The Southern Mercury, Texas Farmers' Alliance Advocate. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1890 Page: 3 of 8
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THE SOrtHKKN MKKCUKY: DALLA , TEX.An, THUKSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 1890
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FARM AND BARDEN.
Devoted to Everything of Interest to the Farm, Orchard and Garden.
Brief Article on Practical Topics, Notes and Observations
are Solicited.
BEETS AS FEED FOR COWS.
Correspondence Solioited.
We want to make this department
of The Mercury of practical benefit
to its readers, and to accomplish this
we solicit your a'd. Give us your ex-
perience with diff.-reat plans in every-
thing pertaining to the farm and gar-
den. If you have tried something
new. with success, it is your duty to
let others know it. If you have made
9?tne discovery of value in the culti-
vation of your farm or garden, give it
to others. Remember too, that what-
ever pertains to to the management of
stock, is included in the word "farm."
"The Is i as in y rule o'er land and sea,
The 1< r I ni.jr live right rojally:
The soldier rde 'n pomp and pride;
The sailor roam o'' r occai wide:
But this or that, whate'er befall.
The farmer be m tt feed thsm all."
Selecting The Best.
When once a species b? gins to vary,
is "broken," man's power over it is
marvelous. In a score ol ways it re-
spond) to his touch Ytít, strangely
enough, there are few explicit laws
known concerning plant breeding b)
simple selection. It is tolerab'y well
known that the character of offspring
is determined by the character of the
parent as a whole, rather than by that
of any individual part which we may
desire to improve. Small tubers o
potatoes from large or productive hills
give larger yields than large tubers
from small hills. An experimenter
labored in vain for man years in the
endeavor to improve the tomato by
selecting seed from best fruits, but
when he began to select seed from
fruits of best plants success came rap-
idly. So it appears that even so
simpleta matter as "selecting the best"
may result in poor practice.—Ameri-
can Gardner.
How to Fatten Hogs Without Corn
Cotton seed and turnipi when boiled
• will certainly fatten hogs without corn
for I have ttied it many years ago, but
I always had enough corn to feed on
month before killing. You can mA
a cheap tank to boil * the sied
and turnips in by the following process
Purchase a slab of iron iS inches wide,
J inch thick, 5 feet long, then purchase
a piece of lumber ij inch thick, 16
inches wide and 14 itet long and saw
the same into two pie es 5 feet lon^.
aad two pieces 16 inchts long anc
make a good, tight box, put togeiher
with large wrought nails two inches-
apart. Have holes drilled in the slab
ot iron two in.hes apart and naiL this
on the botto n of ihe box wi.h wrought
iron nails with largo heads counter
sunk in the slab of iron. Next build
you a good furnace of rock or brick
like you would to boil molasses, and
place the box on it iron side down
and then you are ready for the cotton
seed, turnips, water, fire and wood
R J. Battle in Decatur Post.
Why do animals need salt? Be
cause animal fat is an epitome of min-
eral and vegetable matters and salt is
a medium between them—a compound
of these compounds in certain definite
proportions—and grass and grains do
not supply a sufficient proportion to
complete the animal compound and
are not, therefore, complete nutritients.
Horses fed on excess of grain, in dis
proportion to most fibrous plants, will
eat the grouad with avidity when they
can get at it, and it supplies in a
mea .ure a corrector of vegetable acid
ity. Salt, being a chloride of sodium,
furnishes bo h chlorine and soda, the
latter being a neutralizer of excessive
acid.ty, especially derived from grass
es. Pampered horses should be pro-
vided with the following ball, always
within easy reach: First make a strong
brine of rock salt with a tenth of salt-
petre in it; then get a spit of pure
clay and a hall gallon of fresh wood
ashea, and of these make a mixture,
with sufficient, water, and roll into a
ball and dry. Keep this in a till of
the manger, clean and always in reach
of the pet animal, just as the grass
and ground in hia native wild. As I
have aaid, the hone ia an epitome of
all that he will eat in health, and this
la why they nouriah and build up each
function.—J. F. Lar kin, in Horse
World
NOTES.
Air the house thoroughly every
morning. Open opposite doors and
windows for five or ten minutes, even
if it is stormy.
Good temper, like a sunny day,
sheds a brightness over everything. It
is the sweetener of toil and the soother
of disquietude.
