Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 10, 1887 Page: 3 of 4
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TWEGREAT^*?rf
AN REMED
Curet Rheumatism. Nci .-
L II |% I f| lUfkarlir, livmlach*, Tooti.-u:
A III ■^^fllll Si»p«ln»., Hi-til***, otf.. «t<.
1 III I Olll FKU't FIFTY CE*--
* Wi ■ 1AIII AT blU'OMlHTB AND PKAI.
TflF CUARLB8 A. VOCE! Ill CO., 1IA LTIXOKI. ...
TRADE Wo/ MARK.
»T^
OUGH
m
hj
rice from Opiittvs, JLmetics <»«<f lJ<>iso>
SAFE. zx
SURE. OKfjK
PROMPT.
AT I'Kt'M'.IHM \ S11 1», M.r.KS.
rill nitidis a. \ 0(. kf.eu 10.. ualidiouf. mu
PETRC
P0R0USE0
PLASTER
Cores Backache, Lang T-roable"
Kidney Biseases,
Rheumatism, Eto.
A trinl will convince the most skeptical thai
they are the best. They are medicated v. ith capsi-
cum and the active principle i f pirtrnlemn, being
lar more powerful in their action thanotherplasters.
1)0 not be induced to take others, but be sure and
get the genuine "Petroline," which is always en-
closed in an envelop with the sipniture of the
proprietors, The P. W. P. Co., and directions in
lour lanpiages; also seal on front and back of
each piaster. Sold by first-class druggists, at 25
Cents each.
<PE0ACUHA>
CORN PI,ASTERS
wemmmmmmmmammmmemmmrnmamsmmmmmmmsm
Are the best known remedy for hard and soft corns,
and never fail to cure. Price 25 cents,
The Peleg White Proprietary 60.
MAM'K A C'T'' T\ F K S,
'13 \V. Iiron<lway, X. Y., U. S.
CF FIRST-CI.ASS DRUGGISTS.
AND .1 TKISTKAM. Hlir.MIAM,
LOOK OXJX.I
Compare thin with your purchase:
**5wif
BA80H* tk\
AMD
PHILADELPHIA.
OWE Dollar
A> you value health, perhaps life, examine each
package and be sure you get the Genuine. f See
the red Z Trade-Mark and the full title
on front of Wrapper, anil on the aide
the seal and aifnature of J. H. Zetlin*
Co., as in the above fac- simile. Remember thet
it no other genuine Simmons Liver Regulator.
The beat and sniwrt Remedy fop Cure of
all diseases caused by any derangement of
the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, 8ick Headache, Constipation,
Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds
yield readily to the beneficent influence of
It is pleaaant to the taste, tones up the
ayHtem, restores and preserves health.
It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fall to
prove beneficial, both to old and young
As a Blood Pnrlfier it is superior to atl
others. Sold everywhere at 91.00 a bottle
&
THE NEW SOUTH.
WHAT JUDGE . KELLEY SAYS OF ITS
WONDERFUL DEVELOPMENT.
A Look at Nashville and Chattanooga*
Railroads and Mineral Itegiona—-Cottoh
Kaittln;; and Its Drawback#—An IueU
dent at Annihton—'Towns.
JiuVe Kclley lias come back from his
southern trip, full of its wonderful devel-
opment. 1 le says the new south is entirely
different from the south of twenty years
ago. Said he:
"Certain parts of the south are going
ahead faster to-day than in any parts of
the north. Tho country about Birming-
ham and Anniston is on the boom, and
their appearance is that of the fati grow-
ing western frontier town rather than the
old villacs of the south. Nashville is a
magnificent city. Chattanooga has, I
think, the largest- tRimery in the world,
and is doing a great deal of manufactur-
ing. It thips its lumber in every direction,
and it litis all tV.e enterprise of a northern
city. About Chattanooga the farmers are
making a great deal in the raising of fruit,
and it is a curious thing that on one side
of Mission ridge there are vast strawberry
beds which run up the side of the moun-
tain. and over the hiil are great fields of
grapes. These strawberries are shipped
all over tlie country by the car load and
by train loads. They are eaten in Cincin
nati, Cleveland and Chicago, and, coining
as they do early in the season, they bring
high prices. I cite thin as an example as
to how the south is Investigating its re-
sources. The land will raise something
else than corn and cotton, and the people
are beginning to find it out."
