The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 25, 1886 Page: 6 of 7
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Graham Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the The Library of Graham.
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« 4. K. »«•«*!
I ignri-„.. .»./, ,,'jn
ifeS-
• :: 'T*
•#* ?*
---and Broad Cheat*, and
»w They Are 0|>tal«*d. ',.; a*>
is & profession which many
» know nothing of. It is that of
in this art can demand n
■ is always sure of cm
OiU in the large tailoring houses,
reporter visited a fashionable up-
tailor to have a talk with one of
PI ^rtists. He w as introduced to a
_j»per little Frenchman of about forty-
■ffireyears.
trtou h»ve had a large experience in I
..jsme profruiou. I supple 7~Mkodtift
chosen senator In January, M80, the
mbm year he was elected president.
W defeated candidates lot the presi-
>lav, Cass,
ENGLISH POLITICS.
Dobglas and Blaine were all Csited
.r_^T . „ ;— .---,r States Senators.
vho models the human figure, >t. SHkJ be nothing Just now otr
in day. He models in cloth. ^Wehto “grow” a candidate for presi-
. " *• * • - dent an tbe senate or house; At the
saiuti time Mr. Edmunds was a promU
nentcaii didale for the republican nom-
vJweporter.
*‘£ bnyc given it my constant study
" — o* • vwuoiaus niuu
ay *®r ncHrly twenty years, and the more
|y " oi it the less faith I have in the
'dMinmon sense of most of my patrons.”
-- ^That’s rather a broad assertion to
x Nevertheless, it is true, and becora-
wag more bo every day. -You Ameri-
cans are of all people the Jeast satisfied
Jtttfc what nature luw given you. You
mre always trying to go one better than
urc, and instead of
mature, ami insicou ol trying natural +“'1 “***« wwu uu mss
taneans in the way of taking plenty of .“aPPy in the settlement of Australia, a
*»r and muscular exercise you substi- Vuluulx.j»tl0u lb« encTgeticoxparwton bl
and fKa onraoi ''
trying daturd
aute the pad and, the corset. . . c ,
“Will you tell me the latest idea of a
good figure from a dude’s standpoint?’’
“That depends a great deal Upon
•terhat the dude wants. If he waiits a
finely developed .pair of calves I can
•upply ‘ lilfn. If he lacks broadth'“of
ffiBKmirT~~can furnish him with as fine a
■ «hu*t a* yotecould wish to see. Should
ate ilyUcieney be- in' the ah0,1 biers, f
nnSsluce a,, * '**" '
wroul
air . that -Atlas himself
uld envy. The process of producing
ahemt Is very simjde. But first I must
inform you that! have nothing to-do
~ wrtth the tailoring. I simnly
•meats or pads, which answt
^ecISET
• meats dr pads, which answer the samel
purpose to the tailors as lasts do to a
, mhoemaker. To do this it is absolutely
f5tieot’ssary to have an accurate idea o*f
ination in 1884. Both l|ir. Edmunds
and Mr. Evarts would probably bo un-
willing to con code the correctness of
Gen. Butler’s forecast, while Speaker
Carlisle is looming up on the democrat-
ic side.—New Yopt World.
"Ti,
CQLPNIAL. RACES.
1**KS!T
The Population of fha United State*
Will AJway* Bo Aryan.
However much it may be mixed, the
population of the United States will al-
waj a be Aryan at the bottom, for all
the heterogenius elements are absorbed,
almoist without leaving traces of them-
selves, In TEaninmehse Wartliof colo-
nization. which has no parallel in his-
tory. The English have been no less
ward the north, where the conditions
grow .unfavorable as the settlcraunte- ap-
proach the equator., lb-nee it comes
that, in the northern part of Queens-
land. European colonists arc not in a
condition to endure the fatigue of agri-
cultural labor. This fact has had uTnch
to do with the efforts made of late
years to annex New Guinea and New
Britain, whence It has: hemf'proposed f o
Henry flwrst •■ the 8lt nation fir Ire-
land aaf the Prospects—Hfb Be-
'Kit:.. Mef in (Hadntoncr’s Sincerity.
