The Albany News. (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1887 Page: 1 of 4
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.
North Side Square,
ALBANY,
TEXAS.
"Prescriptions carefully com-
pounded, day 01 niaht.
ALBANY, SHACKELFORD COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1887
Vol,, 3, No. 46.
Whole Number, 150.
DRY CCCC
miiiig, Furnlshlcg Cccds, 6e
IEA IK, i IP , A
SATISFACTION GUARA
WEST SICE CCURT SC
ALMM. - - -
■
TSflt.
Collins So I/lfilliattzs,
cormerly Collins, Baker & Williatos,
Wholesale and Retail
A full and complete assortment of
Banch and . Farm Supplies
always 011 hand at prices to suit the times.
Don't
To be tlie oldest house in Shacktdfoid .roiinty or in Albany, bnf
we claim to sell goods at
the lowest possible cash price.
Call and see us before making
your purchases as we have
marked everything • down
to make hard times easier.
Of Goods to ail parts of llie city.
HOCK BTTIX.r>IIMQ OTOIKTIKTO NATIONAL BANK
ALBANY, - - - TEXAS.
IW- :
SHACKELFORD COUNTY COURT HOUSC
[AL DIRECTORY.
IRTY FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT.
mlolnh - - - District .Turin*
Camp - • District Attorney.
r,„,,r. ,nnvenes the twelfth Monday after the
ft£fMoSdM in February and Wth Monday after
trst Monday in August.
COUNTY OFFICKIIB.
County Judge.
. County Attorney.
. Sheriff and Tax Collector,
District andCounty Clerk.
Count,v Treasurer,
Tax Assesser.
Surveyor.
Inspector.
. . J. P. Precinct No. 1.
_ " " No. 2.
11 ■< ■' 3.
.
Commmlsioner \\ '•
1. •' " 3'.
... •• " 4,
Pefer Hart, •
T. M. Dllworth,
Henrv Herron,
Guv X. Smith,
S. 0. l.arche.
W. J,. Manning.
W. A. Eahart.
T. R. Holcomhe.
H. K. McMurry,
C. J. I.oucks,
8. 1.. Barker.
n. A. Miller -
T. V. Palter.
J. F. Bennett,
(i. K. Wiiters,
X. A. Miller.
COUWTT COURT.
probate business.
COMMISSION*!" COURT.
Second Mondays February. May, August and
Soveaiber.
CTX3R033- DXRBOTOBY.
South—John A. Wallace,
US-viccs twice every Sunday, in
Tuesday evening after llrst and third
(lavs.
PreachAg^verv Wimriav.
tt Pr^r meeting on Thursday night.
0.vnT, >rn PbiwwytkHiaw.—F• F.. l.each,
r. Services every second Sunday.
pas
every second and
school 9:30 a. m,
sooiaxy
Dtaa
AM. AX* fefeWi&Sk"*
Ular conclave, third Tuesoav McANUI TVi E, c.
D. C. CAtlfUKt* Recorder.
Si o. g.
W. 1C. POWELL,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
ALBANY, TEXAS.
All hills must lie paid on discharge or on
first of the month. 37
Officb East Side Maiv, Opposite MAN-
NING'S OLD STAND.
W. 0. MOODY, M. D.,
having permanently located, offers his
professional services to the citizens of
Albany anil surrounding: country. Spec-
ial attention given to the practice of Ob-
stetrics and diseases ot Women anil
Children. All bills due the first of the
month.
OFFICE at Bruckner A. Gooding's-
BILL NYE'S LETTER.
The Huihoriit Wiites from Hii Winter Re-
sort in His Usually Happy Vein on
Various Topics.
Wa m Prepared to Negotiate
LOAX* OK
CHOICE RANCHES
In Solid Bodies. Fenced and Stocked. Al-
t-o on Good r arms at Moderate
Kates of Inter St.
Apply to SHATTUCK4 HOFFMAN,
21 Sobdad St.. San Antonio. Tex.
Or to A. A. CLARKE,
Au'y at I,aw. Albany. Texas
LICE EARL,
The Old Reliable
North side Court Square.
ALBANY.
Common Sense,
T.-Meets, every^ Friday night
Meets every
C. C.
L. J. THOMPbON W. O. I.
C. P. n»AN, W. S. " ■ I
BAYARD LODOF. HO. 39, Kj K^LE!