DEVELOPMENT OF THE COt'NTRY.
"How about railroad building?"
"Several thousand miles of railroad
were built in the south during the past
year, and everywhere the railroad goes
the country develops. In the newly de-
veloped part of the south the condition of
the lower class is rapidly improving. The
laborers of Chattanooga, Birmingham, An-
niston and the fast developing mineral
regions of the south live in good houses,
and they make fair wages. I estimate
that one bachelor laborer is of more good
to tho storekeepers of the southern com-
munity than four families who arc en-
gaged in the work of raising cotton. I
assert this without fear of contradiction,
and am able to maintain it. The south
has been divided up Into small farms and
these farms are almost universally de-
voted to cotton raising. Each farmer's
product amounts to about one or two
bales a year, seldom more than two and
often not more thau one. He sells these
bales for about $40 apiece, and these $40
constitute his annual income and support.
Long lines of these poor farmers come to
market with their yearly load of cotton.
Sometimes they have two steers attached
to a cart, sometimes a mule and a steer,
and at other times a horse. The head of
the family drives the oart, back of him is
the bale of cotton, and behind in the
wagon or cart sit the women of the
family.
"I saw hundreds of such scenes and I
found that the women of the family al-
ways come along. This was in order
that they might lay in their yearly sup-
plies of clothes and provisions. This $40
represented the entire money outlay for
the year, and their entire purchasing
power for household conveniences. Hence
they came along to advise their husbands
and fathers as to the use of the money.
A HITTER COLD NIQI1T.
"One night that I spent at Anniston was
bitter cold. A large number of these small
planters and their families had come in to
sell their cotton, but they had arrived too
late for the dealers to buy. They were too
poor to go to a hotel, and they had to sleep
in their wagons or huddle around a lire
which they kindled out doors to keep them-
selves warm. Some of these farmers travel
twenty, thirty and forty milee to market.
The roai'.s are not good, aa there is little
intercommunication among them. The
cotton trip is the big trip of the year, and,
I doubt not, is talked of for weeks before
it is undertaken. The large landowners,
who, in some oases, rent out small farms
to these planters, graduate their charges
and the expenses of raising by the extent
of the crop, and, as a rule, it makes not
much differenoe whether the crop amounts
to five bales or three. The poor farmer
gets enough to live upon, and this is about
one bale. Now, a laborer at $1 a day will
make if300 a year if he works steadily, or,
even in a slipshod way, he is sure to make
$130. This, as a rule, he spends, and this
amount is three times that of the average
small farmer."
"How about the new towns in the
BOUth?"
"They are growing up along the differ-
ent lines of road, and they are showing all
the signs of modern civilization. Many of
the new store buildings which are erected
are of brick, and I found good churches and
schools in many of them. In Anniston I
noticed tho children going to school. They
seemed as well dressed as our northern
little ones, and I visited a number of both
white and colored schools and found them
very well conducted."—Frank G. Carpen-
ter in Cleveland Leader.
LAND TRAVEL IN NORWAY.
"Hone Bread" In Sweden.
Horse bread % still commonly made In
Sweden. It is still commonly made and
used in Tyrol, and in certain parts of
Switzerland—tho Engadine, for instance.
Your driver stops at a roadside inn, and,
before he buys anything for himself, he
buys for his horse a large cake of brown
oat bread, circular, flatfish, the size and
Bhape of a Yorkshire yule cake. The
strong, quiet, steady horse—or mam very
likely—knows well what all this means;
looks on with eager eyes as he slices the
cake into strips; munches slice after slice
with keen enjoyment; and finally, per-
haps, lays Its lips upon his palm to sug-
gest the possibility of another loaf. Some
drivers, indeed, themselves desirous of a
meal, are content to crumble the bread
into a trough; and in that case the horse
will not only eat all the large pieces, but
will with teeth and tongue take up every
morsel and crumb that, strews the floor
of the trough. Such are his views as to
the merits of oaten bread.—Notes and
Queries.
A " Hnmanlphone " at a Fair.
At a recent churoh fair in Worcester
there was great curiosity to see and hear
the new musical instrument, the humani-
phone, which was exhibited in the large
anteroom of the hall. The instrument
proved to be young ladies representing the
tonee of the scale, arranged behind a screen,
showing only their heads and shoulders.