Make all good men your well wish-
ers; and then, in the years' steady
sifting, some of them grow into friends.
Friends are the sunshine of Ufe.
Generally it is not a good plan to
set out a young tree wheie an old tree
has grown and died. Put the new
tree in an entirely new place.
If you are a tall woman, have your
work-table and ironing-board a few
inches higher than they are usually
made. This little precaution will pre-
vent many a backache.
In successful gardening one of the
most important operations is fn quent
stirring ol the surface. After every
rain, just as soon as the ground is dry
enough, the hoe, or the steel garden
rake, should be brought into use.
One rule of selling at least may be
considered safe, and that is to sell
whenever prices are sufficiently high
to afford a fair profit, regardless of.any
rise in prices that may come later, and
this applies to stock as well as other
farm products.—Ex.
Teach the boy to do his farm work
so that it will be admired, and you
give him something to think about that
adds rest to his work. Teach him to
be as neat and tasteful in his work as
in dress, and you develop valuable
qualities, such as may hold him to the
farm.
Tnere is a great difference in the
value of the labor of farmers. Thut of
one may be worth twice as much as
ihat of another. One is a good farmer
and the other is a poor one, side by
sidt; one plays while the other works,
and one works harder and wiser than
he other.
Very few farmers are able to tell
what it costs them to raise to maturity
a hcrse or a cow, and when they sell
an animal they do not know whether
they have gained or lost in the deal.
If they did, 'scrub'' stock would soon
dúappear and animals of real use and
value would take their places,
The best dust baths at this season
is to spade up a space a yard square
and a foot deep, sifting the dirt so that
all gravel may be removed. The sun
will dry it, and the hens will use it for
ridding themselves of lice. Such a
dust bath should be spaded after each
rain, however, the labor of so djing
being but a few mfautes.
Tumble-down bui'dings and fences;
weedy and pinched up door-ways; hogs
and geese at large; a ret king barn-
yard with piles of manure wasting in
t e weather; lean cows and horses
hunting for scant pasture, or trying to
jump out into a neighbor's field; wo-
men bringing water from a distan*
spring or well; the ' boss" and his boys
all using tobacco —all these are
signs of "peor" farming
A farmer should make it a point
never to come to town without bring-
ing something from the farm that can
be converted into money. Chickens,
eggs, vegetables, fruit and numbers of
things which can be railed on the
farm for a very small outlay of trouble
and practically no expense will c me
in mighty handy when converted into
money. Bees, for instance, are easily
kept, and honey is always in demand
in towns and cities, yet there are many
farmers who never had a hive on their
placo. A farmer, like a merchant,
must make every corner cut, and
everything count, and if you do this,
and keep a strict account of the re-
ceipts ftom these small resources you
will be greatly astonished at the result.
—Southern farmer.
There are many chill tonics offered the
public whose efficiency depend altogether
on inch powerful and Injurious droga a*
quinine, arsenic, strychinlne, ate. Tou
cannot affjrd to take tuch stuff. Take the
great vegetable remedy, Cbeatham'a Taste-
laaa Chill Tonic. It will cura you rapidly,
thoroughly and permanently. Pleaaant to
take. Guaranteed to cure. 76c.
Interesting and Conclusive Experimenta
Made at the Ohio Station.
A bulletin issued by the Ohio experi-
ment Btation gives the results of an
experiment in feeding sugar beets to
milch cows, made last winter, together
with a summary of two similar experi-
ments, one made by the station in 1889
and one by the farm department of the
Ohio State University in 1870.
In the last named experiment eight
cows were kept under test for eleven
weeks; in 1889 twelve cows for eight
weeks, and in 1890 twelve cows for nine
weeks, the cows in each case being
weighed daily, as well as their feed and
milk. In each of the three experiments
the cows ate more hay and more total
dry matter when feeding on beets than
on other foods (hay, meal and bran in
1879, corn silage in 1889 and 1690), and in
each case more milk was given from the
beets than from the other foods, but it is
not yet demonstrated that the increase
of milk was produced economically.
