The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 23, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
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their playing. Timothy Graham St
wag, p^rhupa, the most prominent ra,*•
Urn man on both teams. His , \
A .... . cial
tafckf ung was sure and gritty and T}lt})
no plays went over him. He is
undoubtedly the beat material for him
a tackle in the school. Chock &<**
Pickard also played a good game ra*
Chunk
¥he" IwturalPo°teCti°n h° ^ youl buildir
keep Genasco from cracking and' leaS
Oenasco is easy to apply. Come see t
joonng of real economy.
M0RRIS0H-SMIT1 LUMBER COMPANY
ft Graham A Texas At
at tackle.,
skating rink Panne
Turner,
1 m\\ ■—\j\ Speaking of making sud-
' den changes—did you ever
want to heat up a room
in a hurry? Perhaps you overslept. Per-
chance the alarm did not ring. You are in a
terrible hurry—
L- Then is the time when you will appreciate a
although
have some things in common, that
pigskin, p ayed a stellar game ant
Struck Bear into the hoaetfe of his
difference if we be
make
opponents. Mabe Short’s line buck
iag was irraasstable and blocking
l>erfeet. Hdeam-roi ler Burkett in
bis picturesque uniform amused
himself by caressing terra Pinna
with Nathaniel. Tlie special fea-
ture plays of the CHd Gpard
were three long forward
passes to Twigs and Puffy
by Short ie and long end
Democrats, Ropuldieans or Social'
*■&*» and we -ought to recognize
the tie and treat earth other as a
gentleman, for a man can be
either and be a gentleman.. When
a man votes on election day he
is supposed to vote for his best
interests. The reason that men
vote for the things that are
Against tjieir, interest is that
they have never found the truth
in the matter and the great
Air-Tight
BABBS Ini
truth in our social reform iaryet
From zero to seventy degrees Fah-
renheit is a big jump—but it is an easy
stunt for this remarkable heater.
- Five minutes in time is all that is
needed.
bar of children that lire bom
out of wedlock and these things
when we look about us we know things are wrong. So
that nature w. n,e Ik fault frr htwiy mm auepl flfelr jVilifacs
she has given us rain and other -i1** w a mani buys hot taim&'es,
tilings that we stand in need them without looking
of; nature gave us the greatest •kuek. (Applause.)
crop iu the history of the friends, you may wonder
country.’ Look at the 15,000,000 ***** luw w« a,r*‘ to get away
bales of cotton and then at the from th* Present order of tilings
end of the season we find the there is only one way to do the
ones that made and gathered the r*K*1*> and that is to do away
cotton without clotftung, then it w't*1 thsig by putting a
must be a sociad wrong. There little of the spirit of Ohrist
is a class of people that own ever hnfto it. Whatever we may think
thing and never work,but live off °f tlie divinity of Christ, andi a'l
of the work of the man who never things the infidel has said about
owns anything and produces ail has only been a tribute to
the wealth for the other person: Hia teaching, and that teaching is
It doesn’t make any difference bound to win and take the place
whether you own the body of the °f the present order ixf- things,
slave or tlie things that he pro- It is not so much who ia elected
ditoe, it is slavery in either cam*, a« it is private ownership and so
and let the time soon come when hmg as you allow the individual
these men will be freed from to own the public property, sure
their shackles. There was a time the private will own the public
when some of you men never saiw property.
a tramp or a pauper; that was The Socialists believe in public
the time when men had not lost ownership or industrial demo-
confidence and berfdre the day of cp*cy, and if political democracy
mortgages; that was the time wa# the remedy for political des-
when you aould go into the home P°tk*m then industrial democracy
and find tlie spinning-wheel, the the remedy for political de-
shoe-knife and loom, but the time raocnacy..
came when the magic wand in A raiVoad conductor said to m<
tlie inventor’s band touched these <ltte day, “If we were to take
things and they became grest over tlie railroads, who would run
machines that were soon gotten them! If you will answer that
into the hands of a few men with I will become a Socialist.’’ and I
capital so we have our present merely asked him* Who was run-
oonditions. The great question "•‘‘K them mow!’ and Ive said,
confronts us why are we not We are.’ and I said, ‘You have
allowed to enjoy the abundant answered you own question.’ The
crops we have made and gath- difference is when capital
ered. Reason. They toll us there run« the railroads the rubber
is too much made and there ia no tired class get the money,
demand for the product and vet bu*» -the laborer runs
tilings. You call ua frotj lovers
and that we don’t pare for the
marriage vow. If you will go to
the court records and see the
divorce cases you will see it is
appalling under the Democratic
administration.