Monday nlghK _ . n t ■ K"Y1'K' ■■
R. II. CIUOI.ETI, K.ofR. S. H
ALBANY LoooH No. 290 I. 0. O. F.-Meet-
svery Wednesday night.
B. JonwCN. <^rTKI! UAnT. r. & s.
At I! VVY I.onoie NO- 4!*2 A & A' M.—Mectf
' ay ^ °r bet"re '"P. TgbAHAM, W. M.
Cu,Hoc'y.
WT fiitTFFTN Nf). 4B0 A. F, 9c A. M.~
s S^'urday on W. M.
Ph'of. Umiiauokji, Sec'y.
Eastfrn Stab. Meets every second and
%-Murtti r^S1M W. M.
Mist Dfxia SPKABK. See v.
v0. i(».-Regular meet-
U>J*iu»t.UKl t;'1 UJ'"'jiAomkw?iV.'"l•
W.». DalBvmpt.e. Sec'y.
Practice! Double Entry Book-keeping
Commencing on the 1st of No-
vember I will teach a class in
Double-Entry Biok-keeping, if I
can get a class sufficient to justify.
My mode of teaching is by lectur-
ing and supposed actual business
transactions. I warrant to make
a book-keeper outof anybody who
has a capacity to reason. This
will probably be the last class 1
will teach in Albany.
Terms reasonable.
3ft EDGAR MOORE.
INFORMATIOH
, MANY^ PERSONS
*Kfftr firm*
> IItad actus,
Knurmtglmt,
RhrumnlUtn,
Pain* in (A«
Zlmbt, Back »n4
Stars, Bad Dlea^
fIndigent Ion, ltytpepmittf
Mmtarta,Constipation AKldtuylrtmbU*.
-VOLIMA CORDIAL CURES RHEUMATISM,
Arrival Dops-rture of Mails •
Bnd Blood and Kldnejr Tronblw. by cleansing th«
blood of »U iwiuipanti( "
of th« body.
H0rsT0H & tkxas chktbat. r. k.
" ■' : :
u.iij
m.
tn.
Sunday.
ASP RKTMOUtl.
(BRm^
|U»KKl.l..
.S n. tn '
C p. m. |
ti'.ood of all iuiuipiurittx, •trcngtlicnXuf >Ucu<*
-VOLIHA CORDIAL CORES SICK-HEADACHE.
Neuralpta, Pains i» th» I.lrabs, Buck and Side®, by
toning the nerves and etrsmgih*niug tb« mu«cla»-
—•—VQLIHA CORDIAL CURES DYSPEPSIA.
Infliction and Constipation, by aiding th« aasim*
Uutitiff of the Food throwifli the proper action of t>h»
mloiuuch ; It creates ft healthy appetite.
-*—VOLIKA CORDIAL CURES NERVOUSNESS.
^ I '
log and t
famS*j'VrvV.i:. , ai I
s'St'tj." from « n i
it.! CjWs#. 1'
Ashkville, N. C
As soon as I saw in the papers
that my health was failing, I deci-
ded to wing my way South for the
winter. So I closed up my estab-
lishment at Slipperyelmhurst, told
the game-keeper not to monkey
with the preserves and came here,
where I am now writing. At first
it seems odd to me that I should
be writing from where I now am,
but the more I think it over the
better 1 am reconciled to it» for
what better place Can a man select
front which to write a letter than
the point where he is located at
the time ?
Asheville is an enterprising cos-
mopolitan city of six or seVen
thousand people and a visiting
population during the season of
sixty thousand more. It is situa-
ted in the picturesque valley of
the French Brood and between the
Blue Ridge and the Alleghames.
Asheville is the metropolis of
Western North Carolina, and has
no competition nearer than Knox-
ville, Tenn., one hundred and six-
ty miles away, and, in fact, not in
any way competing with Ashe-
ville, for it is in another county
altogether.
This region of country is from
2,000 to 7,000 feet aoove sea level
and is, m fact, a mountain region
with a southern exposure.
Strange stories are told here of
people who came five, ten, twenty
or more years ago, with a view of
dying here, but who afterward
decided to live on„ and tliey are
living yet. One man who was a
all mountain countries in fact
have never associated with a more
genial urbane or refined donkey
than we have here. He is gener-
ally a soft, mouse folor, about
nine hands high and delights in
making small, elongated fo-»t
prints on the sands ot time,
This small animal of the moun-
tains is frequently accompanied by
a robust but poorly-modulated
voice. It is very pathetic and
generally needs a little oil ofi it<
The North Carolina donkey, like
the Colorado burro, lives to a
great age. He then dies.