For twelve years records have been
kept on the farm now occupied by the
station which show that the average
yield of beets over this period has been
nearly sixteen tons per acre, against an
annual yield of about fifty-five bushels
of shelled corn per acre. But a crop of
fifty-five bushels of shelled corn, with
its fodder, will contain nearly twice as
much dry matter as sixteen tons of beets,
and these experiments indicate that,
whether fed dry, as corn meal and dry
fodder, or as corn ensilage, the dry mat-
ter of the corn crop will bo found about
as effective, pound for pound, as the dry
matter of the beet crop.
It is possible to raise much more than
sixteen tons of beets to the acre. One
crop of two acres is reported at 874 tons
per acre, and smaller ureas have given
still larger yields, but such crops require
very rich land and thorough culture.
Whether it is possible to produce a
pound of dry matter in beets as eco-
nomically as it can be done in corn is not
yet definitely settled, but the probabili-
ties are against it.
Dr. T. S Lambeth, of New York,
aaya he has treated a hundred catea of
sun atroke and not one has proved fa-
tal except where alcoholic liquor has
been used.
A Guild Eurly Penr.
A fruit which has attracted attention
as a promising pear of the early sort
is the Wilder, which is generally con-
ceded to be of better quality than most
of the early pears, and not subject to rot
at the core. Professor Van Deman.
United States pomologist, says of it:
"Among the midsummer pears there is
none that pleases me better than this
one, except that its size is rather small.
But, like the Seckel. what it, lacks in size
it makes up in quality, though it is larg-
or than that variety. It is a choice
seedling found in Chautauqua county,
X. Y. The original tree was partially
grafted with scions of Buffum in 1870
when it was young, and would never
have.borne any fruit, except of this old
variety, had not three of tho natural
branches been loft. These bear profuse-
ly, and the fruit, when fully colored, is
quite attractive. It does not rot at the
core."
Briefly described, the Wilder is in size
small to medium; it is bell shaped,
irregular, a little angular; surface
THIS WILDER PEAK.
smooth, pale yellow ground with deep
shading of brownish carmine; dots very
numerous and small; basin shallow, reg-
ular; eye nearly closed, sepals long and
reflex; apex rather abrupt, with a slight
cavity; stem short; core closed, very
small; seeds very small, narrow, point-
ed, dark; flesh very pale, whitish yel-
low, fine grained, tender; flavor sub-
acid, sprightly, much like Bartlett;
quality very good.
What Apiarists Tell One Another.
San Diego county, Cal., expects a yield
of nearly 1 ,.r>00,000 pounds of honey this
season.
The editor of The American Bee Jour-
nal says oil the subject of feeding
swarms in a honey blow to forward
storing: When honey can be obtained
from the flower-i it is useless to try to
"feed" tho bees in any other way. They
prefer the fresh nectar from the flora,
and will gather and store it in the
combs, and entirely ignore ull the "food"
you place beforo them.
A bee keeper tells Colorado Farmer
that "it appears now that the Lang-
stroth-Simplieity hive and frames, with
the one-piece-one-pound sections, is
meeting the general idea of a 'standard.'
All the other improvements can be at-
tached."
An Iowa apiarist tells in gleanings in
Bee Culture how to water bees. He
says: "1 tuke a tub, tie a piece of burlap
over it, put in a piece of brick or stone
that will keep it down in tho center, and
then fill in with water until it comes up
about one third of the way on the bur-
lap, which leaves a large surface for the
bees to alight on. It is only occasional-
ly that a bee gets drowned. One ad-
vantage of the tub is it does not need
looking after except occasionally. Try
it and be convinced."
Professor Cook says on spacing: "I
have my frames about H inches from
center to center, and do not have them
fixed so as to be just so far apart. I
have used those that were spaced, and
did not like them. I can space with my
eye to suit .me best. A slight variation
ia not ^bjectionable."
Bogota, Red River Co., Tex,, )
May 29th, 1890, J
Southern Germicide Manufacturing
Co—I have been selling Southern
Germicide with great auccess to the
people who bought1' it. I sold two
gallons to a man who had been Buf-
fering with dyspepsia (or 15 years; he
says Southern Germicide has entirely
quredhim. I have had pneumonia
three timo within the last three years,
and I have been able to do but little
work; I have pains in my breast all
the time, and had a very bad cough.
The firat gallon of Germicide cured
me, and I went to work. I use Germ-
icide for everything, and it has never
failed to cure me yet. I send $6.00,
for which atnd condensed Southern
Germicide. J. K. P. Roach.