They wore white masks reaching to tho
mouth, and around the neck of each was
suspended by a ribbon the number of the
scale represented. A young lady stood in
front, who, with a wand, played tunes by
pointing to tho one whose number was tha
tone wanted, which was promptly uttered.
Rounds and other pieces were sung, mak-
ing a unique and amusing affair.—Boston
Transcript.
Kxcellent Koad* aacl Comfortable Ve-
hicle*— Kuwt and Slow Stations, Inns.
Tho land traveling in Norway has come
to be very comfortable; the roads aro ex-
cellent. Apart from a railroad for a
short distance out from , Bergen and a
railroad from Christiania to Trendhjem
there are substantially no public convey-
ances. You travel in two wheel vehicles
known as carioles, which carry only one
person, or in a stolkjaerre, which carries
two. There are no springs, except that
obtained by an arrangement of tho seat;
but this rnakos them generally very com-
fortable. You drive yourself, and tho
boy or girl who is to take the horse and
vehicle bark stands or sits or hangs be-
hind. He will drive from Iteliind if you
desire. The way the Norwegian horses
have of going at a breakneck pace down
lull reminds lae of our Itoyish expression,
"lickety cut." You can ordinarily make
about eight miles an hour, including a
change of horses, if you are not detained
by the fact that so many travelers have
gone lief or© you that they have exhausted
the supply of horses, in which case you
may liave to wait some hours.
flie charge for vehicles in Norway is
very reasonable. Stations are established
at distances of about eight or ten miles.
These stations are of two classes—one is
a fast and the other an ordinary station.
At the fast stations there must always be
kept a specified nurnlier of horses ready
for travelers except when they are in use
by preceding travelers. At tho slow sta-
tions no horses are required to be kept,
but time is given to send out to tho
farmers near and bring them in. There
is, however, a system which is not much
used by which you may send a notifica-
tion ahead and have horses ready even at
the slow stations. In theory all tho
horses are furnished by the, farmers.
This is required at a prico so low that it
is regarded as a tax upon them, but
since traveling has increased so much
arrangements seem to havo been made
by wiiich the keeper of the station as-
sumes the farmers' burden and furnishes
tho horses. They are also required to
furnish a vehicle, but this obligation only
extends to the rough country cariole of
two wheels, with only a seat for one, and
without springs. In fact, however, the
vehicles furnished are quite comfortable.
At a fast station you pay less than five
cents a kilometer for the horse, harness
iuid vehicle, and the boy to take it back.
If you get a stolkjaerre, which has seats
for two, you pay about seven cents.
Sixteen kilometers are equal to ten miles.
The amount of baggage allowed is
small, yet sufliciertt for an ordinary trav-
eler s use. In the stolkjaerre it goee
under the seat, where there is plenty of
room. In a cariole it is fastened behind,
and the akyd, which is the name of the
boy who goes along to take the vehicle
back, rides or stands upon it. You can
always carry in a cariole a small parcel—
on the floor between your legs—and
fasten something to the dashboard, or
what takes the place of it. It is astonish-
ing how enduring tho Norwegian horses
are. They are tough, small, sure footed,
good matured animals, who will start out
at a trot and keep it up thirty miles with-
out stopping, going that distance in four
hours. The harness is of the simplest
possible i ,u.ko. There are no traces, even
when you havo two horses, but always
shafts, to which the harness is fastened
by pegs. There is an arch of wood over
the horse's head, through rings in which
the reins pass, and which is arranged so
as to take much of the weight from the
collar. Tho reins are rope or twisted
leather.
Tho hotels or inns are comfortable,
with no elegance, but always, without
exception, clean, and the food is fair. In
these respects Norway has made great
improvements within a few years, and
improvements are going on in increased
ratio. Tho scenery in riding in Norway,
much of it, is exceedingly beautiful. I
can imagine no more beautiful ride than
that of the four or five days' trip from
Bergen to Christiana.—Col. George Bliss
in New York Times.
TIRED OUT
it this maeon n«arlj
■t of tonic. IRON
inn's prescription foi
BROWNS
A t this aetuson nearly evv.y one needs to upe noma
wort of tonio. IRON enters into almost every phy-
sician's prescription forthooe who need building up.