Asheville has splendid water-
works supplying first-class water
to those who wish to use this pop-
ular fitiid; electric lights all over
the city, a street railway organized
with its money put up to construct
it next summer, first-class churches
schools and colleges, well supplied
markets with moderate prises and
lots rf genuine attractions besides
the climate. Fuel and whisky are"
about the same that they awj in
Chicago, so a man need uot suffer
here provided he has a moderate
income.
The sportsman may sport here
with impunity, and the angler may
also triangular relaxation.
Moonshine whisky is also pro-
duced here in the mountains* tho'
in a crude Way, and very quietly.
None of the moonshiners adver-
tise much in th« papers. They do
not care for a big run of trade,
but seem content to remain in ob-
scurity. Sometimes, however,
their work attracts the attention
of prominent people who come
ECONOMIST
PLOW
COMPANY,
SOUTH BEND,
INDIANA.
CH'CA«°
I
Agcn
L. BAN
TEXAS.
66
Solid Comfort" Sulk'
THE HAND FLOW All III KILLS
T
Read the Evidence for the Plaintiff:
HOUSANDSof8hrewd,keen- need wait fur rain—when yon
wirte.i farmers read onr little
book and other documents and
drop the matter right there.
They never go to the- marrow
of the subject. Why?
MAINLY because the burden
i.f our song is the riding
plow, and th»t tune has • o pow-
er to charm the m iss of farmers.
ANY SAY, —"This subject
is no interest for me -the
tiding plow is not. adapted to
my taim," others—"No more
sulky plow for me if you please.
I've been there."
Mi"
survivor of the Samso-Philistine
war, if I am not mistaken, came
here at last tiom the mouth of the
out and call on them
guns and regrets<
Then the moonshiner does his
distillery up in a napkin and goes
away into the primeval forest.
■ Some years ago a party of revenue
: officers hunted out one of these
Amazon, full of malaria.
been kind of ''down
mouth
years, and they say his liver look-
ed like a rubber door-mat and his
skin was like the cover of a sun-
kissed ham.
He picked up Jiis spirits here
and recovered his youth, and tho'
he was very olci when he came, he
18 still older now and in pretty
good health. I went to see him
the other day. He is so old that
there is moss on the north side of
him and hieroglyphics on his feet.
When 1 made some facetious re-
marks to him and told him a story
I had recently acquired, he bright-
ened up a good deal and emitted a
dry, crackling laugh like a xylo-
phone, and said that he believed
amateur distillers and chased him
up the side of the mountain where
TN THE M \tN. both are right.
with shot-l1 r,te 8,,lky P,ow Pr°Per ha8
I b. en a fi.tu l and a delusion, a
short lived, weak kneed, ttnieli
;ib!e, "horse killing" device
adaptt-d only to u limited range
of w<>rk and favorable coiidi
tions.
ARE Nor OFFERING
i kind of a plow;
Win,
rilHE "SOLID COMFORT is
, : la three-wheeled self-guiding
of the Am-tzon for some1 . ' ,hst,ilcr^ on 'l's hack, iplow. with neither pole or lat.d-
like a Babcock fire-extinguisher, sidand bears lb" same rela
He had;^ surroundec' and captured him!
ln tbe I... -Infill u: . u. ... ■
and still warm.
The officer, in hia report of the
capture, referred to it as a still
hunt, whereupon his commission
was promptly revoked. The man
who tries to have any fun with the
present Administration must have
his resignation where he can put
his hand on it at a moment's
warning.
Bill Nye.
A Swindling Brother-in-Law.
A couple of young fellows were
conversing on the street corner
when one said:
"By the way, how do you like
he enjoyed that story just as well that hew brother-in-law of yours?"
"Like him! I think he'fe about
the meanest man this side of Hali-
fax."
"Mean ! Why, how's that? Ev-
erybody speaks well of him."
"They don't know him. What
, would you say if I told you he had
blessed privilege during the last. 8wuuiled me out ()f a humlred do|_
twenty years to view nearly alrthe i |arsy"
as he did when they used to tell it
in the rifle-nits in front of Troy.
He said he liked Asheville very
much, indeed.