She Buffered for Twenty Teare.
My wile hat suffered for fifteen year from
congestion and palntul menstruation. A'-
ter uilrg three bottles ot Bradfield'a Fe-
male Regulator the la now able to do her
homework and go where the pleases. J,
W. Davis, Moravian Fall , N. C. Write
Brtdtteld Keg. Co , Allanta. O ., kr par
tlcular . Sold by all drugg'sts.
RUNS EASY.
CINS FAST.
Clean* SM
PERFECTLY
Makes FINE
SAMPLE.
NEVER CHOKE* er
BREAKS THE ROLL
THE CELEBRATED
COTTON f* |N
BLOOM IaIW
H«S All LATEST IMPROVEMENTS
including BaUllra Whirl on Rr«k which Id.
■urea «ven apead. This feature la peculiar to
thla make of Gin and la uaed on no other. Ar%
ri'LLY «rARANTKKUand Arr Iklluml
I'BKK OF FRKIUHT at any R. R. Btation or
-be landing of any Regular Steamboat Line in
the South. If wa have no Agent near you.
addreea the Oeneral Southern Agent,
H.Vy.HUBBARD VaVVAV i ex.'
'OSGOOD'
U. S. Standard
SCALES
Low Raee to Summer Beaorta of The
Baat, Noitb and Weat.
From June 1st until September 30th
1B00, low rate* are In effect via the Mlssou
si, Kansas and Tezai Railway, to he prln
olpal (ummer resorts of the North, Eati
*n<i 4 eat.
Bite , tickets, reserva Ion In through
sleeping cara and any further lulormatioi
«an be obtained of your local ticket agent,
or by addressing H. P. Hughes, Aailaien
Oeneral Passenger Agent, Fort Worth
Texas; W. D Lawson, Traveling Fuesen
<er Agent, Fort Worth, Texas, or Gastoi
Melsltr, General Passenger oró Ticlte
Agent, Serial!*. Mn
It Is said the (ioatherd threw und strucl-
tlie Goal on tho horn an t broke It. lir
coming alarmed, he besought the Gont not
to tell his muster. ' Gh! most foolish Goat-
herd," replied the Goal, 'ray broken I1011.
wi 1 tell the story, though I should not ut
ter a wotd." Facts speak louder thai
words, which accounts tor the un rece-
dented popularity of Knulimi Fkmai.k
Bittkrs for the quick and permanent cur
of all troublesome female om iluln ■ at <1
Irregularities It rflievos monthly weuk
ness or excesses, cures leuchorrhun, pain
In the back and falling ot the worn j end
Icates swimming at d giddiness of tl.r. head
acts like a eharm with ijlrls jus'mr'g'ng
Into womanhood and Intures anafe journev
through '-the turn of life."
MNGHANTON.
Warranted. 3TonS3S
Freight Paid. Full
THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER
ralcigii, N C .
L. L. POLK, EDITOR,
Official Orgon of the North Caro-
lino Farmers' State Alliance.
8-PAGE, 48-COLUMN WEEELY—ALL HOME
PRINT.
Oíilv 8X.OO per Yo«r.
Wholly tinil «ntlrnly devoten <0 ttio promO'l'1,
of tun Alliance <ni(i to tho Hdviiui o uont 01 tb
aprlculiuml Intern.!* ol the eo'ii t y.
eerBeml for specimen ropv. Aililrn s
THE I'KOGKBSmVB FAIIMF.lt.
Ha l-ikIi, N 1
Home seekers will find the lairi
ol the publicd main f agricul-
tural > ml jrrii/.lng value ulonir
the Great N"rthoi n Hy In N<.rtli
Dakota ano Montana.
FKEE
LANDS
NEW
TOWNS
100 or more, ulonir the O en
N jrlhern Hnllwnv Une. Ilutd
ncssehnni'fs. W. ltoF. I Wnii
nky, St. Paul, M nn , f ir Books
Ma^B.Arc. Write now.
LOW
RATES
bottlers on free Government
lands along the OreM Northern
Ity. Mil' In North DaUo'ft and
Montana tret lo v rate ai d flne
market for producís.
HUNTING,
FISHING.
Finest resorts In Aneriun
alonir Great N irthern Ky. Line
in Mlnnegota. Dakotasand Mn-
tana, 'lest climate for healtl
seekers.