Ytm men have giton as macrh
thought to ttis Irish problem as Mr.
Henry George. He was asked what he Ireland.’
■ *■ muM^ uvutw woe anauu W lidL Ilf? r-”
though* of the intimation thattfa^and L,.‘'Mlhlnk,:ihen, thatMr.Gladstone
bas a real ambition to settle the ques.
I said before, here is the real difficult
T^iat it is possible even for him to i
mintotevtfce dul iwe# his office to I
satisfaction of the people Ido*notbe-
lieve. The'di fficuTty is mherfenHn the
situation Itself, in the fact that it Is still
held that an EngiNhnian 6r a Sooteh-
man must be the virtual governor of
or a time.
question would be brought forward in
the hope^that it would tako the place of
the home mile agitation.
“I think thepositiop of tltfngs is the
Other way,” responded Mr. George.
“The land question is moro important
Jthan thopolitical question. The Eng-
lish government in Ireland has froni
the first had for its purpose the main-
tenance of the landlords. That has
been the reason of all its tyranny. The
Irish peoplp have been disfranchised
and’kept down, not because English
statesmen wished to do that out of more
wantonness, but that it was necessary
tP piwm thfiAoM of an alieu. class up-
on the lands that had been Wrostedfrom
theT^rish peopla, and io-dav thp reid
of free control
e Iri«h.' people
wn The dispossession
Irish landlordism is
db'lithclo to the granting i
6f their oiyn amiirs to th
of the landlords.
proportions ol the customer; othor-
h k would lead to a very amusing
lfusion. .. Qnce I hgd a customer who
wmntetl to poeicss a shapely pair of legs.
jfficiently full
original ones were su
'*>r alt practical ^ur^osos, but he want-
• ad them more null, l made some pad
ior the thighs, calves and hlpis. They
’ weT* tpade of fine chamois leatber, and
wrlteh finished they were sevfrn into the
'trousers. The result was the gentle-
Vng with hnelv shaped legs, btH eiitffi* tneFH1M3 latwuao oetween them ana
■v me nt nMnwu. —:»i. *u„ _*i— the motjQiCjf coutytry of the colonists.
Iy out of proportion with the other
. parts of his body.”
mantv peo^e.waar pSda of this
~ “Quite a larga number. Most gen-
tlemen prefer to wear padded under
-i^*annents; by this means they avoid the
mjmemn , ------wm —v
i bulky appearonue which padded clothes
gve.x them. The cheapest outfit costs
draw the manual forces required for tlio
tillage of the soil.
- In the South Afriistn ........r.. _____
Dutch have been Solidly established for
some two hundred years; 6hd, in a few
countries of South America, colonies
composed of people of various Eiirope-
nft origin* h avc "prospered, though Une-
qually. There aru also some young
coloniesTTdiiitded by Germans on the
Rio Granuo, in Brazil, which a fancy
still fieeding confirmation has plated in
the rank of healthful countries and
suitable for our people. Reviewing the
results that have been obtained in the
colonies’ thus briefly enumerated, which
embraces the amouht. of the- more or
less fortunate enterprises of the kind,
wo see that their success has been in In-
verse proportion to- the difference in
But in every case it is hot probable that
the organization of the colonists has es-
caped having to pay, at the~expense~6T
profound alterations, for acclimatiza-
tion in foreign countries _
ence, as well as tourists, have been i»-
-New York Mail and Express.
Presidential. Candidates;
In an interesting interview published
* in the TribtiM, Gen. Benjamin F. But-
ler is represented as .saying that for
^iany years to come “the Country W ill
not hanker after an Ohio man for proai*
dent. ’ -------3=--
“Blaiue-has certainly grown of late,”
ways the doughty general. “There is tio
•no else who anywhere near approach-
* n hiip in his own party. It is possiblo
he thay be renominated. He i$ stronger
? jthan he has ever been.” >
’*May not congress grow a man?”
