Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1891 Page: 3 of 10
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i (ramps
tornttoii.pt-
J.jrglary, Id remove their brtak-
dlshos ho vvas-et uf.on aud n
desperate attempt was made to secure
liis keys aud thus to escape. The olii
cer iti the fii>ht Shot b<-tb men. Om
was kilie i Distant!) aud the othci
Will die.
A apccM from ?unv Orlc»n , La ,
says:—The supreme court of Louisia-
na, by three to t*o, dec.tied the luuii-
damus case in favor of the Louis ;.na
Lottery coinpftuy. The mandamus
is to compel the Secretary ot Hi, state
to submit to the pc pie at llte i ex'
elate election the ameudment passed
by the last general assembly extend-
ing the charter if the Louisiana i.,ot-
i tery company twenty-five years lon-
ger. should the people ra ify the
amendment the lottery company will
pay the state annually i sum of $1.
25P,000 to be applied to public uses.
p*D»on^MWftiliW IP"
[eojoy a dance or attend the theatre
This Se could not do without the
necessary money requisite to such a
1 itc so he felt pressed to rsiso some.
He procured a check, it is alleged, on
the Mount Vernon Bank and tilled it
<nit, it 's said, \c ith the name ofij
M. Pollard maker, an i had \V.I) Parks
cash it tor him. In court ho waived
having his papers’v-. of extradition
eighiicd bv Governor Hogg and Sec-
retary cf ©tats HI tine. bo will bring
b ck Louis Paige*, who is accu-ed ot
embezzling abou* $40 000 worth of
property from Banker Sullivnu.
S. .1. Blessing, a launderer, ago 1 28
years, attempted suicide tbit morning
by too pniao but was rescued by two
doctors and a stomach pumy. lie as-l
exatniu ti u and was lurid in $2000 i signed as the cause ol' the deed the
for the May term of the superior court
~ ■ m ^ w ■ i
A Washington special says:—The
attorneys for the publishers of the
Jtfew Orleans States and Mobile Reg-
ister and the Louisiana Lottery com-
pany to-day made a vigorom effort
to prevent the postpondmeut of the
. argument in the ca e against the
' newspaper publishers for violariug
ihe auti-lotterv act forbi idtng circu-
lation through the mails of publica-
tions containing lottery adveriise-
inients. The court was very much
disinclined to hear the case at this
term owing to the illness of Jus ice
Jftradlcy. J. C. Gar;er ot New York
. amide tne request: 1 tba' the ca cs go
kV
m
I;
ft
A snecial from Paris, Tex., savs
Passengers who arrived here oi: the
Frisco train briug u ws of the terri-
ble death ol a iumbermau named •).
A. Weutbersby, at Kos-oma, 1. T.—
Weatbersby went into a lot to rope a
bull and had succeeded in capturing
the animal, which iuiuriated i an i it
rushed rpou W« a:hersbv,Hho turned
to run away. The animal caught him
wit. us horns and tore the flesh from
bis legs and oatk, and thre n him ou
the ground and tneu plunged on him
with its fore'ee',crushing his stomach
bek aud bowels A bystander r <n
and g ,t a Winchester ami killed the
brute as it pawed an t bellowed around
its victim. Weathersby was on the
platform as the train pas-rd oy. He
is horribly mutilated aud his death is
inevitable.
re cut death ot his parents, wife,
chllur n and other relatives
inggie Nav-j • Was jailed ou
charge ot stenliug $26 worth of cloth-
ing lr. m a compairn named Autouto
Gai za.
The $2000 bond of Albert Harry
Newiou, accu-ed of shooting banker
. S. Lockwood, was forfePcd to-day.
THE DAY FOR ME.
said that the report ot the Investiga-
tion of the killing ot (bo Italians in
Now.Orleans is now op fl'e in th" de-
partment 6f justice. The investiga-
tion was made at the instauce of the
department in aocotda co wi h the
notice given the Italian government.
The teport shows, so it is said, t .at
everyone of the Italians killed voted
in the last New Orleans election and
i hits announced their allegiance to
(his republic. The report has not yet
been given to the public, but a leak is
said to exist and from it comes the
above news.