Montana proiiuci a thi fln-st
horres and Cattie. Free < an -re*
vet in Mouse, Milk and Sun
River Valleys and Sweet Grass
HI'Is
IIOHSKS,
CATTLK.
HEALTH,
WEALTH,
In Mot tana. Free Lands, N«w
Towns, New Hallways, Nov
Mines, Low Kates. Largest are ,
off (food vacant land.
Hweot Oras Hills, Milk and
Hun Hlver Val'eys, Mon'ana.
• etched only hy tho Or< at
Northern Ualwity Line. Tho
Stock Hal nor*' [aradlas.
SIIKKP,
HOGS.
GOLD,
COAL.
The roirl ns tributary toUr< a
Northern Railway Line in Mod
tana produce all the prcclout
aid btger mótala. Now town*
and laliways aro b lnir built.
tío to the Great Bosorvaiton
of Montana and iret a good free
homestead. Low rate* an I
Fre" sleepers on OreM North-
ern R'y Line. Go now.
MILK
RÍ7KK.
HERDS,
MINES.
Those have made Mo.itana t b>
richest Stale per cap,t* In trx
Union. Plenty or room fo'
more miner* snd stock ra serf
Now is tho time.
Along tho Great Northern
Ha lway Line In Montana aro
fruo ranchea and piaturage,
mines of precious met is, iron
and coal, an I new cities nnd
towns. Now Is your chance
YOUNG
MANI
GREAT
FALLS.
Surrounded by a Bao ngricul
t u ral and grazing country, oloat
to m<neg of precious metal',
Iron snd onal, possessing a wa
ter power une<iualed In Amer
Ion, It Is Montana'g industria
centre.
The Vail ys of lied, Mouse,
Missouri, Milk and Sun Bivors (J W
reaoled by Great Northern By.
Lino. Half rate excursion
Sept. 9. 23, and O -t. M, IWO. v T
Writs F.1. Wiiitwar. St. Paul, A L
Minn-
tit
It U-lped h<
bar. 1
Two rears ago my
3d
little fin
and g«emed to hav*
strained her hip, aiid ha* been
limping ever since. 1 used two
tot tie* or Atk'n*' Batt'e Snake
Oil on it and alio Is wnll to-day.
icr from the word go until It cured
& S Bu. , Hsllas, Juno 1."
tit
Atklna' Battle Snake Oil
My middle nngerwa*doubled u)
with HnmuMATiBM for years. Toda;
It i* straight. From the use of it
wii.i. r> soooin
'None genuine without the snakt
The Panhandle
MtchiDerj and ImproTtmwtyfc
•tilth#
Famous U. S. Sotid Wltttl
Wind Mill ever aold la Texas.
stroke, durable. No mill ever before
fered haa given such satisfaction,
for catalogues.
The above Company are State Agenta M><
the celebrated Balladaj Wind MiUs, Salsaa
Pompa, Farquhar Engines, Eureka Wind
Milla, ato. Have always on hand a lull Ua -
ol Machinery Supplies, Brass Goods, Ball
lng, Pipe, Well Caalng, Well Drills, ato.
Contract to fUrnlsli entire mill, gin m
water-tank outflta. Get their prlooa. If
yon need anything In machinery line, ysf
can save money by ao doing.
Uto agenta wanted In sysry c%
county In tho stato.
Address tho
fillMIDU UCIIIEBYI linOVNEIT GO,
FM Worth, In
EL H- HAMILTON,
Wall Paper. Window Glass, Paints, [ Oil ,.
Artists' Materials, Picture Frameo, BCto,
747 "Ellxrs afreet Dftllaa. Taxaa.
The BE ST on Earth U
for the Money.
SCUPPER TRICYCLE
la constructed entirely of Steel, wrought
and malleable Iron. NO WOOD. HO
CA8T IRON. Turns 11 perfectly square corncr
without raisins out uf til* «round. Huh more moderu
Improvements lliun imy mow madi>. It Is not a clump
Plow, lint tin-best on eurtli for tlit money. Hlilppvd
anywhere to responsible ineu to operate against alt
oilier*. IÍ your dealer don't handle It,and won't order
one lor you, write us direct. The world ran't beat It
in Texas black IIob Wallow nor In sandy land. Illu .
trated Catalogue with textliuonluls free. Address
the Nanufueturers.