Ike reDorter. Ami to im*
j^ortant inquiry General Butler an-
swered: “There is nothing oti which to
•grow him. Tbo rule is that a member
-•f the house rarely develops into presi-
^-deatial timber, a member of the senate,
Ppwrwr. ..'-V y.#.
i; What a sin^ulairblunder is this for an
* jfid political wheel-horse like- Benjamin
Bufler to make, who has himselfJboen
it member of congress and a candidate
land
-never had experience jn con-
gress.
r~ John Adams was the first member
2- to the continental congress by
Massachusetts. Jefierson ’Was in the
'-equiuivet.al congress in 1775. Madison
was in the contmenal- congress in' 1779
■ mud 1786 and in the federal congress
from 1789 to L797. Monroe was in the
«»ntinental congress in 1783 and in the
senate in 1790. John Quiney Adams
^B^ mrus elected to tho senate in'1803 and re-
signed in 1808. Andrew Jackson was
" -Is congress in 1/96 and in the senate in
1797, resigning in 1798. Martin Van
Men of sci
. --------. jave been in-
terested for many years in the study of
the Yankee type, which, according to
thegeneral Opinion, is not wholly com-'
parable either with the English or Ger-
man,* or with a cross of the two with the
Irish race. The peculiar physiology of
the Yankees is yet to be matte out, and
I can not insist too strongly on the
great value of, the. scientific-results that
might accrue from the study of this deli-
cate ethnological problem, iris averted
that the transformations of this type
grow more pronounced as we go from
northern to the southern states. —Popu-
lar Science Monthly. ■ , • •
Drift of Modern Fiction.
The libraries of the land.bear witness
to the fact that the books read by the
masses of th© people are works of fic-
tion, novels, love-stories. Thu pe.np|«:
are of necessity influenced by what they
read, influenced not only mentally but
morally-- Knowing these things to be
sow and that light literature reaches ten
people where the church reaches ope,.
any far-thinking, keen-sighted Christian
philosopher inquires into this'influence,
what it is and what its effect will be.
To give moral power and vigor, wisdom
must be inculcated, not man's, but
God’s wisdom, the wisdom that is given
by direct revelation from heaven. Mod-
ern fiction is full of moralizing, free-
thinkers’ theories. Their sentiments
are dangerous. There 1b an insidious^
poison of rationalism—-though for the!
most part- sugar-coated—lurking in-
thousands of volumes on offr library,
shelves, and in cultured homes, and it
is even found in many of the pulpits of
the land. By a simple weakening of
the grand ola faith ox the martyrs, the
faith that has wrought rovolutions in
churoh and state, the faith that bade
Martin Luther stand up alone against
the word, the simple taking away one
tithe of its purity is sufficient to grad-
ually undermine our Christian civili
■Britain, and as I say in a recent: article
on this subject,. ‘The dpnmiant class
in Groat Britain ha^e the same direct
ism as the slaveholders of Smith,Cam,
liua would have had in preserving a sue-
--------- - w ... r v **
cessful insurrection erf slaves Ip North
CaroTTna.1’ An Irish parliament Jo^day
nto>y, he a parliament of the
arutlords, but it would be a parliament
in Which the landless WOplff be domi-
nant, and which would ihevitably be
soon led by men bout oh restoring the
land tp Hie people without any compen-
sation whatpvor to the landlords. This
is the real difficulty which hesets Eng-
lish statesmen in the settlement of tlio
Irish question.
‘All hopes of the settlement of this
question at the present session of par-
liament must prove futile. Although
prepared to make what they deem
'&r.ge concessions, no English party is
yet prepared to go far enough, for a
tiuuP”
• •'Yea, I do. But although he is to-
d*y the most powerful man in Great
Britain, and, with perhaps the excep-
tion of Bismarck, the most powerful Ir*-
diviifaal in the world, this is a task
that ip m^r opinion transeends even his
great powers. Mr. Chamber!idlyathor
represents the element that mnsvCome
to the front before a final settlement is
possible.^ I think whatever Mr. Glad-
stone can do will result as the landAct,,
What really begaa in -the land league
movemeaff'was a grent revolution—a
revolution1 more . important and far
reaohing, tliau the Freneh revolution in
the test century—and revolutions are
notrto be stayed by half-uiea*tires. The
■ iitliiuilLy about vmupromisvu in .such
times Is that they always coins too late.
