560 acres, four alternate sections in
Hall county, on or near MoKensie Trail
an Red River, patented to J. Poitevent;
au perior Red Rivsf land, Well watered;
price 50 tents an sera. . •
16240 acres—14 alternate section#
A. B. GANT,
IlAHD looatok,
Local option wu defeated in ColHn
m!>‘
.pn, and U.a_ prica.
the city, St the old stand
H. KilliaWa Snd give us a trial.
, iv KILLIAN A PAS
■A1
__2_
A PARKER.
ifrl if; t t'l WgiLL|a4Sfe^
usual on electisn u»t».
.vrf .!
The Tiepper* are
and the wheat crop is more promising
than for many yean. , xw WEATHERFORD. • v TEXAS.
my locative interest Fronts about nine
miles on Red River mouth of Powers
Fork—surveyed in 18(4 by Qetege
Spiller, prcAfliik'fihlfveyor Young Laud
District Will furnish she vs, patented
ready for patent nearly tWo years.'
Hch
- -W EATHERFORD, : ~i ‘T1XX0
a _ -
Otfora for sals skeiss Lands foe
Graiu, Cotton find Stock Farms
’ 4V; . f
v"J,; * -A
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Graham Leader. (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 26, 1877, newspaper, May 26, 1877; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth879360/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.