The Colorado Citizen (Columbus, Tex.), Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 22, 1889 Page: 9 of 10
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COLQBASO CITIZEN-S3ECIAL EBITlOOCl
w1
a",
pronounced
The
originated
DICK'S H
(LATE ILSE'S.) COL
spring
•It. cteuud pellucid, fronv tU"
and forms the San Antonio^'
M
uA.:AA
jjiexico,
of the most powerful
tend withl the Lone
dealing, the excellency of
tt e eoartesy of its
extended its trade to
far by its originators.
THE JiPANESÉ PEtílim ^
JVitb most new pomologioal pro-
ducts the first experiments are not
satisfactory. For several years the
cultivation of the
to their
I to
paid 'dut by them per
army of employes going far
porting hundreds. Tk«y make their owTSI
ice, own their own cars, (the Zimnfennann
patent refrigerator,) fcod by. prompt ship-
ments and quick transit^ furnish better and
purer beer than any otfifer -eeeeertnftttqg
business in the state. Mr. H. D. Kamp-
mann, the President of the company, and
Mr. L. Berg, the Secretary, are gentlemen^
so well known to the business world thdt
the mere mention of the fact of their con-
nection with the Lone Stab Brkwbby is a
sufficient guarantee of its stability and the
excellence of its product. , ;V¿Y .V
COLUMBUS AGENCY
"LONE STAR*' BREWING CO.
„¿á£^;SS£-rSíSIMJlQSr. •
was restricted to amateurs and gar
deners, becaase the fruit was sup-;
posed to be interesting onty^as" an
ornamental, and not of any commer-
cial or edible value. Many pi the
trees, when transplanted* ifail to start
in growth. nntU ffiay o^Jiinet frence
are freqne5|tiy pretnatarely up-
jt ^vasprop-.
i any has a reputatiog in
*?£vr years of which it ba 4 right to
This
the last1
feel proud. Their large Brewery, situated
at Saa Antonio, is a monum<iai of théir en-
terprise and pluck. Furnishing beer that
equal, if not the superior, of any brought
to t||l state, iltey leave steadily and
favéÜUFof
the invigorating brew of King Gambri-
nns. • '
In this citytlieyajre represented by that
of tóoí'fea^w^'ílft £üros Bin-
vim 4héy owe
article,
friendship 1
tution
their money north.
i thif
airnng our
native pebsimmon,
-did it begbi to «bowks value as one
.of our pomologie^resotii^ces.V V
A TfBOFA^ATieN AN^CmTIVATX^^K
Here allow us to quote President
P. J.sBuckmans: "The early introdu
cers«ta*£d that it)was impossibJo to
;",th ese ver a lv a r i et i e s unless
grafted upon seedüngssgrowii f>Qiu
Japanese seed. This-was soou dis-
covered to be untenable,as otWLnative
ersonal
insti-
species w eminentlyXuitable X©r stocks,
ami, as subsequently proven, superior
for that purpose to the seedlings of
Tihe Kaki. Our native seedlings have
batter*and rirore nériierous roots, and,
tinlike the Japanétséj'have branched
single, Düi enormously'long, tap root,
wjtjj,, ^tejajls; r^pd ¡tjius,th|e¡y are.;
difficult to dig up anjd .ttfhspJap,!-,"
> The auraat .method ofpropagat-wgiB,
BY CLEFT GRAFTING
nptfn%j|pFJltafc^f thqlroot, a
fpy .fJbsJd^ithe §nfjj|ce,
the latter part of February or first
of March. About this time the sap
lining is said to bu
.tcfcgofip vakjPfc, ¿hoitgh ^ hafu
never found H to abjure tbe ti tes. No
Special SeejQü^tto u4£r e^uia|d.6>r
their success: tliéyUirive and do well
e the Aa&ki: rierfeifemon suc-
begins to rise.