A few years befoyo its passage such a
measura^as - the- ’Irish tend act wiroltf
have stayed the agrarian movement in
Ireland for some time: So, a little
while ago, siieh a measure as Mr. Giffon
now premises would have hadthO samo
effect. ^Now..! think ikis*too late even
for that. N or do *1 • think it can lie seri-
ously proposed to buy out the Irish
landlords without bringing the question
of "gefting rid of the BritisR landlords
“Fhe leprous dlstllmrat, whose effeet ;
Holds »ucb sn enmity with Wood of rain,
That, swift m <;n|cksllTfr, it courses through .
The natural gat»*f ai.i.d alleys of thrbndy.
*nd canseatoC *kfn to b*com« “barked about,
most laBur-Ilke, with vile and loathsome
crn«ta”. Such aro the effects of (iUcaaed sad
•fid bile, the only antidote for Srhlcl
•c and regulate the lifer—|
. which Is to
mm office a
and regulate the llyer—aa office ad-
agtqS; performed by Dr. Tlefort "GOlden
It 1* a nice croas between religion and hap-
piness.
(’onnrmption.—Ttrr tbe mee of this dlstress-
tngdiseaew there has been no piedlclneyet dla-
eovered that can show more evidence of real
merit than Allen’s Lung Balsam. U5c.Y 50c.,
rand #1.00 a bottle. f
It ia the ingredient that greases the saw of j
nxs. • ... , J ;
v/f'
A QUESTION I
iJBrcmns Iron~*
—-Bitters
ANSWERED.
w"V.
-- —' — — — T » • V" VliV< ' ■ V ■
of gefting rid of /lie British landlords .
n.n wril irrtn prartient pottrlos, and they 1
will never be bought out. Tbe proje^
*UU*n that a wholoupeupla sJiuuld inn
from a few of their number the right to
live on their pative soil raises too dis-
tinctly the question of the origin of
property ytgtits in tenff ttnmrimjt of hte
lag carried out.
, “But.” concluded Mr. Goorge, “the
subject is-too vast and important to be
!ully treated in an off-hand interview.
What f havo said is frugnumlary,’--—
New York Herald. ’ . ^ . . . -
or produ
medict nea do. B.„ .. „
care* fidl(«itlM, BntomdMrWnksNi,
By*»■!■*■; MalarHt, <%Ht* and Fevero»
fila-for all tboM Ail^Mints Iron U pr«woriM daily,
BROWN’S IROn BITTERS.Srsri
: * O'----
ernranentsettlement;......I think the po^
itical question cun nnt ho *
the land question Is settled,
the Irish land ( juestion can not be set-
and that
tied until the English land question is
settled: --What may be done during
' ..... ifr
this parliament will only help ifo st
Irish
!tp iTO
The
further radicalize opinion.
movement is, m reality, a 0_______
revolution, but it is only a part of a
revolution which has eommetaccd
England and-Scotland.”——
“You sav the Irish political question
canteot be settled, until the British
land question is settled?”
W hat I mean is that uhtil British
landlordism loses its power it will never
consent to concede to Ireland the politi-
cal rights which will alone satisfy the
feeling that has been aroused . in that
country, gp.d that, therefore, the final
settlement of the'Irish question must
mean the destruction of British land-
lordism is now fighting for life, and will
fight desperately, and while the land
movement in England anil Scotland in
creases the anxiety of the dominant
class to settle the Irish question, it also
makes anything like dull concession
more dangerous to them. While they
might be willing to sacrifice the Irish
landlords completelv, as they did prac-
tically in the Irish land afct, the danger
to them is that this would only hasten
their doom.”