Asheville is called the Switzer-
land of America. It has been my
Switzerlands of America that are
here, but this is fully the equal if
not the superior of any of them.
"A hundred dollars? You don't
say so!"
"Fact! Shortly after he mar-
1 ou can climb to the top of ried Sis, he promised to lend me
Beaucatcher Mountain and see a
beautiful sight in any direction,
and on most any day of the year.
Every where the eye rests on a
broad sweep of datk-blue Climate.
Up in the gorges, under the whis-
a hundred dollars, and he didn't
do it. I call that a clean swindle."
A Black Annanias.
"Here, waiter, do you call this
pe'ri'ng'pines, alo'ng the* rh^doden-ia frues{''aid ^ '\»kcd 11 Suest
Iron bordered marg.ns of the ! »l th« ^nmpv,lie House, as the
Swannonoa, or the French Brood, downv Pute f a chi,cbe» ma,le lts
.ut through the Gap, and d„wn;«PP^»«e through the cracked
th' thousand mountain brooks, * .
u will find enough clinrtte in1 Yes, sah. Ar dtitl tjped de hen
twenty minutes to last a week.
The chief products of Western
N'orth Carolina, are smoking to-
acco and climate.
If you do Hot i,
i* i- j know it*
ike the climate you can keep
lay dat egg uiase'f at fo' 'clock
dis maWnin'," replied the sable
i attendant without a blUsli.
"You rascal, you'r* lying, and
lion to the sulky pl>>w that a
i borough bl ed horse does to a
spavined mule.
TT HAS DISCARDED and
Ithrowu aside the defects thai
tiave on many farms killed the
sulky plow; (aiid nearly killed
the horses) and it requiies no
special or favorable conditions
or ttie a^rviee^ of a mechanical
engineer to run it and keep it in
order.
T WILL plow any ground a
m<iwer can cut over.
WILL work fielvls the ordi-
iry plow has no business
with, and the rougher, tougher
and stonier the piece is :he more
its superiority will show.
H THIS statement as a
as is, and We stand ready
to prove the truth of evwrv word
.if it, the question will naturally
arise. "Is there any money in it
for me ? If so where is il ? "
UR ANSWER IS—If vou
:iiliivj«te 40 acres of gro'QVid
there is money in it for you.
Let us see how and wh-'re.
First and forfmost —ft will
draw lighter than any plow on
eiirth. on «>r off wheels, doing
*he sam- work ; and the hatder
the groiitid tie gfVater the dif-
ference iti i*s favor, mi a ling of
c. inse. more acre* iter week
with the saiti • te.iHti t*i I plow
man, an 1 less co f per yre.
Second —With .» "s 'MO CoM
fort'' on the farm you never
ar.
1
IT
Ann
with
and
its s
w!,::
o,^
get ready vou can plow.
Third—There is no "dodg
intr" or "skipping' hard spois
and no temptation to plowman
to slight his work ; every foot of
ground can be turned as the
owner wants it.
Fourth. — It will cost, from 1 3
to 1-2 less for repairs than am
tdow in use. Why ? Because
it can't be run on the nose. We
need say no more on this point
Every farmer understands it.
Fifth.—Putting a full-grown
man on a "solid comfort" is a
"waste of raw material"—like
doing your churning with ;i
threshing engine—it furnishes
recreation-^not work—for a ten
or twelve year old boy or gill.
»
Sixth. — But you have no boy.
ami yon will not buy a plow tT.r
voiu hired man to ride on. We
hear this frequently. But il
there whs any in uiey in it you'd
ha ihe hired man ride the
plow, as you do the mower or
hay rake. There is money in it.
How ? Put on a third horse and
send the outfit along at a pace
that your hired man couldn't
stand between the handles, and
add ati acre a day to the work.
You needn't fear for the horses,
they can stand it.
Seventh.—-'Yaw have no use fur
a stalk and a "solid coIijpokt"
on the same farm, nor need you
waste time breaking down
stalks, if they are ten feet liigli
and as tlncK as yoUi wrist, the
"St.lid comfort" will bury them.
Eighth.—As ev e i y fa r in e i
knows, straight, regular futrolivs
yield more and better work,
than crooked irregular one!-.
Straight, uniform work is the
great specialty of the "solid
comfort." It will hold a tini
form furrow day in and day out
regardless of charges from hard
to soft spots. Nor is it tiecessa-
ly to keep the horses in a stiff,
rigid attitude like soldiers on a
parade, by continual reining.