3R5|t
tfcerwire
Pairopize borne enters
H I ' C3
-j Colorado county is celebrated (or
Wé'índ fruits, some specimens whifch hsvé
been grown by Mr. J. F. Leyendecker at
his Nursery—which he has very appropri-
ately named Pearfield—cannot ^ excelled
j had twenty years' expe-
i * frait grower.'he ha so caws-
"*~t his stock that to day trees
him are giving much better
mu& lii other dp
This is but natural, as be has been
~~ fe?fs be£
-Ñi'.rsery, and the stock be has on hand,
willpteve. Another thing: in-buying from
9>im you are sure to get just what you pay
for—the true name being átways given.
e, Mr. Leytaddbker
! of our home pgfpljg,
SSr""' -yield
PearSeld Nursery is situated nine miles
bing in the fruit line, drop
to J. I*. Leyendecker,
CULTIVATION IS QUITE SIMPLE,
sitnilaiUo that, giv^u to year tree?,
er allo§- a«^ r weedá tófgro#
our orefga up til aíter r lie first of
tember... . k
VJXfie. IMi&stJtati)* all varieties va- '
ríes from ,a( ¡light, to .a dark orange or ,
vermilion. It begins to color when >
three quarters grawn, but should not
be ¿.^hinedMijiiU ^j t' lajfflrél'rost is"
expected, or until nearly ripe. The
qiialtt^of thá íruit'ittipróveVif sH^lfti- !
ly touched by frost, bat its keeping
ift«rtrtie« *t^lo?fc':'Tiib£'fnrtt adheres
firmly to the stem, and should be cut
of w|ith ajBl^rp kni^,Sut away
^ '
north of
in Col-
"Tfycfa íavé'anidea
L. eiEENi |
county attorney.
Mr. Oreen was born in* Gonzales couhty
in 1860, and received the princtpai portion
of his.^eatioíatSiín Antonio and the A.
& M: College at Bryan. He entered the
Sw office of Messrs. Logue & Simpson of
is city, receiving in a few months his
license as, an attorney. The esteem in
which Mr. Green is liéld is shown by the
iftíí that he has lteen elected four succes'
sfVe fhnér tó the office he now holds.'
" Tbe law firm of Adkio# & J3reen,
« young one,-ratífcshigU ^to i* c^fl
<of the bar and people.
MR.JjAl, JOttN
AA.A. WUU
tober nmil Marc
l e cut
9
H mw-
bear, which will enfeeble their vital-
ly ¿rid sometimes kill the tree; hence
is adv
hese outfjSp
rin
le to thin
uit ham
/
i in Clarks-
i^irginia, 6th September, 1843,
«nd.eMke to Texas in March, 1888. he was
«ppOioted Sheriff of Colorado Connty in
the,^pn«c<«f 188 , and resigned in the fall
efeSeíl Distii^Clerk ia
1876. and was «e elected to say,office twice.
iHe declined to be a^ndidlilif fljpjffaid office
dn 1882, and was succéeáíñ 'by Mr. J. J.
'(Taxes in .iJ^wfefch office he now holds.
IHe nuttied a native Texan in He ¡8
>en|^ed fn farming arid ¿lock raising.
/vjE8£E J.
MSTBICT CLERK.
Harrison was born in Obion county,
- Tennessee, September 7th, 1840, and Immi-
thts city
Mr. Har-
*;son was elacted District Clerk which
o'Iob hestill filfe. He is very popular, and
atanfe^igb as an officer and business man.
" BAliftER J. J. HOLLOWAY s
Of Weimar, aids tbe special edition of the.
Citizen by the insertion of bis business
card, to which we invite public attention.
He is doing a Banking and Exchange busi-
ness; with ample means forks-transaction,
and for the accommodation of tbe public.
Anything in his line Will receive prompt
'person at attention, and at odd times he ran
also " spin a yarn" or tell a good story with
infinita zest. He is genial and clever and
Companionable. Try Mm. jjffjjiff ||j|
We take this metbod of informing tbe
ladies that we have an elegant line of fall
millinery at very low prices. ;
Mbb. Putney & Dexter.