■
I
I
A special from Fort Smi*h, Ark.,
say: Mrs. Amelia Harms, wife of
Henry Harms, was found in the barn
loft ot h6r home in this city about
noon to day, handing from a rafter by
a long wire which she had taken from
ubaleofhay. She had first tr!cd lo
kill ..crselt oy cutting an artery iu her
OU as originally ordered. He called at-; wrist, but this wa- evidently too slow
teuiion to the position in which .a I a process, bo she twisted the wire
postponement would leave bis c ients, | around her neck, made it fast to tlit
a newspaper with lottery advenis - j rafter, sud, kicking some hoards from
tnents beiug excluded aiisolu ely from ! under her feet, swung into eternity,
the mails pending the decision. The ; $ ,o leaves four children, the oldest
chief justice was disinclined to grant | only five years ago. She was a widow
the request, and finally said that llie j and o\Vucd the home where she lived
court would retire for consultation, j when Henry Harms married her. tie
which it imcJiatcly did The govern-1 induced her to ir.ortgage her home
incut counsel are indifferent as to j fo; $G00, which he tqifndercd, and
immediate argument or postponement in ': ?r three weeKS ago prevailed ou
aud offers no suggestions lo the court, j her fo place auothcr mortgage ou the
When the justices returned the c .icf property for $400 Securing thisi
justice announced a postponement of i money, he fled the cr untry, leaving; down a great deal earlier than lie needs
A brilliant sky, a fine bare tree,
Some soft snow blowing down the slope;
The cedars green as they can be,
The sunshine full of life aud hopo—
These till one's heart with glee.
This is the day for met
A warm, sweet noon, with flowers round,
Aud Insects huppy in the sun;
With green things rising from the ground.
Their higher life not long begun—
Hail! blossom, bird and bee.
This is the day for met
A richer sky. a deeper green;
A happy sense of well-earned rest:
A summer landscape full of sheen.
The world at its brightest, sweetest, best;
A swaying seat in a tree—
This is the day for me!
The glowing woods in splendor stand
(Their wealth is hid from careless sight),
The eye may feast on every baud;
To be alive is pure delight.
Oh, autumn wind so free.
This is the day for me!
lie not so fast, joy pulsing heart;
These ideal days make not the year:-
They only form its perfec t part.
Home must be rainy, cold and drear.
Cansi then say earnestly
"This is the day for me':"
—Anuie Isabel Willis in ISoston Pilot.
Ilest Is Necessary.
A man who has so much ta do that lie
will work nights and Sundays as well as
week days is uot likely to do as much it,
the long run us the man who rests at
God's appointed times in order to fit
himself for effective work between
these times. Many a busy man breaks
the cases until the second Monday ip : ji r <o take .’arc of her children. IIis
next October. ccnduci and the thought of losing her
A special from St. Louis. Mo, sau: 1 l,roPtr;y drove tlC poor woman to
Because ot h<s unhappy love lor i he j ' c',p ral10^______
woman who had separated him from!
his wife, a visitor bv tho name of ! A special from San Francisco, Gal.,
Weldon chloroformed his mistress! 8n>'8: •';’arat' Bernhardt did a star
this tnoruiua at an early hour aud
ended his own life with a bullet, Tho
inurdtr and sui idc occured at the
Grand View hotel. On Friday last
ihev cantc here and registered as Mr.
and Mrs. Weldon o! Texas. Not aj -
piece of acting Saturday night, but it
was behind the scenes and only pro-
fessionals witnessed it. She had just
come oil'the stage after the third act
to, because he insists cn working when
rest is his first duty. And many a man
who observes God's law of the night
and the Sabbath, written in man's very
nature, accomplishes far more in a serie>
of years than he could have wrought
with any violation of that law.
Mr. Gladstone, speaking not long ago
of his own experiences in busy life, said
of the high privilege of “Sunday rest,"
l “Personally, I have always endeavored,
! so far as circumstances have allowed, tc
A spec'al from Dennison, Tex. says:
On the 10th in-tnnt A F. Lank-
ford living with his family, wife
and four children in West Denison,
left for Lehigh, I. T„ where he enter
cd tho employ of a Mr. Pollard Lank-
foul work three dnysand ou theuigh
of the third day ho disappeared, nnd
as yet nothing baa been learned ns to
his whereabouts. Lankford is about
80 years of age. Ho was very devoted
to his family. It is feared that he has
neon murdered.
CHILDREN
Are always liable to sudden and severe
colds, to croup, sore throat, lung fever, etc.