No we are not taking the home*
of men. We. want every nun to
have a home, for the Lordj gives
hut the landlord takes away.'
You Democrats as well prepare
for us for we are going to win.
We are now the second party in
power in the State of Texas and
are going to make great advances
the next year. In Oklahoma we
have five representatives in con-
gress and one senator. And you
know up there a Socialist is a
tolerably respectable thing and
sometimes one can even marry a
white woman. (Applause). Wa
are often toid of a Socialist
railing off with another man’s
wife and if he does, k is always s
prominent Socialist. Now the raa-
son for this is that a reporter
is always on tlie lookout for news
and so few Socialists are guilty
that it is news, but so many''
right half; Putfy Stoffem, left
half; Twigs Eddleman, quarter
baek; Sort./. Porter, right end);
Chock Pickard, right tackle;
Chunk Turner, right guard;
Steam-mi ler Burkett, center;
Mabe Short, left guard; Timothy
Graham, left taek’e; W. Clark
Johnson, left end .
The line-up, G. H. S.: Daddy
Holt, full back; C. Lynch, right
half; Toad Taylor, left half; Pat
Tackett, quarter back; Freak
Priee; right end; Handsome
Howard, right tackle; Fritz Hud-
son, right guard; Nathaniel Price
center; Jack Stewart, left guard;
Sid Self, left tackle ;HBtar Kib-
ble, left end.
Referee: Puckett. Linesman.:
Senator Rickman. Tune of quar-
ters: 8 minutes. Score: 0 to 0.
Spbndid Small Farm for Sale
~ Vlu • v •v • v i v, i r .1*,
or Trade.
Eighty-acre fayin n<
dear sf debff-'/fine in
50 acres
of what that mcuib nrywnai
a cold morning—of the time
youjoave. No building of a
new fire. You put in a fresh
stick and away she goes.
That isn’t all. You get a
steady, controllable heat hour
after hour.
^ . Think what this means
to your family—in illness
prevented and doctor’s
Jp bills avoided.
a Think of what it means
I in comfort—quickly and
V cheaply furnished.
Bji Then come in while
it is still in your mind.
An inspection will de-
cide the matter.
Bums wood and
It is just ths stove you need,
lighter fuel.
* ‘ x- .-v------.
"CoUV the Original Patented
{ Aar Tight Hsater, is sold only by us
wm
trade for larger farm and pay
cadi difference
or assume small
incumbrance.
t _A. W. Kay.
l The Kansas City Star opines:
5 “Some men are born bores, some
i acquire turgidky by constant
i practice and others tell Fond
t stories.'’
Initial Game of ths
^ Results in a 0 to
sTiy o ti*. i-
’ Napoleon, Jim Jeffries, and T.
R. faded to come back, but the
*‘Gfcd Guard” came back an a
fcr:.
blaze of gi'cry. Her playing was
characterised by* the vim and in-
domitable spirt die displayed in
You will find no end of peo-
|de practicing the touch system
who couldn’t apei’l the word
“work” on a typewriter if their
meal depiinkled on It.
that I could got debts on Demo-
crats wnd Republicans Wt 1(V, aflt
them -the------htrrri
f would take thorn
(Applause).
| We are often accused of being
< infidels and trying to do away
I wfth the churches, and you will
sit and see the European natkxis
shoot tlie dappers out of the
bells and yet it is alright under
the...........present order____of things.
j The trouble with this tiling m
iTustrated hy you prohibkioniatB
praying for Tom Ball to be elected
I and them after the primary havo
to vote for .Hm Ferguson, Now
God didn’t fail to answer your
prayers, the trouble is in the
primary. (AppLaose).
{ Men of all parties won’t you
I arise and help to bettor the con-
< tit kens and got the mothers out
i of the places where k is impossi-
generatim of Ink-Slingers were
driven before her mighty phalanx
as the diaff before the wind.
Only Fattier Time with his eight
minute periods saevd the youth-
ful aspirants to gridiron fame
from a decisive defeat.