; COMMERCIAL V^L^Ej.
¿ué f4\v jfro^ersTfavfe raised ¿his
fruit in sufficier^ cnjanti
■ men); .htnee it ^ dim'ewtlo^ rriye
! their mli|tet viJiiJ l^resl Hi ük|nsrtas
says: J J wo jjeairl ng4 |nLc 'd|r' t¿
test this point, we shipped a dozen
coates, éj,iksir íioidhig^ peck, to New
York a ltd F^ita^elpUM: —^tf^st ¡tíie
Tóales wé're sfew, bu.t"Tu a f©w day ie-
Óirns w^^e |pceij^r3, Qaur ¿dollars per
crate from New York', andf four and a
liaif Cropt £b|lade)nliw, and ^rej^t^st
from the látter point'to send all we
oíáild secure/' Jnsc aa the cgase
with all n_ew products, consumers
acquainted
" ' "frlTH THE MERITS OF THE FEyiT
before sales can be made, My trees
háye borne regular ¡crops since 1882,
■aát.' now loaded witl fruit, and excite
the odijiiratiOB of gjg^v|ió see them.*
I I L i i If J. 1
1 cUucSSCC, ÜCJACHIUvi fWl, xcramt au
Í grated Ur Texis in 1879, settling in i
in t«7'4. At the-election in 1882, B
fwjió eee th^i
eten¿bc¿bb.
so for me: indeed, within the last 25
years I have j^ownihut ohe instance.
A pear scion was grafted into a red-
Law stock a little below the surface,
and took root, grew and is now a large
tree, bearing, it is said by those who
live near it,ais ffiiueh- as thirty or forty
—some say fifty—bushels a year.
The bíállofy'oí the old varieties in
the states of Tennessee, Kentucky,
Arkansas and Texas, is that they are
every where dying,ant, and the new
varieties are taking their place in the
orchards and fruit gardens. - I refer
tó tblrTeCotíte áñd Kieffer, both of
which are comparatively new, and are
said to be hybrids —- the L?Cont a
cross betireeii the: Chinese Sand aind
•the Bsrtl^t. The history of tbe for-
mer is tba| one Joseph LeGónte sent
or brought a little tree from New York
to Llbmjr coVrttj-.' GV., ^hich' was
transplanted and attended by a kins-
woman of his; that the tree is liying
now, ^nd is healthy, bearing enormous
erops )S^ftttttr-€very year. It is now
tu between tíiírty and forty years old.
. pWhen our so'&thern coast was block-
aded during the hte unpleasantness,
there was a skeedaddling from that
Üftmnty into the interior of the state.
A few cuttings of the old LeConte
pear tree went along and were planted
in Thornas conijiy, from which have
• spYftng^myfiads of trees, spreading
over the state and over the United
States. For years and years the pi op-
agation tbferé1 liáis been from cuttings.
Some paVtiPs have, however, practiced
grafting, or budding on, other pear
ttock.^iof on t^e quincé, and claim
that they do well. For my own part
I prefer the cuttings, as, on my
^i^nftdfi^Jit.JeaflÍK-Íbey grow mnch
more thriftily than the grafted ones
as I can demonstrate to any one who
will-visit me.
Tlie tree is a rapid grower, a pro-
fuse bearer, begins to bear the fourth
year from the cutting, (as early as the
old varieties worked on the quince,)
and i$ a standard tree upon which yon
do not have to wait half a generation
to see fruit, and a tree that, as it ac-
quires ago and size, is capable of
bearing ten, twenty, thirty or forty
bushels of large, juicy and delicious
pears annually.
For transplanting I prefer a tree
two years old or even older. I have
transplanted quite a number of them
five years old, which did well;
Those which I have lost in transplant-
ing have been one year old, from tbe
cuttings.
Now, how about: the profits arising
from the cultivation of the LeConte?