For WeukneM,
Knerir
i lie on
nergV) etc., It HAH NO
nlj
—THE
BEST.TONIC
LiiMilladei Lark
EQUAL,
Oi
w 9 and m
j only Iron medicine that is not Injurious.
It Eoiiclies the Blood. Invigorate the
mc em, Restores Appetite, Aids
WHiem, Restores Appetite, Aids Digestion
It does not blacken or injure the teeth, cause he.-.d-
Nvhe or produce constipation—-other Iron medicinr* <ln
Du. (i. H. Binkley, a leading physician of Spring-
field, Ohio, says:
" Brown's Iron Bitters is a thoroughly good medi-
cine. I use it in my practice, and find its action -
cols all other forms oi iron. In weaknp*«. or a low con-
dition of the system, Brown's Iron Bitters is usually
a positive necessity. It w all that is claimed for it.'
I)r. W. N. Waters. 1219 Thirty-second Stn«f
Creorpetown. D. O., says: "Brown's Iron Bitter*
'lie Tonic of the ««e. Nothing better. It cre.ites
appetite, gives strength and improves digestion '
• ;< nuine has above Trade Mark and crossed red lint •
0:1 wrapper. Take no ot her. Made only to
"KOWN CIKKMK'AL CO.. 1IALT1MOUJK. .<!'•
DmrUCCC ,u CAI-SKS an<l a 1 ew ami
LflrntOO U 11.1 CCKK at your own
home 1 »y one who was ileal twenty-ei^rht
year!-,. '1* rented by most ot tiie noted Hf.prlal-
lsts ot the -lav without benefit. ( uieil himself
In three months, and since then hundreds ot
others. Full part tenia in sent «»n application.
T. S. PAGE, 41 WV-.t :>!.st St.. New York Citv.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY.
A Great Hcdlral Work for Young and JlitN
die-Aged Men.
KNOW THYSELF.
PUBLISHED by the PEABODY MED-
ICAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 BuMncli St.,
Boston, Mass. W'M. If. PARKER, M. D.,
Author. More thnn one million copies sold. It treats
upon Nervous and Physical Debility, Premature Decline,
Krrors of Youth, Exhausted Vitality, Lost Manhood,
Impaired Vigor, «nd Impurities of the Blood, and tho
untold miseries consequent thereon. Contains 300 pages,
substantial embossed binding, full gilt. Warranted
the best popular medical treatise published in tf e Eng-
lish language. Price only $1 by mail, postpaid, and
concealed in a plain wrapper. IlluMratiVc tsamplt free
if you send now. Address as above.
t>r. WM. H. PARKER, the auttmr of the Science of
Life, and chief consulting physician of thePeabody
Medical Institute. Boston, haa many imitator, but no
•Hjuul.—National Tribune.
Decorations of Interior Walls.
A new material for the decoration of
interior walls and ceilings is made from
chemical wood fibre. The sheet or roll
of chemical wood fibre of the desired
tliickuess is taken while wet or damp,
and any desired raised design or pattern
is produced in high relief by means of
suitable embossing rolls or dies, after
wiiich it is allowed to dry, and may then
lie colored or bronzed, if desired, or
inty be colored in the pulp if preferred.
Chemical libro is especially adapted as a
material for embossed wall coverings, as
its great elasticity permits it to be very
deeply embossed without liability of
breaking as it is stretched, thus enabling
designs to It- successfully produced in
high relief with a smooth and unbroken
surface, while after lieing stretched in
tho embossing process the strength and
toughness of the fibres will cause the de-
sign to permanently retain its form and
effectually resist any pressure to which
it might lie subjected in tho operation of
applying the material to a wall or ceiling.
—Paper World.
Winter Exposure Causes Coughs,
Colds. Pleurisy, Pneumonia, Neuralgia, Pneu-
monia. SeiaMca. Lumbago, Backache and other
ailments, tor which Benson's 1 aj cine Plasters
are admi'te i m be the best remed\ known They
relieve and cure in a lew iioiir.-* when no other
opplicaMow is of he lea*t benefit Endor-ed by
.p»,ikmi Pin icians and 1 ~• P»c\vaie of ino-
tations under similar eoundinp narne>, Mich as
4 'Capsicum,J' "1 apsicin. " or ( ap-i< ine "
A-k lor llen-on and take no o hers Examine
caiet'ullv when v«»n bu . All druggists.