“What about the land movement in
England and ScotlandP”
“It is already much stronger than
can be understood from the English
cress, and is rapidly increasing eVory-
i lay. Not only are Scottish crofters and
inglish agricultural laborers awakening
to the truth that God made the land for
tiro whole people and not lor a few"
landlords, but the masses of the cities
and tbwns are also begining to realize
that the land question is at the bottom
of the sooial injustice from which they
suffer. The oorrewpQndent does not ex-
aggerate the want and misery that exist
in all the British cities. I do not think
that there is likely to be any ‘danger-
ous uprising in many great cities before
the winter is over, as he says, for tl
organization by which' such' physical
1U» W
manifestations of discontent can he re-
pressed. Ja.Jtoo strong. *. Not only is
there bitter suffering, however* but a
rapidly-growing feeling that this suffer-
*n.l 1R18 ami in tlio M>n&te in 1H>; Tv- Jo r"pM» »»<1 wMrlpuol o( rovolut.on. „i„, „riJ;Il" *
There is sgjyty in onA dlwcffteytfilij;
“ ill ion
»nd i»18 and in the senate in 1824. Ty-
?“• **• <«*«* o? mode™ «aKS
•v ti • in « HiFnnhAn omm*
1827 and re-dected in 1838.®
Polk served in congress in 1825 and
ior several subsequent tcrnis. and was
Afisaker in 1835 and 1837. Fillmore,
dtected Vice-president, was in congress
iff 1832 and re-clectcd in 1836, 1838 and
1840. Pierce was in congress in 1833
“nd 1835, and senator in 1837. Bu-
„ianan went to congress as % federalist
in 1820 and as a democrat tn 1828, and
was in the senate from 1833 till 1845,1
—1*- - a he boqamo secretary of state in
______to this. Inger-
soll’s endeavor is tq take from human
souls All stay and comfort and to give
nothing in return. The light literature
of the present day performs much *•
same office.—Saturday Mail.
members of parliament that Mr Glad-
stone Is not slnoere in Ids alleged desire
_ A Very Remarkable Boy.
John, Sturdevan.t, the boy preacher,
near Raleigh, N. C., who was recently
stricken blind for a few days, during
! our
I860, Uhcoln
.which.period' ha preached with
was te congress,|nl846. ami vTas a can- Adding ^JftefhwTe'ha^hid^
0th,‘r <livin,> r,’v*’li\tion. Ite in to lie ,..........
stricken blind, depf and dumb, and liis he
one report states iEittV* lD ■■
to give'Ireland home rule, and db you
think IJs insincerity is evidaneed »>v ike
cabinet appointments he has made?”
'think. Mr. Gladstone is entirely
sincere, though Ltbink him the sort ofiv^”
man who can do the most contradictory "**e8.ir<?,
thing with bqual sincerity,and I belieVe
H is not merely his wish, but his ambf-
tion now. to give Ireland tbo home rule
a hte optntoir, ought, to satisfy
he» he ean gteerwiH go
which. In
latter was elected.
_ «lectc<l vice-nresidt
w. * president,
for ten years,
■■ van-
States senate
itHfeen the
Johnson,,
was in in con-
as’ far as the Irish people want is an- ___
iu If
r in 1863, serving
1864. 'oLete
pernor
^erti^tiftn9 0Xvaiattd lhe
^ the C.VKC a won-
Atkmi^xbnaaaam:
Mtk;
v
hffirlcy* I fear,., ia ham per.h1 with tbe
■u|>< rstition that the Irish lsmUords
any fiVOilt, bo
S'
How a Dog Should be Fed.
The puppy, when jjust weaned, should
bo fed four, five,or even six times a day,
and from two months to four months of
age, four times; after (hat three tames,
to the age of qlno to twelve months, aiv
cording to the breed—the efnaRar va-
rieties reaching maturity soonest; after
that twice a day is - enough, a fuU meal
being given each time, until matarity
Is reached. Regularity as to time is
llfgpnrlant: tti 4aaA\ng Kftfh, R
assists health and is a considerable help
in inculcating orderly and cleanly hab-
its.....Minute calculations have been
made as to the.amount of fobd required
by a dog, with the result of: conflicting
statenafents of opinion, ranging trom
one-jqyvntieth to one-twelfth of his
own" weight per day, and it is often
stated in this forrq—one ounce of food
U«nnin«i hM Trada Hate and ennaad rad Uaa*
"tew/TAKB NO otiii u.