Remedies, to he effective, must be admin-
istered without delay. Nothing is better
adapted for such emergencies than Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral. It, soothes the inflamed
membrane, promotes expectoration, relieves
coughing, and Induces sleep. The prompt uso
of this medicine has saved innumerable lives,
botli of young and old.
"One of my-children hart croup. The case
was attended by our physician, and was sup-
posed to be well under central. One night
I was startled by the child’s hard breathing,
and on going to it found it
StrangSing.
It lmd nearly ceased to breathe. Realizing
that the child's alarming condition had be-
come possible in suite ot the medicine it lmd
taken, l reasoned that shell remedies would
he of no avail. Having a part of a bottle of'
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house, I gave
the child three doses, at short intervals, and
anxiously waited results. Prom tire moment
the Pectoral was given, tho child’s breathing
grew easier, and iu a short time it was sleep-
ing quietly and breathing naturally. The
child is alive and well to-day, and I do not
hesitate to sav that Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
saved its lifed’-C. J. Wooldridge, Wortham,
Texas.
fir™ For colds, coughs, bronchitis, asthma,
and the early stages ot consumption, take
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
I
PREPARED P.V
DB. J. C. AYER £ CO., Lowell, Masa.
Bold by all Druggists, Price $1; Bi* bottles, $5,
when her Lurkish servant, Angelo,: aViljj inyself of this privilege, timl now
—------ ------ ------ -......, rushed up to her with a black eyo and i tftut I have arrived near the goal of a
pearing at the breakfast table at their j streaming over hx-* forehead, laborious public career of close on fifty*
diecuSloiyiod time the clerk burst open i ^at^ been roughly handled by sev- j g^yon years, 1 attribute in great part tc
the door to their room. t)u tho bed era^ Grand opera bouse scene shif-j this practice the prolonging of my life
tors, because lie persisted iu comeiug; ;1nd the preservation of my faculties.
.saturated with blood which bad flow-
ed from a wound iu Weld ns bead,
•lay lie man and woman. A revolver
upon the stage against th° orders ot
Manager Bonner. The scene shif.ers
grasped tightly in the right hand, aud j promp.ly knocked him out when he
cotton saturated with chloroform held
•in tho left, told the story. A note
•addressed to tho-proprietor ot the
hotel gave the reason already stated
Tor the tragedy, and directed that his
•body be sent to his friends at Vernon
Texas.
became insolent. Bernhardt, w as in
her dressing room when she heard
her favorite servant call loi aid. She
descended upon tho four scene sbif*-
ers like living tire and poured forth
A true man can do more in six days than
he can in seven, week by week, as be
can do more in sixteen hours than in
twenty-four, day by day, for a lifetime.
—Sunday School Times.
Mail in Early (.’allTornia Days.
A Californian tells this story of boom
A dispatch from Clebourn, Tex,
•>says:—Torn Carter, a young man
.about 22 years old, killed kimselt 'ust
night at the residence of Charles
Williams. He had been drinking con
•sidcrably all day yesterday aud threat-
ened to kill himself, lie went to
William’s house, whore he has been
boarding, about 10 o’clock last night,
and on entering the door bo began
feeling around, saying be was lookiug
for a light, but iustcad got bis pistol
and aat on the bed and placing tbe
pistol to hi« right ear fired, tho ball
passing through his bead It was
dark in tho room and no one knew
what ne was about until the shot was
fired. He lived about three hours but
could not speak. Carter has no rela-
tives that any one knows of except a
: sister in Alabama.
a storm of French expletives that; times in San Diego. The general deli v-
would have withered them had ihev
understood that longue. After three
quarters of an hour’s wrangling she
was persuaded to conclude the play.
A special from Austin says: An
amusing but suggestive incident baa
just lehked out in refference to Presi-
dent Harrison’s visit to Texas. Gov-
ernor Hoifg, who was elected by 180,-
000 majo-ity, wont to meet Harrison
at Palestine, away up in the piuev
woods of eastern Texas While seated
la the president’s car a mes age from
the assistant secretary ot war was
ban'ed ti n president. It slated that
Mexicau troops wanted his permission
to cross over into Texas territory to
take part in the reception In his honor
at El Paso. ‘ That, Mr. President,”
said Governor Hogg, smiiing, "is the
prerogative ot the governor of Texas
not of the President of the United
States.” A friendly colloquy then
took place between Messrs. Hogg and'
Harrison, which ended in Hogg car-
rying his point aud the president for
once admit’iug nt Last in part, ti.e
doctri.ie of states righ's. Finally it
was deedted that Governor Ilogg
should answer tho war office and ac-
cord the permission atked for by the
Mexican officers, which was done.