One hundred trees will plant an acre
of ground, and at ten yeá'rs old they
will yield, say ten bushels of pears,
which sell readily at two dollars per
bushel, fay $20 per tree, and you have
$2000 per acre; but suppose you cutoff
one-half for casualties, and you still
have more money than you can make
off an aqre olj ground planted in any-
thing etsei. Í would not have to go
y • . ■ >■ r , . "
far to prove that in Texas any tree
ten years old produces $23 worth;
another one, same age, $21 worth, at
one crop. An instance is given where
a gentleman in Texas with 20 acr^s in
trees, with an average of four or five
bushels to the tree, was offered $1.Í6
cénts for the fruit on the trees, and be
! < .; ... JJ c | j .-¿T-f * I 1
refused to take it because he could do
better to gather and ship the fruit
himself. A little ahead of cotton,
sugar or anything else, I should think.
These are facts well established, and
what one man has done, another can
do. I would say here, however, by
way of caution, that to be successful
in the growing of fruit, care and at-
tention, with good cultivation, is a
sine qua non. I may add that the
LiConte commences to ripen in July
and continues to ripen until late in
August. The pears are susceptible of
being evaporated, preserved or canned
and are the equal, if not superior, to
a try other fruit so disposed of, thus
allowing V >t Least twelve months to
dispose of a orop.
ronFtfeiT
Fbelsbubg, pet. 12, 1889.
PEARS F8* SOra TEXAS.
Written 7or the Special Éúition, by request, by
Dr. D. G. Gregory.
either «s
(grafted-vor .
Tbe'^rm^p
canse it req
Twenty-five or thirty years ago the
old varieties tiSfJipirs were relied npon
tr^eS," oc. worked
^on tlyi' qnince.
objectionable be-
fxoin seven to ten
years for the treee to come into bear-
ing, or even longertpreknowti
one instance which oochrréd. in Con-
rado connty where a standard tf'ee
bore fruit the t^ent^tb year! feut
some of tlié old varietrés, aá standard
trees, wbert they fo bearing,
prodnCe^ireffflTous crops of fruit. Yet
seven to twenty years is too long to
wait. There are1 tut few Texans Who
are willing to wait half that long.
The remedy for-^hi? used to be (and
it is «till, to -some-extent,) to graft
on the quince, wbigh dwarfs the tree
an^ Jcítiísés ¡tí to bepr'Jruit tlie third or
fourth year. JJnJt,. ibe trees thns pro-
duced afehfo^ tná!í,l a¿d art; short-
lived. Some fruit-growers tell us
that frequently the pear stock takes
root when worked on the quince,
making what is called a half-standard
tree; but loan say they have not done
The Kiefftlr pear comes
north, and a cross of some of the
common pears with Chinese or Japan
varieties or stock. The tree will grow
from cuttings like the LeConte, but
is improved by working it on tbe Le
Conte roots. Tbe fruit is large and
fine, and ripens from the 15th of Oc-
tober to the 10th of November, and,
with careful handling, can be kept all
winter, sound and good. Pears in
winter!
I have both varieties on my grounds
and they have both fruited, so I know
what they are. I do not say they are
better 'than any other pears, for I
think tbe Howell the best pear I have
ever eaten; but they will compare
well with any pear, and so far the
trees have proved, with me, healthy.
In Georgia, where the Leconte orig-
inated, it was claimed until recently
that it was blight-proof; but within
the last year or two blight has nfade
its appearance there; but an expert
sent from the agricultural department
a,t Washington, D. C., after examin-
ing the trees, gave it as his opinion
yiat the disease would prove to be
tfempofary; and I had a letter from a
reliable gentleman saying to me that
trees showed the which disease very
plainly were recovering rapidly, send-
ing out during the last summer new
and healthy branches.
Before closing this article I would
. «•. . ".yitfW ..
m Mí
■ ' - -. . i fSmiOk'Jm
'
- *■_ .