I Od_ D E JM f S
x^BEEF'TDNIC
^iTTniTnrriimraitTiB^imrri
for every pound the dog weighs. Ex-
perience convinces me tha’t in the mat-
ter of quantity of food the scales arc
better dispensed with, using instead the
dog’s appetite as the correct measure;
T therefore always advise that a dog
should have, as much at a meal as he
will cat freely, and that when he stops
to turn it over and pick out bits here
and there, the dish Jdiould bo removed.
The composition and quality of the
food is the next point claiming consid-
eration. In reference to the first point,
I think.it lieocssary to rider to theories
propounded by Dr. Billings, Y. S., of
Boston, Massachusetts, in two lectures
delivered iu- that oity, and reproduced
with apparent approval by that section
of the American press whiah specially
deals with canine matters. I have not
the text before me. so cannot quote
with verbal accuracy; but, briefly stat-
ed, Df. Billings, founding hi& argumcnt
oh /he admitted fact that the (fog is a
ciirhBrordiisiRilffial. declared he should
be fed entirely on flesh, and even went
Is prononnoed hy scores of phy^I
sicians, and thousands of people:
who have used it, to be the best ■
hnown remedy for Debility, Dys-’
pepsia, Indigestion, Loss of Ap-
petite, Loss of Flesh, Lung Com- ■
plaints, Female Weakness, Gas-
trio Irritability, Nervousness,
Malarial Fever and many other ;
diseases where tonics are required ;
—differing essentially from all
other Beef Foods and Tonics# • 4-
Tills arrot Invlaorator oonninta ot the i:
Jutta ot the flneM treah hoof—by liaron Voa
Liebig’s process—tosatherwith iron, quinine, . •
and root* and herbs known'(or their ton to ,r
an4 health-giving j>rop*rtleat *n<l affords I
building material^fo'r both nerve and muscle.., !
An’SBuJysIs by tbs eminent chemist. AB-
don,£nglam1; and also an en < 1 orSem'entb* J~
thd celebrated physician, Professor SIB
'.0-
Mw' ’
ij
4
ERASMUS WILSON, F.H.8.' TJ.-D-, o* Lon-
don, are labeled on each bottle., - /
J9 ham wrought tnrh rnnarknW* ewres
Gf th* ailment* which afflict common /tit*
manitff that it may truly called
\
REMCMBCR THE NAMCl
* »........ ---- *
GOLDEN’S Liquid. Boot Tonfo.
. *’
t^as^iwn°te^fdo^farQR^E^lfei - tfiii
U.Vr.
>s mi __________^ ___________
practice for Centuries—from the time of
that excellent huntsman and dhtcoijrsGr
on dogs and their treatment, Edmund
dP Langley, of the cai ly part of the
fourteenth century, confirmed by such
Practical writers- as Turbcrville and
Jervase Markham, of the sixtoonth,
Cdx, Jacobs, and others^ of the seven-
teenth, and all the masters of hounds,
huntsmen, gamo-keepers, kennel, men,
and every other person who has kept a
dog since—Is de&d against Dr» Billings’s
theory, which, indeed, shoajd rather be
named a “crotchet.** Tor dogs there is
JBtaHed by druggists generally.
1 Price, $t per bottle; 6 for $5.
If"
SMITH’S
BliJ
no more wholesome food thiui/hp mix-
rmsistini
ed scraps from the table, consisting of
meat, bonea, bread? and Vegetables,and
when there are more dogs kept than
«ae»are bones imd scitepsfor, thebn>
ken rlctnafs should be taken as the
/3TUM i
\® om
In regard to pot dogs kept by ladles.
pot dogs
the great mistake often made is to over-
mMsm
feed and feed too r'< hlv. It is a mis-
taken kindness to feed dogs on rioh, fat-
pfodueing diet; an I to glvo sugar and
4- 9. SMITH
J
isaetstaProp^
IS'
* CO..
it. uwi^j
. . L-—, , -nything
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The Graham Leader (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 25, 1886, newspaper, March 25, 1886; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth886244/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.