They can be driven with a slack
line, and move freely tlnd narnr
allv, and you can use any length
of ev«Mier you desire, and spread
them widely apart in hot weatii
er.
Ninth -Well—r- we skip tli*
tefiirtin let. We could give you
eiglu triors reasons of the same
tenor, but we don't Want to talk
fort to death.
I N CONCLUSION, it must be
L ipnaretit fo vou that we, and
the purchasers of the "SOLID
CoMFniit'' Whose statements we
publish, form the most
galaxy of liars now befo <•
public, or the plow mns l-ai'f
exceptional tttefit and
In this connection plea r
member that if you derid
to the bottom of thesubjt: i r
one on your own land a t
vour judge, as thousands Jmv*-
already done. You can "k.
vour hand on yonipocket
until yon know you are go,
(jet full value fur your mot
Truly yours/
J. S. Reync
State A s
I.ioon'ikr, hid.. Mbv".:; i
Ecoxomist Plow Co.:
Dentst fist fall when you Sefli
Id C.omfort" Sulky Plow'here t<
hard, stonv land. I was laid up
for rain. My hnnd plow which If
one tailed. Your fluent placed t\
Id Comfort" in my hands fo tesl
two tinrses only, could bury It i
b"iim in tlie worst spotsin the fie:
my plow could not be forced in, a I
T say it ran almost J lighter on t .i
than the hand plow I know by ex: ■
ju t what I nm ralkiiio' abnnt.
Never saw the work equaled by > i(
sulky plow: tied lines to lever u t
stick "n tonm and let ihem ffo It
and it would <m stniijjht through • I.
stonvclav spots w ithout losin»n.. i
its furrow and at anv depth Av
nlow If fnvtts corners either «
open and finish land to perfeetl
polo to bother tea til and no use fo
Am pleased to see there are .
"Solid Comforts" i„ in
a'ld those who liav ■ them are loin n : .
praise. The number will inerea-v \<-\r
tanners find it is not an old sly . I,.
InlVr on wheels and will ,!0 befti .
and more of it with a big snvin<; ol ■: ■
over a hand plow.
•TaMbs Burt otti.
Ml.
1.1 |)l
. flillsboro. Ohio. May
Economist J.»\v Co.. South Item
Cents :_Yoii'- dealers, Messri •
' slitkv IW •vonr "S,llil1 C-wi
« iiiky I low. which v* as put in ,
tion with the Klylng Dutehnian ••
aday. and my decision in talon"- i
id' Oniforl" was made after <.jv|
plow a > l'orou?l, test in-iii.llnsr s
durability and,'extreme simp, Iciiv.
dar I us.- tht H°IM Comteit I life ix f
and better. Aly buy is just sevi
, " nse tlie plow as v if
o'o V.V,1,0 unable to do v. i! >,
of • r-. 1 he plow Is porfeet and. .
ii.i" tlie maniifaetmers
oan imp:
pr»r! *
Truly Yours.
J AS. Mi J OH
I have no use lor (lie pole and hav
back. Trnlv Vn..fa
t, WilnrtngtaiKO.. AnrTI 13 r:
Economist Plow South Bend '■
CKNTMa,RN:-_t boucrht Of VOVII
I'.i. nl" ' """ yur'Solid < '■ml n
. iuy I Jow s unci fin ve given if n thoroi ■ h
trial in ground which is of n bin k hm-I
<ucmv nature, and have found it a rri-i :
Success.
I have f und tlie draft lieht, en
7' "d expectation, and pleased wi'j.
tonjriieless feature i can turn more en<,.v
wit,i piotyin ground without, frettfrj. - ,v
™y horses do liotsnflei
'f'*M caused by the tniigue. U' ■• •
be?0l"es f;,sfe,|ed in the roots
»ndeigt"Hi)d, can get loose from .
wheel WOrk,n^ ,ew™ "0.1 ln,vi..;»
w lieei at the rear can easilv roll Vile
bacliWurds. "
1 ho
plov
I lake pleasure in recomm^nd.hijf t
ie beat i
. ... .. . . , " ■" »' V3IUIIII
s«»lnl (,o^ll^ort,, us beini*-the
ever seen.