—r-- -rrn , i
VIEW Otf A PORTION OF XAGLE LAKE.
call the attention of readers to some
new varieties of piunis, and here, as^
in the case of the^Bfrs, tht «li
eties have bectnne unreliable. The
wild goose, for instance, one of tte
very best of our improved Américan
varieties, sometimes stands eight or
ten years without bearing, aud some
of the trees never bear. Japan heie
comeito our relief and we have the
Botan, Ogon, Kelsey, and I do not
know how many other varieties. I
have had the Kelsey to ripen fruit
this year, and I must say that of all
Tbe Public Debt.
Theídebt statement for September
complies very favorably with the
returnsffor August and July. Com
pares, dlo we say? We had better put
it as contrasting. In the first two
months pf this fiscal year the debt
movement ran the wrong way. Au-
gust reported a very disappointing in-
crease of $6,076,692, and July a smal-
ler, but equally unreasonable increase
of $1,01",311. September, however,
does its iest to make amends by a
decrease of debt to the amount of
at £24,29$, 8 (J7 ,a n a y ei a&pf] digre as (
of $23,371,491 ^or^Ke^tiarfet-fiidi
^tlie democratic management of the
finances. It will be seen that the re-
duction of debt in the current fiscal
year rules llÓi^éUOb^feeloW'thá'i'v-
erage reached for the -corre^poridlifi^
period in the past four y'éliHs, .
One other point may/,be/brpuglit
out. in this connection. If. tfip debt
statement were made up in,the old
from employed before Air. íreasurer
Jordon confused the fignre^, the cprij-
parison wouid.run as under: The de-
crease of debt in September wonld
amount to ,$13,O71^?04, agaiiisjt^a dg-
ijinciii
I ft! Jf
if«iir.i
anonsq
ffl •IV i J
lit 'If!O
ti oi¡ A
VIEW OF
UAItE. EAGLE .LAKE,
l;'i )fv,.; W
íOi Jj:í
to
t
saw agjj
r.-o
!oct!p.-ifj hi
the fruits I e«er ate, taking the whole
list, including the sniall fruits, a ripe
Kelsey Japanese plum is the best by
far. The other varieties, some of
which I have growing, are represented
as being equal to the Kelsey. They
are all hardy so far, and grow off well
when transplanted, grow rapidly, etc.
They bear early and full, commencing
to bear the second year after trans-
planting. The Kelsey grows as large
as an average sized peach.
Now,in conclusion, I would ask my i
readers tó stop and think just a little,
and make some calculations as to the
enormous profits (?) arising from the
cultivation of cotton and compare
them with calculations on ffuit grow-!
ing. Much more might be said in be-
half of the fruit, but we take it that!
every one, with the facts before him,
can see how it is, even if he has to
bore a hole through a cotton bale.;
through which to see the figures.
$13,685,194. 1 he reduction i* well
up to the usual exhibit for the month.