The people here r.ro gratified at the
incident and laughingly say Ho^g is
on top, as he always is.
A special from Boston, Mass , says :
Charles Cullis, a Harvard student ar-
rested on the charge of forging a
check tor $25, on tho Mount Voruon
National bank, has been arraigned in
tho munineval court. Cullis is 22
years old, a son of Dr. Cullis of the
Consumptive’s home, aud has becj a
student as the llai vard Medical school
tor the past year and a halt. Ili:
lather has always kept him uudci
strict djsciplin, not allowing him H
attend any social gathering and i r
bidding him out of doors at nighi
'This Lullis is said to hnve been unablt
THE R. R. BOOM.
Is here to stay. The artesian well
will surely flow, the town ot Temple
will over-ride all opposition
Bell county Is in a heaiyty condition
and so Is tbe firm of Wade
& Barns. A look through their
establishment would indicato that
they do a wholesale business in every
line, their house is taxed to its utmost
capacity to say nothing ot the two
ware rooms which aro used for re-
serve stock. Mr. Wade has just
returned from the east, where no pur-
chased this immense stock, he tells us
that in buying in such large quantities
he was given the advance on all goods
which the McKinley 'bill effected.
When iu need of anything iu their
line, we advise you to see them.
Is Life Worth living?
Not if you go through the world a
dyspeptic. Dr. Acker’s Dyspepsia
Tablets arc a possilivo cure lor the
worst forms of dyspepsia, iudigesiion,
flatulency aud consiipation.
A Dallas special says:—Two months
ago the grocery store of Stone & Bro,
was ente red by burglars, who blew
onen the sal'o and made a small haul
Since that time Stone & Bro haye
purchased a new sate. Fearing it
might share the same tate as the other
they wrote the following on a tag and
hung it on the door:
‘•This safe is uot locked. Below
find the combination, open it and
help ' ourself. There is nothing of
value in it, but please leave it shut
iu case oi tire.’
Yesterday morning when the pro-
prietors came down to their busiues-
place they found that a door of tne
store had been prized open, the knob
ot the s.iic knocked ot with a sledge
hammer, which was lying near and a
hole bored through the first door,
which, however, had not been opened.
Un oxarning the tag it was found thal
the burgulars hau aaded tho follow-
ing: "We did not see this till it was
almost too late. Many thanks.”
Fifteen hundred pounds of flour in
sacks had been piled up in iront ol
(he safe by the burglars, and behind
th's barricade 1 hey did their work
unseen from the street.
ery window of the postoffice was always
crowded. One week the mails were de-
layed for several days, and when thej
were at last distributed the line of in
quirers at the general delivery window
of the postoffice extended for six blocks.
A man who fell in line in the early
morning got to the window and received
his mail about 8 o’clock in the evening.
One old lady, who had plenty of time
on her hands, took with her a camp stool
and her lunch basket, and camped rigid
there on the line. She received no let
ter, and turned away apparently happy,
although she waited in line for seven
hours. When this mail accumulated the
postmaster made no attempt to distribute
the newspapers. They were simply piled
np in one corner, and finally a wagon
load of newspaper mail was carted away
from the postoffice. To be distributed:
Oh. no: to be champed into San Diegc
bay.—Exchange.
SAVES MONEY.
One box of those pills wlU envo mnnr
dollars In doctor’s bills. They uro
specially prepared us a
Family Medicine,
and supplies a want long felt. They're*
move unhealthy accumulations from
the body, without nausea or frrlplng.
Adapted to young and old. Price, Z9o<
SOLD EVEHYWHEJBE.
A special from ban Antonio, Tex.,
says.—Apolinario Orttz wns convict-
ed to-day of rupe nnd given a peualtx
il seven years imprisonment.
Detective Thomas Hughes loft hen
to-day tor Halifax, Novia Scotia, via
The “Fall.”