Wography. However, he has evi-
dently had little training and ex-
[xirience in real football1 and may
after being well polished, prove
a diamond in the rough. Sid,
the man with the $1.60 uniform,
the money. You Dcni<x*rftt*|
say if Socialists had control
they wtJtt’d ruin the thing. 11
vvairrt to know how much grealtor1
rain could Im* brought Hism us
Some will say if they were in
of cottiin, jP0'wor tliey would want us to di-
vide up. We Tvave' ni*ver ank<d t
'for such a thing. We don’t'
want men to divid*' the things)
tbat^ go to make a livelihood,•
but we-are wanting the expknter
out of the way—Hindi as tho man
that wants rent, interest and
profit. Tln rc <Knmcs a man want-
ing you to £ive him one bale of,
cotton. You say, ‘I won’t do it.’
He sa^T* ‘It is rent.’ You say. ‘I l
guess yon wi’l have to take k. ’
IMwm the next day he comes aixl
says, ‘ 1 want another oop. ’ You j
mj, ‘I can't do it.’ You -will!
have to for this is interest. Then!
us there is an ovcr-produotkin;
yet there are children that Iwive
no clothes to wear.
When the war broke out in
August, 1914, they mid it. is the
war that is ruining us and
lowering— the pri
toiien in December and January
more ootton went to Europe
that at ' any otftor time in
history, ami during the war
the allied forces are using more
cotton, three time over than ever
before, to make explosives to kill
their fellowman, while the pro-
ducers go half clad and cold. And
the cost of hiving kc|»t going up
in spite of Mr. Wilson’s legisla
tkxn on high <Mist of living. This
only serves to remind us that
Cleveland was elected to raise
the price of the things and Jt was
so with Mr. Bryan in his first
I including kidney protectors, and
played Friday be*
rubber raise guard, and a
tween tne uio uuaraa ami tne u. |,ej,nt.t of o<»thic style, "has the
Hv S. hopefu^s was the shining tight of tlie line, although
and most warmly confratod foot ite gputfcpTing flame was oftirnes.
ball game ever staged an the local ^ (brt^r of 'being extinguished
gridiron. Both teams played a |,y 'p Graham. Fritz Ilmlaon, of
stoljsjr game. Although the siui j,u,^ year’s fairw, acquitted lihn-
U?imUi8iafted fl,ry w‘lf nobly in the fray. F<-
Wgl*ng mass of swel-^ prj,.e Handsome Howard and J.
i ' oity the eamagt1 °on-, Stewart, played a eocsiston? game
>***’■ ‘• ^'a(m looked oat with Naithaniel Prk**, who entered the
a benignant! smile . game with such colossal eoitlfi-
Altlwmgh the G. H. 8. team dggge and sn'enhlar. esane out
"Hay good h&CL a number of weak- broken in spirit and. looking like
nesses were apparent. Of course, hu asphalt imvoment.
k must be rermsmbeored that this T|,<> (jy Guard was an all star
was her <q>ming gsnne and as y<it collection. Shortie’s punting was
she lias had, little practice. R revelation And his line plung-
Puckett, Iwiwever, Ibas done ra ing kraskftil)le. -.Cofs^wnd and
Connection
Adds to Farm Cheer
It was a blustery March
evening, but inside the
cozy sitting-room of the •
Brown's all was . cheery
and bright.
the telephone. Her hus-
band smiled—for he knew
•the pleasant custom for
years had been to gall the
daughter, in the distant
village, each week. _
Have you a Telephone
connected to the Bell Sy»>.
Mm)
they say die Socialists want you
Sr. Wilssun ciakned if
etw.tod he would ran down the to divide up. There is «niy to* ^
cost of living, and Mr.Wi’sar) bad reason that the other follow don’t inR
no sootier been Elected to office take ajl you have, he can’t find ^
than he called an extraordinary a name to take it under. You say -u y
session and the ink had not we will wreck the government
gotten dry on the bill to lower and the koine. Wi‘l you look ^
the coat of living than he asked at the conditio* of things in
Congress to appoint a octiunis- Europe. The present order of Jb
ason to inveatigate the coat of things has byppglit it about ™
living showing that his legisla- J and will you Walt at the num- ‘
~ ; J
At tniithisttani
1W ouUUlWBSlWn
Tstagrapfe &
Tstspbom Co.'
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Bowron, Frank H. The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 23, 1915, newspaper, September 23, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth884311/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Library of Graham.