Indeed it is soniewhat larger than the
average decrea:e of debt in Septem-
ber during the four years of democrat-
ic adminiatrat on. In September,
1888, there wfc a decrease of $12,-
247,246; in September, 1887, a ¡de-
crease of $14?,247,069; m September,
18S6, a decrease of $10,627,013; and
'in September 1885, a decrease of
$12,757,965.^The average decrease
for the fo^W Septembers stands at
5 $'12,469,993 aiid'' the decrease for:
last month exceeds this average by
$1,215,100. ; ,r j
But when yjon take the debt move-
crease of $11,521,567 ip Septe
1888, a decrease of $13,404,87y f
September, 18S7¿ a decrease of / $9
833,846 in Septerhber, 1ÍS86, ttnd<a dé-
or. a;e of $11,936,787 in Sépte¿aber,|
1885. The reductions of débt in tbe;
first quarter of the fiscal year, if reck-
oned in thé c'd form, wobld «mount
to $4,370.907 this yeav,¡'«gsinfst• ¡H:í,-
423,671 in 1888, $20,917,274'in 1887,
$l:8,548j536, in lS86¿'fcnd 085
in 1885.' • > 'lo la.niga.jll
The liOense' law of SWedért' forbids
any person buying driyk ñ'ítlíttiít piir-
chasingr*&rtiethihg tó eat aft^íé áüitíe
time. " ■■ '¡■iñ oí .-:;M i jrtooí)
'fitin.J
DRÍJMMERS' HOME—A NEW HOTEL, EAGLE LAKE, ;T£XAST-nu.;. s
C . D . B A R N E T T
'Vas born in Payette county, Ky., July 31,
1837; moved to Fayette county, Texas, iu
1849; was deputy sheriff of Fayette county
in I860. The war between the states com-
ing on, he enlisted in Terry's Texas lin-
gers, 8th Texas cavalry, in 1861, served
in that command throughout the war, doing
his diity faithfully and well, having been
slightly wounded three times. In 1865 he
returned from the war to Colorado county,
and August. 10, 1865, married Miss Pru-
dence Smalley. In 1873 the family moved
to Weimar, and enjoy the distinction of
being the first family to locate in that active
and flourishing little city, where they still
reside. Mr. Barnett is justice of the peace
express agent, & member of several benevo-
lent societies, the versatile and wide-awake
correspondent at Weimar of the Citizen,-
a faithful laborer in the Master's vineyard,
and it is a common expression to hear, the
other citizens say: " We can't get along
without Charley Barnett," from which the
truth is forcibly presented that he always
"acts well liis part, there all the honor
lies." Genial in disposition, with a heart-
overflowing with kindness for humanity, a
hand every ready to assist In distress, he
would adorn the honored citizenship of
any land.
—
A company of ten ladies and gen-
tlemen met accidently in a house in
West Chester, Pa., a week ago, and
their names were two Josephs, two
Annies, two Marys, two Nellies and
two Jameses.
yearly-of ihé fi
.^ÍT'SIqptember 30,
iparison bet ween the
Tie Harrison and Cleve
land administrations, the republican
exhibit siitjws to great disadvantage.
This yearithe decrease of debt for
the quarter amounts to no morp than
$6,591,090^ while last year it stood at
$23,709,001, in 1887 at $23,902,340,
in 1886 at b'21,586,816, and in 1885 at
■vf.take of p^pliywhe-fiii'MiA"
diaií'tea unpalatibtó'iá'fhait of u<ing
the samé quantity fe?!1 a- brew ás tbey;
would of Chinese, wheréas' bal? the1
quantity is sometimes more titan átiifi-
cient. '• ,v;r,i"-'i ;:r
-•—irlitotfjg. ia/UMljMi'.ii
S. Shillito, of Chatnbersburg, Pá-,.
has a two pound three' ounce toitiato
which nearly staggered the>'éViírt foot
stalk it grew on.
TAalfi «irnMUIO
Oolumtoujs, -
t .t"!! "iiMIOj'*Si. ..... " C
MO. W1TTIK«, ,-±r
DEALÜRS IN-
¡iafAltuíí k* ;
MS mn UK €0LtRAB0 COUNTY 01 Ml CSLlBUfIB AND MLf -CHIHII
agents !for the
ALL-STEEL, W
ni íuiiisaiA o. fer.i: .«jtel i-i
I' n ■ I
Si
CORN ÁHD COfTON FLAUTEES, .
Am Other Labor-Saving Machinery..
^Mighesf Ca*K paid Wool? Hides amJ
VoimrirPrÓfhtátf *1 l'i7? I ««UwÍPil^ ¡:*íVf *:¡ ^
■ i! ■/.. - ü" !i,i .. rn f lt -1-.7H .viTtni rr ■
MBaiMBOMJ
MAXUFACTDBERS AND BUILDERS OF
other,
official
andlqual
the
C'^4
« --I
man ageioent.