SKAIiliU A JOHNSON, Pr 1 s New York.
PLEASE DON'T EOKOET IT
That Dr. M. larue* Cannabis Indb a I" prepared
in Calcutta. India, from the pmest and best Na-
tive Hemp, an I :.•> li e onl> rem* dy, either in
that coun'rv or in this, that will positivelyar.il
permanently cure Consumption. I'r ncliitis,
Asthma. Nasal Catarrh and Nervous Debility,
or break i;;> a fie-1] told in -4 bonis. per
bottle, tt.ne bople* $»;.*,0. t raddi ok & Co.,
Proprietor.-. 1 ij-J Race St., Phi!a.
Wire and Fencing.
Ilewnre til the ol<l style bau-fry iip'tinc. Sly
improved patent netting, Mini pa allel wires,
nf ver sags between (oostfc. Ship|iml ready made,
In rolls, (.r license, model, wiie and hon e made
netting or picket fence lurnistied Itelore buy-
in;; smooth or barbed wire, iron posts, gates,
farm, citv or graveyard fences, \vi i:e for my
prices and free catalogue. Send stamp tor prl
vate agency terms. A G IIL'I.HEUT,
904 Olive street, bt, Lonis, Mo.
PATENTS.
HENRY VFIsE GAKNETT, Attorney at
Law, Washington. 1). C. Refers to Nat Hank.
Washington, I). C. Scud for INYENTOK'8
GUIDE,
PEAC MONTH AM> -I TKIT
0 w L V I UU H;ll. TO AU1.NTS AM> (J AN-J
YA.Sf.Kit8. The biggest Tiling on larih anil the
chance ot a lifetime. Our new enlaiged hlec-
tric Portrait- me the tlnest in the world.
W. II U»KH|-KK .V -SON. ->* Bol d St., N Y
Too Murli Notoriety.
It is hard to understand, but it seems
to be a mania with young married |mm-
ple, to celebrate their honeymoon by hav-
ing their photographs taken together and
then conspicuously displayed in some art
store. The good taste of such displays
may be as seriously questioned as the
propriety of hanging marriage certifi-
cates or state fair dipiomas in the front
jiarlor. The act subjects the young
bride to coarse and ill-natured criticism,
and leaves the groom ojien to the ques-
tion of every paner-by, "How coidd she
have married him?" If bridal couples
must be photographed with the orange
wreath and lace thrown in, hang the pict-
ure in the garret and not behind the
plate glass fronts ot stores. Marriage
gives sufficient notoriety without illus-
trating its victims.—Pioneer Press.
Cur. for Typhoid Patlenti,
The best physicians now freely admit
that typhoid patients, in the great ma-
jority of cases, would recover without a
drop of medicine; that they need medi-
cine mainly to promote ease and comfort,
and that pure air is better for them than
all drugs.—Hall's Journal of Health.
A Swiss law com]*?Is every newly mar-
ried couple to plant trees shortly after
the ceremony of marriage.
617, ST. CHARLES STREET
Sf- LiOVIS, MO-
A Regular Graduate of three medical col-
lects, has been longer engaged in the treatment
of Chroiiflr, Nervous, Skin and Blood
Dl«cn*e* than anv other phvsician in Amer-
ica. Consultation at office or by mail, free, :md
Medicines sent bv mail or express everywhere,
secnrcly packet! free from observation.
Nsrvous Prostration, Debility, Mental
and Physical Weakness, arising from
Indiscretion, Excess. Exposure or In-
diligence, producing tome of the following
effects: Nervousness, Debility, Dimness of
Sight, Defective Memory, Pimples on !' e Face,
Aversion to Society of b em ales, Want ot Pleas-
ure in Life, Unfitness to Marry, Melancholy,
Dyspepsia, Stunted Dev elopment.Loss of Power,
Pains in the Back, etc., are treated with unpar-
alleled success. Safely, privately.
A Positive Written Guarantee
piven In every cura.l* Caik ; where doubt ex-
ists it i* frankly stated. Complete symptom blank
enabling you to properly state your case, sent
free. 36 paffe book; either sex, one stamp.