Very truly vonrs,
Chaiuks :
STATJU A.G-3SJSTT.
u.
f-hildfen»
I "in delV«hifai
To I In a
vomT?a drug a ohe
- m 1 itMMM* M0», e.
Mint!
' .'.■
ourself 'o the smoking tobacco.
Here you wiil find Mr. Ozone
vith his coat off and a feather
luster in his hand, prepared to
ust the cobwebs from the cnta-
•ombs of the asthmatic or the
consumptive. There is enough
climate wasted here every year to
oipply a city the size of Chicago,
vloreover, there is & handsome
intel here called the Battery Park
—that hits been full ever since it
vus built and you can get good
or iloM-
" 'Deed itr isn't, its de climate.
Funniest climate ebber yo' seed.
Do chickens dun hatch out some-
times fore de eggs is laid. Data
er fack, boss/'
IS8SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS3S£$S'&9&
ajb
Woudtiiful Cures
W. D. II yt A Co., Wholesale and Re-
tail Druggists of Koine, !•#., say. We
have been setting "r King's \ew'l»iscov
er , Kle.-tt'te Bitter*, anw Uuekl'ir's Arm-
ca s ilv.i for two years, dave never h m-
.lied reined Iimt sell «s well, or jrive
audi univei sal aatl-faction/ There liav.
been sot lie W mictTitl • ffectod b.v
I lie
:|><il"n«
Several eases
ion • aw !)■ ei
hoti >#.
SWIFT'S
r. £ r *
•?
Rer. C. T. ClirV, A of t!;«- P
Tfttnall C»tf tvf <J-a.:"One yz&v Ago 5
' for «»• « in 1* TBfti
11> »»*i* •'»' «'t • S v> Hi", i h-:v« : v •
Mf'ftin. i W:»* 1»«1 . -It " •"
t.O'it I t' I J". ,<J1 >1 <1- '•»
nr.. Mi';t
!f® .■"*>
I h«te liH nw n> .t i-
CURES
i.'i
ii
f; '. )'
: y.^-- I nri"forc3■:::' y ,■ m. :^ ■ ■:■ : 1 ■ . ■
helple^a/hftxlWh'-^lpvdronvCi' Led. M •• I ".wt-'l*": to ^ u->.
hni HW'O ifW' hon'dU-l n t- mlrrly »*« «.• Aly c'.- "t-v . . ■■ i, « ;x , ,i\
intoie Jit .'imM.- All Uip old uiul .vtl? ; *•:» h r; * x\; ' «>
t rrf'iel*#. ibtftine.U' A^'Wtiyc ; »'•' i »ras i.i/iKwl l»v «• .» ••-d t » iy
l'h« tmc has bocrr ia-»|rical.- .\ly friends pcflvcoiy rec :m\z* tr.c. iiy
i* e'»l»reif tpmeiiftf giwS) health Itftfipsrh. dm L Km wcighia.-: ti.ir.y
1 •ommcttecd tnkina- - S. S. I nm to Pttettd to o.l mjMnin-;c1k>r:ai- y. r.rU.
«ii tul for mj rwtoratloa to beollh^ which I otrr. th» b!e«*ine of
* Rev.#, U.L0W4T.
TWTtOi.l)«ttT I
tlMMI.i I
I «m 'Inf.
V.-#,
CO., to*
m
„WORKING CLASSES ATTEST :
e are imw prepared to furnish all '
with employniCiit at home, the vyl r.f
the dine, or for their ^pare viio:
Business new, lijjlit and profitable, i .
"'"•-"'n'"1'01, sev ei,s'l>' earn Iron i
to per evening, aiid a propo ion i?
sum by devoting ail their time to t! «
>iness. Boys and girls earn neu ,
much st* in. n. That, all wlmseefln< okh
M-iid their address, and te-«t the i
we make this oiler, !j o e.hcli
well sali-fied we will send SI
the trouble of writing. !■ Oil
■ind outfit free. Address Ui
IS < t», Pnt^hnnd, H.inw,
il
i ■¥
■ • ■■^mmSST
to be made,
return to us.ii
you free, su
vaitie and importance to
start you in busines- Wl
yn in more money rjfi
hiiljf else io this
tlie v» r'k and liv«
-ii) ilgte». sullied
'iioiiev for a i
•: c:r
jn'aii
'I'iH,:-!*
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The Albany News. (Albany, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1887, newspaper, January 6, 1887; Albany, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth416684/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.