I have seen it stated over and ovei
again that “fall”—autumn— is an Amer-
icanism. I am not snre that I have ever
seen it contradicted. I myself learned long
ago that to a Dorset rustic "fall” was
the word of native speech, “a'tumn” a
mere high polite exotic. (Is it so still, 1
wonder, in this day of board schools?]
However, here is a passage from a bool;
of the Seventeenth century, in whicl
“spring and fall” are spoken of as a Dor-
set man might speak:
“And this 1 doe, not so verie expreslie,
by occasion of my contingent health,
though still, if I secure not from some
decaies this spring, I may chance do it
lesse happilie in the fall.”—Notes and
Queries.
Which isbott*:, to allow a guilty man
to escape by legal process or to kill an
innocent man by mob law?
Thtidoieesn
Are chocolate creams going to bo
cheaper now? This is one of girls’ in-
alienable rights under the new tariff law.
At a ratification meeting in honor of
Senator Pawner, of Illinois, this senti-
ment was tremendously cheered: “There
is no room in the ranks of the Democratic)
party for the man who bolts the regular
nominee.”
■ The discussion has been renewed as to
.vhat language was spoken by the founder
of Christianity. It is the strangest fact
in regard to one who made a religion for
the world that so little is certainly known
in regard to his personal history as to
make it donbtful even in what language
ho spoke. Learned ecclesiologists are
many of them cf opinion that it was the
Aramaic dialect used by the Jews of
Palestine, but this is by no means surely
ttbtablishcd.
^ (O tl&ALi 1 u anti ? lumvi'VD ij t nm<u lutu >
THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO. ST. LOUIS. MOt
f I
Do you know that a little _ _
ccrous thing? Are yon aware___________
fastens on the lungs and far too often runs
into Consumption and ends in Death ? People -
suffering from Asthma, Bronchitis, Pnenmo-l
nia And Consumption will all tell you that 1
f “IT STARTED WITH A GOLD.” j
Can you afford to neglect it? Can you trifle
with so serious a matter ? Are you aware that
sm, &gkW9& English remedy
b fo • Coughs, Colds and Consumption is beyond question the greatest of all
|Modern Remedies? It will stop a Cough in one night. It will check a
ff Cold in a day. It will prevent Croup, relieve Asthma and cure Consump-
0 tiou if takc/i in time, “ You can’t afford to be without it.” A 26c. bottle
■ rnav save you § tOO iu Doctor’s bills—may save your life! Ask your drng-
igist for it,‘ or write tc W, H. HOOKER i CO., 46 West Broadway, lew YorR, for book,
wi ■ "iiiiiBi ■-■iiiiBiiBTiMtt 11 nr ■rB»«~Wi»i,»iwiiM'rBrMriwiMi«H'»'i'»'WiM'iiWiiwiiM^’
•4REY1 LUMBERYARD>
THE CAREY LOMBARD LUMCER Co.
Have opened up a new yard at theos l LAuieron yard, opposite
the Santa Fo depot, and will <*:im a iii'd line of
LUMBER,SASH,DOOR,BLINDS,MOLDING,SHINGLES
And everything carried in a first-class Lumber yard, (h*1’
and get their prices before buying elsewhere.
DURKUMManager
THE
BEST
LIVER
MEDICINE
CHILL CURE.
CHEAPEST HEDICIIVE KNOWN
CONSIDERING QUALITY AND SIZE OF DOSE.
IT WILL ALSO CUBE
BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEP8IA,
AND CHRONIC CONSTIPATION.
For sale by W. E. AVtllis, Temple Tex |
1 l-28wly
mJiVEE
If PILLS.
DO NOT GRIPE, SICKEN OB
CONSTIPATE.
Sure Cure for Sick Headache,
and nil troubles Brining from
Indigestion or Constipation.
Improve® the Oomplexiop
by Purifying tho Biood
be nicely nd justed to suit tho obh f
F. M. BOUBLAND .
Physician and Surgeon.
Office over Yancey & Branch’s W holesale Store
i2th St. Telephone Connection.