In the extent of our^st^fefií felífcj5«
country — — |
xv-v/Qlu buildings, -which have a -floor area of more than five ácí-és
w''ext^,' ^épe bttilt'«Bpetíiaíily |pQ;r'purpose to. which they are
déVbféil, áté: thói-óü^lj"^tocíke(l with im proved macJliiiiery and
-•violtií i'li
.«6<í|«HÍoO i
Jaíl íUirf Bnlidins Department
VI If All JíríTff4!
The Motlel Sjstem.
adiunct
Burglai'-^rÓóf' jails Háv^e bécome an almost indis
and in our larger •; tíiftés' they a'ssifmfe eb
architectural pFQpoftion%;whue: the precautions taken in their
cofteítru¡étioBj-;toge*¡hw*rátb:tlie spfe^uards that covei* every avenue
of appl'Oíiich aiid eseítóej'aré feomethinar wonderful.
of'approach attd eseáp^'áré Something wonderful.
,:<l TOeré"^^ ' and the bad
in this branch of work—a ^iglte^ OrdCT'ié réiijuiied no\v tlian for-
merly, 40A)ll|i8..fteadSi&y is to#^'^iS',l^ifeg.y finished and
l' eftcowagiHg «igtt -for the futuie
ant iiidustry;: attd which we have met by introducing such work,
jilaiined in' rekultfej eif ;lhe' best sáiiifáiv re-
.séjirfeli'ps.^'sól^éi^h'l 'tó have won the approval .of .--the .-National
construction and ,arrangement -f<!
in^ of ' pneonerSj aTid the pi'otectiom -of their guards.
j ' A poor kil is a baii; in^festtileht, fOi^/if it permits the escape of
laM'"Í8,nóíb'^écfire 'ná^tins!t (lfll 'díHMia^ átffeiÜ|)ts tri break
open, the money expend
ecutipn of offenders
in this direetio
or*-¿ifc.ce-* ó J ro*s
the actualvi^
a i •
Austin,
Pl |here'it
i)lace8 in
expensive,
retain its i
men
A^ail that will see
of time; that will
tools; that will prov
the personal safety-
is the want which is
Cells. Not only are
manner claimed, but the;
iuals, because they know
generally know in advance _
caught and caged, and ^Kose 1 ^
are their preferred fie|d|J$f operation. ;
As this niatteii:>;^|^K-^ ineomp'
ml
unt, as well as for the pros-
in thin air. E^speri-
-r-
s for indefinite lengths
'oof against all cutting
itive condition, and for
t with the above; this
reduction of our Steel
ts accomplished in the
tanding menace to crim-
business. These gentry
i prospect of escape is when
having cheap, flimsy jails
some reference to
by us in
teen other
ation. In-
any others,
né and exhibit
; . <&
-Mm
restigate the - naertte of our
and if y™i r
plans and models of our systeSí of jail construction.
We invite correspondence from parties desiring work of this de-
scription, and pledge ourselves to demonsti-ate ¿o the satisfaction
of all that, our'Factory being the largest, we have abundant room,
aid and light, and facilities for handling heavy work. We employ
moré 'iskilled Ayqrkinen, and use a higher grade of Material, which
embraces, the latest scientific discoveries, without regard to eost.
Upon, these grounds, therefort^, we base our clajms for superiority
over competitors, and only ask an opportunity to substantiate their
truthfulnesa, ;iind with all our MODERN IMPKOVEMfaNlTS we
address, L..
CAPT. w. G. BEARD'S JERSEY STOCK FARM, EAGLE LAKE, TEXAS;
can vouch' for thetii'iti tíhé future. Por Diagrams, Estimate,
i! "! IPI'^S^VíSiñi .HÍOJÚSlOlty-TéX-V-'
i: i«iu
Jíeatly; cheaply ánd expedltiovuáy:exééuted at this'office. A 'trial fe respectfully solicite d
from parties desiring anything in the printing line, jy Terms, cash.
i'iattí
art Kindts of Jo6 Worü
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The Colorado Citizen (Columbus, Tex.), Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 22, 1889, newspaper, October 22, 1889; Columbus, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth177648/m1/9/: accessed May 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.