Blood Impurities and Blood Poisoning,
Mercurial and other Affections of Throat,
Skin and Bones, Blotches, Eruptions, Old
Sores and Ulcers, Painful Swellings,
from w haterer cause, positively and forever
driren from the system, bymeans of »*r* tim*-
TKOTKt) H KM EDI VS. STl FF and IWOLIIN JOINTS
and rheumatism, the result of blood poison,
positively cured. No poisonous drups used.
Catarrh, Throat. Nose, Lung Diseases,
Oonnlltntlonikl and Acqair**! Weak
rnin of both ifiN, treated successfully.
A*e and export.nee are Important; the
prot*rf gooH rfmw/lc# of all ages and countries
are used, and knowing what to give, no tjrperi-
mentt are made. On account of the great num-
ber of cases applying, the charges are kept low,
often lower than is demanded by others.
MARRIAGE GUIDE
3flO Pftfrem • • * • Fine IMafe*.
Elegant cloth and gilt binding. Sealed for 50c
in money or postage stamps. Over fifty wonder-
ful pen picture*, snowing who mav marry, who
not, why. Proper age to marry. Who marry first.
Manhood. Womanhood. Physical decay. Who
should marrv. How life and happiness may be
increased. Those married or about to marry
should read it: of interest and value to every
thinking man and woman. Popular edition.
?a; er covcr, 35e. AddressDB. WU1TI IEK.
("BOSKS"AND" STATIONERY"!
SCHOOL BOOKS, SLATES, SATCHELS, ETC,,
.^5
fife
-AT-
H.MULLER'S BOOK STORE,
MAIS S Tit E FT, VI. XT IK, OH TO ZEISS' HA K Ell 7,
F. KRENTZLIN,
-AGENT FOR—
n
—DEALER IN—
Choice Family Groceries.
Wines, Liquors, Tobacco; Cigars, Crockery and Glassware,
GKABE.Il BUILDING, BRENOAM, TEXAS.
Orders for Keg or Bottled Beer promptly filled. Goods dclr
ered in all parts of the city free of charge.
ALEX. SIMON,
zz<r
fGENERin
NDISE
\-J
NORTHWEST CORNER OF PUBER' SQUARE,
BRENHAM, .... TEXAS
Has Received a Full and Complete Stock of
FALL AND WINTER GOODS.
LATEST STYLES IN
LADIES' 1X1 DRESS M GOODS, M~TBmil«6S7ft]Til5,
'S
lr
CLOTHmG, BOOTS AND SHOES,
XZnta, Caps, Quoonsware and Orocerios.
Also a large and varied assortment of
Parlor and Bed Room Furniture.
CAKPETS, MATS and HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS,
I^.Call and examine onr goods before purchasing elsewhere. Guarantee satisfaction in
denajtments. Give us a trial.
Reichae dt & Sediiorst.
BRENHAM, TEXAS,
^ L-i' MIL.
f! 1
HEADQUARTERS FOR-
m*
Daiiils,ins
(I
IJ.
HUNTERS'AND MILL SUPPLIES,
Manufacturers of Galvanized Iron Cornices, Flues, FU
Till and Corrugated Iron Roofing a Specialty,
All "kinds of Tinsmithing, Gunsmitbing, Locksmillnng, Pipefittin.;
Plumbing ftnd Repairing done.
LINDFjMANN & KOCH,
-DEALERS IN-
0 (
n
i
(
i
(
i
'Ili'O
1
u(
(lilu
PLOWS0F ALL KIKDS
i
AT VERY LOWEST PRICES,
BARB WIRE -A.3STD STOVES
[IREICHARDTir&XlHlRMANW.
WHOLESALE AND HETAIL DKALUS IN
Furniture and Carpets
TtTl -RTMTIAM ----- TB3CAB.
I^Parlor Sets, Charabor Sets, House Furnishing Goods._0«
CARPBTING, OIL CLOTHS, MATTING,
MIRRORS, MATTRESSES, WALL PAPBR.
We are prepared to furnish your house from top to bottom, nt «hertnot.v£ Carpets
sowed and put down. Call and see us. Goods delivered in the city FREK
StSDY STREET, BETWEEN ANT and NORTH. RREMIAM, TEXAS,
; 1
'111
1
I I
.
.4
rar igl
l ■mm- ^
urn
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Rankin, John G. & Levin. Brenham Daily Banner. (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 10, 1887, newspaper, February 10, 1887; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth485619/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.