( 8 to 10*30 a m
Hours Jat0 4pm
( 7 to o p Slate at Hamill's Drug St
IL is a solid handsome c&keof
scouring soap which has no equal
for all cleaning purposes excepHn
the laundry-To use it is lo value if-
Wliat will SAP0LI0 do? Why it will clean paint, make oil cloth*
bright, and give the floors, tables aud shelves a new appearance. It will
take the grease off the dishes and oli'tlis pots and pans. You cau scour
the knives and forks with it, and ruako tho tin tilings shine brightly. Tlio
wash-basin, the bath-tub, even the greasy kitchen sink will be as clean as
a new pin if you use SAP0LI0. Ono cake will prove all wo say. Bo ft
clever housekeeper and try it.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. THEfiB 13 BUT ONE SAPOLIO'
ENOCH! MORGAN’S SONS CO., NEW YORiC.
THE
IBEST/
theVOLUNTEER CULTIVATOR!
CultlvRtor boon no|
iu Farmers an tbe -
and ■
Never bofore has a Spring
I favorably received by tl)
' VOI.llNTKKIt. It is simple lu all its details nn_
possessed poluts of merit to be found in no other. I hs
FHAJIE can bo made wide or narrow, which also
t controls tho width of the gangs. 1 lie U«» Bl^B-
kTRGK Is a neat steel one, and Is connected directly
"the shovels. The UANUS ore made of ertra strong
strong]
ulnr. a
FBI
fur-,
■FARMERS
[ uk tor tho
hVOLlNTEER
mBmmu
PARLIN &ORENDORFF CO. Manufacturer^ak^8tate AatHTB,
L. C. Porter
John James.
JAMES & PORTER
Have formed a Co-partnership, and are prepared
to'do all kinds of
Blacksmithino'. Repairing, Horse-shoing.
Mr. Porter, formerly of the firm of Boykin & Porter, “is
well known, and will be pleased to meet his old
friends
Don'PJiorget the Place.
8th Street, Between Avenue C and D, Temple, Tex,
M
-m
■
iBASS’i
CHICKEN CHOLERA CURE
I. wutuM U stop CIOUBA aawg rwHry eai taama*
Ill rreSntlm f I pw wat. It to wtemg hr mm* •! M.
UrfMt »«4 Ml lataUlfMl Bnwtora la tlM iMktMto.
Price, 50 Cents per Package
for Ml# bj all DragfUto, n Mat pMt-palt oa rotolpl at prtot.
BASS & BROTHER,
TBRHBIilj,
f
' m
L DOUGLAS $3,”” SHOE
Best in the World.
Awarded the inednl Coe superior uunllty of nu. ovlnl
and proBeiency In worhtiliinship over all other Attao
exhiliiiH, bv the UliiHsiicliosetlH Charitable Me-
chanics' .iMMOviatiun, IIomIou, lSHO,
For GENTLEMEN.
*5.00
<g A Hand-Sowed
4iUv Welt Shoo.
Poliae and
Farmer.
•3.50
$2 gQ Extra Value
*2.25
•2.00
Calf Shoe.
Working-
man’! Shoe.
Goodwear
Shoe.
For LADIEe.
•3.00"“%™.
Beit
Talae
For i
MISSIS.
g H. HUNTER, JK
Attorney at Law
LOANS AND COLLECTION
— AGENTS.—
Cff ce c vc r Tc n pic N 11 ic 11) TWm
<li lie - - - Texas
^2aS0 Donfola
*2.00 ““
*1.75
For BOYS' & YOUTH'S.
*2 it *1.75
SCHOOL SHOB.
«y\
ga'IRmr JjKirfr 'a .lino dealer nt^mpla to sell yoi’ibfii without^, 1
•n stamped on tlm bottom, anil claim, they arc his make, do not bu deceived
5SStSgrSt^t%5S^fe*S^ « St as thousands who hoar
worn them will testify. . ________________a nat already occnaled
rWnu ted — A* 1 oca I agent in every city nnd town In the C. 8. not already occupied.
ftfaEaliTflveMP«wl*mrrnI cannot supply you. take no otHo-s. but send ill.cct tofocto^, endortwr
advertised orlrp To Ordrr bv DlaiK CbMUlerrien nnd novswlU Ht.ito slso iifluaUv worn, style aniwldti
dSSKrYKB wIM please^ state stylo desired, si, a and wimhvsuMlvtw.rn ^ WiC^T
preferred. Misses else and kind ofhool. >V, I.. UroWtOfl. m»
EL). YIEXO, Agent.
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Crow, J. D. & Bitzer, J. H. Temple Weekly Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1891, newspaper, May 1, 1891; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585316/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.