PARLIN & 0REND0RFF C0.,Dallas,Tex~
IWNone yenulne without the
le 11, W.
snake.
Holstieu-Fresian SM Farm,
FERRIS, ELLIS OO.. TEX.
• reedcrs ol Thoi'outthbied and OrndoA
1 lolBticn-Frosian Cattle.-
AI.110
Houdan and fly mouth Rock ChicJten .
Eggs, $1.00 for 13.
Cattle for sale on tills lurui are full; aoolV
ollmHted. 'I hese are the entilo for Texae^-
itardy and gi ol rtiBtlors. Fur furihor Informa*Ion, Adduce N. J. DOTY, Manager,
tW We refer to tlu> o^l"" of Tho Moroury. Korrls, Tel.
II; IV. BTJR.Ü.IT M'F O. OO.
irAiitoAM Citjr.ECanab
Vanufaet'irei't or
The Monarch Scale,
!'(r" Unlimited Oitpiiolty Without Weiifhlsl-wr "
EUREKA! EUREKA!! EUREKA!!!
Ti e mil. i-Oftlo uiHile tilftt I11S no rials, soab
orwilxhts muí Ih truly ere of the griuidost
Invent Inns ovi rttelievei! In the sene family.
Iff Nr\ o fur Cn iiokub and 1 rices. Fo*
uo r and 1 se none '0 1 i|iinl thorn.
I1KN. V. WOLI'K \ ( 0„
Gon'i Mantigers,
.0:1 mil '> Main Street, Dalit s, Texa*.
The Unsolicited Endorsements!
It £CKI VJ3I> II V
¡S04JTH WEST TEXAS
O Til 13 L.IJXIS OF TIIJ3
Stamps this Section as ihe Finest Agricultural Country in the World.
Fruits, Grapes and Vegetables of all kinds ripen and are ready for markefe
weeks in advance of any other section. Lands cheap. Climate healthy.
tST*For Information, in'.dress or call on
H. W. ANDHKW8,
A. O. P. A,, Sai Antonio, Tesav.
TEXAS AND PACIFIC RAILWAY,
THE GREAT POPULAR ROUTE BETWEEN
THE EAST AND WEST,
AND THE SHORT LINE TO
New Orleans, and all points in Colorado, Louisiana, Texas and New Mexico;
Old Mexico, Arizona, California and Oregon, via El Paso.
Pullman Palacc Sleeping Cars daily lietwoen Ht. Louis, Dallas, Fort Worth, Bi Paso
and New Orleans,, without ohanye.
Double Line of Sleeping Oars,dally, through to St. Louis, via Texarkana and the
Iron Mountain Houte.
Onlv Line oflerlnK Choleo of Koutos to I'o nts In the Southeast via either Texark-
ana, Shrovot ort or New Orleans.
For maps, tlme-tnUes, ticket rains, and any desired Information, oall on any of tbs tierno
i rf nts, or a dri ss ^ FEO AN, Traveling Passenger Agent, Dallas, Texas.
II. W. MoCl 'LLODOH, Oeneral Paasergor and Tlekot Ag't, Dallas, Tema.
JOHN A. O KANT. :ird Viee-Prosldont, Dallas. Texas.
fti
The International Route
X efts 0.1ST,
f
TO—
Houaton, Galveston, Austin, San Antonio, Laredo, and all points South a #
Southwest Tevas.
■BOHT XjXSrai TO TBB
REPUBLIC OF MEXICO, via San Antonio and Laredo.
gCHEOULE 1W EFFECT MA.It. a. lSfrp
liT
f.n pss
11:26 pss
vL
1:t0 1
KM 1
South Dally I
8. no a in
4:80 a m
4:20 a ss
7:46 a m
4:00 p m
7:60 p ss
1:10 p m
*17 p m
4¡lo p m
1(00 p m
10:00 p m
7:26 p
8:2 p
8:06 p t
10:10 p 1
«C16 a I
fclO a 1
ft 22 a 1
4:10 a 1
a 1
7:20 a 1
10:66 a I
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Dixon, Sam H. The Southern Mercury, Texas Farmers' Alliance Advocate. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1890, newspaper, September 18, 1890; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth186156/m1/3/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .