The Alvin Sun. (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, February 9, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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Doctors Said
,1
ALVIN.
TEXAS
Health Gone
WAY TO SUCCEED
Suffered with Throat 1 rouble
LS
• Copyrirht. 19M). by th* New Tork Herald Company.)
<Copyri<ht. 1S10. by the Mar Lilian Company
'T
r
«
v
SYNOPSIS.
71
<
Mr. B. W. D. Barnss.
V
un
CHAPTER XV—Continued.
A DRAW.
7/
"I I.Ike You, Mr. Harnish, and That Is Ail."
■ ".'d
them.
you
knuckles and a
Clad
CHAPTER XVI.
one
P
rested ate assimilated, but I find that
led
And it’s notblng to all the things I m
on
miles sway
£
k\
is the pleasure
from the sound
to bear church
largely In rhe i
C’llcage stenographers are verktog
to establish a tulrlmum wag* scale
of $12 a week
anion which now
When the onion ha
bars, all the stemgi apbers of the city
Will hare been er r J
"Thermometer e.
ent thing tn worn?
the husband bar t<
▼ide himself w th
glasses to enable
from a safe distance, bls wife’s tern-
peratare.
persistently, without tn ?ch
except whst be finds to 'he
aid have formed ■
ias 300 members,
i 9.7C0 more mem
rides become a<-
peoule ma:’ In
true artFtocra
aeroplane excin
creased.
the higher was his appraisal
him—thtolt-
whether or
she would
Peace is the strongest force there
is. but only a tew have made the die
i !
The ma ) with ability, who to willing
to work
recreation
tabor Itself. is bound to make money.
He may
termed ”
looked
Woman.
for a
some
Meat
- Sheriff
Warren
's,
J. 1
'I
r
E
A correspondent
criticizes the pre
the ringing of
nothing Is donle
of factories and i
and down the river,
are more people kept awake
single night byjtl
foghorn than tin
church bells n
the discomfort
Jhj
“ *
Ok Grouch—So you had a fight with
Clarence. He claims he licked you.
Chilly—Oh! the boastab! it’s twis-
w
more effort
then using v hatever time may be let
©▼er for recr nation, can a man hope to
become a 119,000 man, except to
usual cases
It Is reporfy
me nt has
battleships
gB'-,
8^’
z-frt
5S!
■n v1
irrlngs" are the lat-
i’s adornmen. All
• do nowjs to pro-
ft pair of opera
him to ascertain.
If New York cub t
cheap that common
duljje In them y»n
will have to use y>
•Ivcly.
,1
l\
isve reverses, or what is
streak of hard luck.” Bat
If he heel a *t it he Is bound to go
ahead. T!|e captains of industry who
have conUred large fortunes sre fra-
fluently critidi
tallness to ne
Most of Lfem
their you a re .* daya
able to ge
o'lw
pected Of coiurs.. „
the shins are Hold, zr?.'
by South American coun ries. which.
ir themselves, ere not en-
race for glan ships.
Ill
fl?
in New York. The
treatment consists in
he malignair. growth
so reduced in flesh that 1 w as little bet-
ter thar. a living skeleton. The doc-
tors failed to give me relief and 1 de-
spaired of recovery.
"One day our groceryman left a
package of Grape-Nuts food by mi a
take, so I tried some for dinner. | was
surprised to find that it Hhtisfied
appetite and gave me no distress what-
i ever. Tie next meal I ate of it again,
and to be brief, I have lived for th©
past year almost exclusively on Grape-
It. has proved to be &
j healthful and appetizing food,
^7
r
fi1
| been traveling with a lively crowd—"
| ”1 don't mean that,” she said,
i "though 1 know about It, too. and
can’t say that I like it But It Is your
life In general, your br«’nees
t
fe
1
Ised. but the charge of
never laid at their di»r.
i worked incessantly In
That they were
along without much ivc-
reation wajs, of course, a matter of
and temperament. sn-s
To many tn» n
vork and too little ph;y
dullness or nervous pro
‘ i man who loves his work
and knows lit thoroughly is bound 'O
push ahead. He doesn’t have to
eringe or ,awn Life is largely a
imlnation. A man cannot
Ung he wants. If be to
ed to a life of imusfinen;
era. dances and parties
o work, be need not con
s a greater success to tlw
an he is to the businesa
r satisfying to the full th<
demands >f work, giving even a littk
than is denanded. sr<;
shooting of sparl
All week every on* to the office
knew that something new and big was
On Sunday
ebutetts —
Mianeapoll s
soon to be
The contract
machinery of
•14.651.000.
fortunate for
Cored in the
very pertinently
»roj>osltlon to suppress eomrsdeliness
church bells while
to stop the whistles
of boats »teaming tp
Probably them
in a
the dismal tx>t of the
J a week by all the
the city. Ov^r against
to some people occa-
sioned by the ringing of church bells
b which others derive
The peop e who like
i bells doubtless are
majority.
wr ■
! wmiplaint and believe
’ obtain good results.”
He paused triumphantly
The ferry system between Oakland
and San FYanclsco Is the worst one-
horse concern to the United States
You cross on It every day. six days
to the week That's say twenty-five-
days a mootn. or tbree hundred a
year How long does it tuke you one
way? Forty minutes. If you re lucky
J I’m going to put you acre as in twen
i ty minutes ;lf that ain't OMtoing j co very.
i
a thing I made Opnir. and she was a
hummer.”
’’And you won something there that
was more than mere money” Dede
encouraged “Now io you know what
I would do If I bad lots of money
and simply had to ?o on playing at
business? Take all be southerly and
westerly slope of these bare bills. I d
buy them to and plant eucalyptus on
I’d do It for t ie joy of doing It
anyway; but suppose I had that gam
bling twist in me which you talk
about, why. I’d do It just the same
and make mon- y out of the trees. And
there's my other point again. Instead
of raising the price of coal without
adding an ounce of ccal to the market
supply. I'd be making thousands and
thousands of cords of firewood—mak
tog something where notblng was be-
fore. And evrrybidy who ever
crosfed on the f' rrlei would look up
at these forested hlEs and be mace
Who was made glad by youi
adding four dollars a ton to Rock
Wells?
li was Daylight's tirn to be silent
a time while she waited an an
A Possibility.
"He’s gone to that meeting, full of
through . fire " ’
"Then be had better be careful cr
they >«t.i put tom out.”
After a Fashion.
, Chn.’ch Member—Does your father
Here no trees obstruct- always practice what he preaches?
Minister’*) Son—Yevsum. before a
minor—Come 1 Widow.
THE CARELESS GROCER
El unde red, and Great Good Came of it.
two of Lacupia and two of Manalin, I
am free of my trouble to that I can do
ail my farm work again. I am heart-
ily recommend this medicine to any
one who suffers with thia annoying
• that -bey wi9
nwmvLiGHT
Z5v^JA€K IPNDON
crossed before they began the climb.
The slope was steep and covered with
matted brush and bushes,
which the horses slipped and lunged
Showers of twigs and leaves fell upon
them, and predicament followed pre-
dicament. until tb^y emerged on the
hilltop the 'vorae for wear but happy I
and excited Here no trees obstruct- ■
ed the view. The particular hill on .
which they were out-jutted from the !
regular lire of the range, so that me :
sweep o* their vision extended over
three-quarters of the circle Below, on
the flat land bordering the bay. lay
Oakland, and across tbe bay was S»n
Francisco. Between the two cities
they could see tbe white ferryboats
on the water Around to their right
was Berkeley, and to their left the
scattered villages between Oakland
and San Leandro Directly In the fore-
ground was Piedmont, with Its desul-
tory dwellings and patches of farming
land, and from Piedmont tbe land
rolled down to successive waves upon
Oakland.
f©i
swer.
Would you rather I did things like
that?" he asked at last
"It would be better for the world,
and better for you." she answered
non-committally.
most
I f«'”- •■“*«* “> ‘he
^wU the i head with a competent management ?! ®“‘; , , . ,
i own a I Suppose 1 rot -,<■ xtme to Sap Fran- Orapo Nat. I. not only easily dl.
I cisco one balt by building a big pwr r<!s,c,J 1 »nd that
!o« lhere .Itnost to Goat Island and ,",ce ' »“«>««■> "«*»« « ‘ ™ ablo
I - . , • •» oil ontyhiniz oloo rnv aA* — .
; a ferry system with moo
Why folks will
want the market io jump up out o» , want to live over on this side Very
eight You see that hill over there 1 good They’ll need land on which to
It s my hill running dear down t»s | build So. first I buy up the lard,
slopes through Piedmont and halfway | But tbe land’s cheap now Why? Be-
along those rolling bills into Oakland . cause it’s to tbe country, no electric
roads no quick communication, no-
body guess;ng that the electric roads
are coming. I’ll build the roads Tn at
will make tbe land jump up Then
I'll sell the land aa fast as tbe folks
wfjl want tn buy because of the im-
proved terry system and transporta
tton facilities
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
The department) of agriculture some-
times has to sol'Je its probler^ to a
devious way. Here It Is proposing to
rule out "floated <j-ysters—that is. oys-
ters fattened in brackish water—not
simply because they are unwholesome.
t«t also because they are adulterated
ty containing <xt|a water and so de-
ceive tbe custome . But If the floated
oysters can be at lacked best t v call
ing them adulter eked, the method of
attack is justiflnhip.
ka as "Fuming ,
»ih blrtlday wir*
(he Circle City
co heavy rarrb'lng.
Is staked Harnish
his —
stai
aledi
tn t.
Bur-
rar
am
to
ro'd fields,
found in the
buys two tons
will be wort?
when he arrlvss
the bls *
era sold ant
vest. He f~
tnost prom ft
and defeats
tn a vast i
civilization
eo<ripl!cat1:na
Side that he
eleven ml "
Be goes 1
...KU. BUM ..U.K.UW-. .u. . l.iau O<11 ■ 1' ■ 11 g. ID V V 1-.UW, BUppVPC ’ I V *
made believe 1 was look ng at? Well. I buy in all the street railways ot Oak- I ,
I’m going to buy It I’m going to buy | land. Berkeley. Alameda. San Leandro. 1
tbeee bills, too clear from t
sround to Berkeley and down
other way to San Leandro I
lot of them already for that matter.
But mum is tbe word i’ll be buying
a long time to come before aj
repoirited that tbe navy dec ar*
is f.n bffer of •8.000.000 for ths
Ips lAwa. Indiana and Massa-
i and the prote ted cruh-e-s j jk°{£r"{J1
Nita 4nd “
be retired on account of uge
price for tne hulls and
f these five ships wa»
after all that hrs been
•aid about tie rapid dec Ina in the
value of war blpa the price men
tionod lookt » gger than Tight be ex
irse, it to likely that If
Id. they will be bought
“ Dr. de Kea-icg Hart of France has
been demonstr itlng the figuration
I treatment for aacer at the Skin and
J Cancer Hospital
first part of the
the removal of
of tumor; the a icobd consists in the
of static e ectrlcity j
Into the cavity I made by the knife,
after which the Ikeai'hy cells, it Is as
serted. are forever Incapable of har-
boring cancercus germs. Tbe current
tas no effect whatever on ciseased
cells, and to make the treatment ef
dectlve the meat minute par:u of the
tumor must be removed.
cies. without trouble from indlges
tion. Th«» stomach trouble aad nef-
vousness I ave left me. I have regain
ed my plumpness and my views ot
life are no longer despondent and
gloomy.
“Other members of my family, espe
c ally my husband, (whose oil enemy
the ‘heart-1 uni.’ has b < n vaEqi iehed)
have also derived great benefit from
the use cf Grape-Nuts food and w©
think no irorning meal complete with-
out it.” Name given by Postum Co
Battle Creek. Mich.
“There's a reason," and h |g
plained to rhe little book, "The Road
to Wellville,” to pkgs.
Ever retd the abeve letter?
aae apeea:-» from time to (,*
are *ea«i»t^ tree, aad fall
tBtereat.
Elam Rarntah, Known a!) through Alas-
a aa "Eurolru; Daylignt.'* celebrstrs his
"*■ birthday with a crowd of miners at
Circle City Tivoli. The dance l*-ads ,
.tak^ - HarnUh tophi'. ttr'' ’o”1™ >" "><- ’Ond who could
v mine but wins the riail contract. He
arts on hli ma*! trip with d >gs and
i-dge. telling Ma frten<s that h» will be
the bije Yukon gold strike at t w* atart.
urnlng Day Ight makes a sensationally
ipid run a-rai country with tw mail.
>pears at (> e Tlv.vli ano Is no r ready
■ Join hln f. lends In a dash to the new
>!d Helds. Tac’dlnf that sold wil. be
and In the up-river district Hamish
nr flour, which he declares
Its weight In gnld. but
with his flour »e finds
flat desolat*. A comrade discov-
■ and »>ayHrht reaps a rich har-
.e goes to Dawson, becoinea the
•'••nfnen* firure tn the K londike
• c-untlnatlon of cajitallsts
—t miu’r f deal. He ret jma to
L.llzatlon. and. amid tbe bewildering
“npltcatlc-na of hh,-h finance. Day light
has been led to in -ert his
eleven millions in a manipulated icneme
He goes to New York, xnd con!routing
his disloyal partners with a revolver, he
threatens to will them if its mono - is not
returned They are cowed, return thejr
steat.ngs and ilarnlsh gees back to San
Franctaco where he meets his fate tn
Dede Mason, a pretty st ?nograph *r. He
makes large Investments and gets into the
political ring For a rest he goes to the
country. Daylight gets ceeper in-o high
finance In Ran Franctaco but often the
longing for the simple life nearh over-
comes him. Dede Mason buys a hotse and
Daylight meets her in her «addl< tr’ps
Ore day he asks D»de tc go wi h him
’ 7”'""1 ey canter
Columb'-a. which are away, she trying to analyze her fee Inga.
But through it all nn the golden
thread of love At first he bad been
content just to ride with Dede tn’, to
be on comradely terms with her; but
the desire and the need for bar tn
The more he knew o' her.
Had
she been reserved and haughty with
him. or been merely a giggling slm
pertag creature of a woman, it would
have been different. Instead, she
amazed him with her slmpllcttj and
wholeeomeress. with he* great store
The totter was the
unexpected. He bad never
upon woman In that way.
the toy: woman, the ha’-py; weman.
the necessary wife and mother of the
race's offspring—all this bad been his
expectation and uuderstandinf of
woman But woman, the comrade and
play allow and jcyfallow—this was
what Dede had surprised blm In. And
’be more shn became worth while, the
wore ardently bto love burned, un
consciously shading his voice with
<-«re»:s*a. and wAh equal upconsclous-
ress flaring up signal fires in his eyes
For was she blind to It. ye'., like many
v omen before her, ehe the ight to play
v Ith tbe pretty fir® and escape tbe
consequent conflagration.”
“Winter wi!| soon be coming on.”
s »e said regretfully, and with provoca-
tion. one day. "and then tl.ere won’t
b ? at y more rf-lng”
“Bit I must see you to tbe winter
jvst the saw. .” he cried haatly
She shook her herd
"I’ve been pretty f ood.” be declared
"1 leave it to you If 1 haven’t Its
t»en pretty hard. too. I can fell rou
Y-»u Just think It ever Not once tave
I <ald h word about Icve to you. and
tn ‘ loving you all ihe time That’s
rctog some for a man that's usee to
hiving his own way. I’m somewhat
of a rusher when It comes to travel
In;; I reckon I'd rush Gnd Almlgh’ly
If t came to a race over the Ice And
ye:. I didn't meh you. I guess • his
(art If an Indication of how much I
do love you Of course I want yot to
merry me Have I said a word about
It. (hough? Nary a chirp, narv a 1luf
ter I've been quiet and goed. though
lr's almost made me sick at times, this
keeping quiet i haven’t asked you to
(na<*ry ne I’m not asking you n-iw
Oh not but what you satisfy me. I
pure know you're the wife fo* me Hu»
ho* about myself? Im you know me
well enough tc know your own m’nd’"
He shrugged bis shoulders. "I don’t
knew, and I .In’t going to take
cha ires on It now You’ve got to
know for sure whether you think ynu
con d get along with me or not. and
fir. playing a slow conservative game
I ali’t »i going to lose for overlooking
n.t hand ”
V ila was love making of a sort lie-
yor< Dede't experience. Nor had she
ev*r heard of anythin* like 1".
’So you see. he urged, 'jvst
squrre deal we've got to see
mor*- of each other this winter
ilk*-! * your mind ain't made u;o yet—”
’Tut It Is." she Interrupted ”1
▼oniin’t dare permit myself to rare for
rot Happiness icr me. would not He
rhat way I like you Mr Harnish,
and sll that, but It can never be mo*e
than that"
"It s to cause you don't like my w»y
of living" be charged, thinking In his
own mind of tbe sensational joy rides
• nd general profligacy with which tte
news,tapers had credited
tng this, and wondering
not. o maiden modesty
itself Im knowledge of IL
Tc bls surprise, her answer was fist
ind > neon, promising.
"No; I don’t"
"I know I've been brat h'on soma cf
hose rides tn a go* Intoitbe papers.
>e began «ls defence aiod that IV»
const! tutioi
the Washington Post,
too much
maker for
tntlon. Tlie
and known It
push ahead,
eringe or Fa
process of
have ©very^hl
more attacbr
with theatj
than be Li t|
plain if h<» I
•ocial life tl
life. Only b
There ■
I
marry a man like you and be happy i
i but I couldn't And the more I cared j
for such a man. the more unhappy I I
should be You see. my unhappiness. '
to turn, would tend to make him un- ,
happy. I should make a mistake, and '
be would make an equal mistake. .
though his would not be so hard on i
him because be would still have his i
business.”
"Business!" Daylight gasped. !
“What’s wrong with my business? i I
play fair and square. There’s noth- i
tog underhand about It. which esn’t
be said of most businesses, whether of
the big corporations or of the cheat-
ing. lying, little **omer grocerymen I
play the straight rules of the game,
and I don’t have to He or cheat or
break my word."
"Don’t you see." he went on. "the
whole game Is a gamble. Everybody
gambles In one way or another The
farmer gambles against the weather
and <h. market on bL crops. So does
the United States Steel Corporation
The business of lots of men is straight
robbery of the poor people But I've
never made that my business. You J
know that I’ve always gone after the
robbers ”
"I missed my point” the admitted
’’Wait a minute "
And for a space they rode to si-
lence
"I ?ee it more clearly than I can
state It, but it’s something like this
There is legtlmat** work, and there’s
work that—well, that Isn’t legitimate
The farmer works tbe soil and pro-
duces grain He’s making something
that is good for humanity. He actual-
ly. to a way. creates something, the
grain that will fill tbe mouths of the
hungry."
“And then the railroads and market-
riggers and the res’ proceed to rob
him of that same grain." Daylight
broke in.
"There ain’t much difference be-
tween playing halfway robber like
tbe railroad hauling that farmer’s
wheat to market, and p’aylng all rob-
ber and robbing the robbers like I <io
Ar-?, besides, halfway robbery is too
slow a game for me to sit to. You
don’t win quick enough for me."
"But what do you want to win for?"
Dede demanded. “You have millions
and millions, already; why can’t you
do good with all your money?”
Daylight laughed
“Doing good with your money?
Ain’t It fuepy, to go around with brass
knuckles and a big club breaking
folks’ heads and taking their money
nway from them until I’ve got a pl‘e
and then, repenting o* my ways, going
around and bandaging up the heads
(he other robbers are breaking? I
•eave It to you That’s what dling good
with money amounts to Every once
to a while some robber turns soft-
hearted and takes to driving an am
huianep That's what Carnegie did
He smashed heads to pitched battles
at Homestead, regular wholesale head
breaker be wai. held up (he suckers
for a few hundred million, and now
he goes around dribbling It hack to
them. Funny? I leave it to you
He rolled a cigarette and watched
her half curiously, half amusedly His
replies and harsh generalizations of a
harsh school were disconcerting, and
she came back to her earlier position
"1 can’t argue with you. and you
know that. No matter how right a
woman Is. men have such a way about
them—well, what they say sounds
most convincing, and yet tbe woman
Is sill! certain they are wrong But
th. re Is one thing, tbe creative Jov;
and It’s a higher joy than mere gam
bltog Haven't you ever made thinas
yourself—a log cabin up to the .'u-
kon. or a csroe. or -aft or kotnethins?
And don’t yon remember how satis-
fied you were, how good ynu felt,
while you were doing It and after you
had it done?”
While she spoke his memory was
busy with the associations she recall
ed He saw tbe deserted flat on tne
river bank by tbe Klondike, and ne
saw the log cabins and warehouses
spring up. and fill the log structures
he had bui!t, and hiv sawmills work-
ing night and day on three shifts.
"Why. doggone IL Miss .Mason,
you’re right—in a way I’ve built
hundreds of bouses up there, and I
remember 1 was proud and glad to
see them go up I’m proud now. v ben
I remember them And there was
Ophir—the most God-forsaken in ooze-
pasture of a creek you ever laid eyes ' going to buy "
I made that Into tbe big Ophir
Why I ran the water in there from
the Rlnkabflly. eighty
They all said I couldn’t, but I Jld it, ’
end I Jid it by myself The dam ana
the fl-jme cost me four million Hut J
you should have seen that Ophir—pow
er piants. electric lights, and bun
deeds of men on the pay-roll, working
night and day. I guess I do get an
inkling of what you mean by making
'rhe plea of a Kw sas man for a di-
vorce because hh slf«> keeps 3fl dogs
and cats In tbe home se<-ms unneces
•ary Wltl^ such a kupply of tbe dog
and cat element tie numan pair ought
to leave the dog anti cat behavior to
the natural reprei eaitativea.
afoot In Daylight's mind
Dede learned all atout It
"I’ve been thinking a lot of our
talk.” be began, "and I ve got an Idea
I’d like to give ft a Cu ter And I've
got a proposition to make your hair
stand up It’s what jou call iegtti
mate, and at the same time It's tbe
gosh-dangdest gamble a man ever
went Into
utes wholesale, and making two min-
utes grow where one m nute grew ne
fore? Oh. yes. and planting a te’
trees, too—say several million
them You remember the quarry
THE ALVIN SUN
CHAS *. BAILEY . Ptiblwhei
minutes rrow where one grew before,
knock off my head with little apples
I'll save you twenty minutes each
uay That's forty mtoues a day. times
’hree hundred, equal to twelve thou-
sand minutes a year, just for you. juht
for one person. Let’s see: that's two
hundred whole hours Suppose I save
two hundred hours a vear for thou-
sands of other folks—ihatt, farming
seme, ain’t is? Come on. Let’s ride
up rhat hill, and when I get you out ;
on top where you can see something, he w tmpted my cwavat dveadfully,
I’ll talk sense ” hut when it was all ovah his collah
A small footpath dropped down to was fwightfully wilted,
the dry bed of the canyon, which they j
Mr. B. W
D. Bar nes,
©f
C o n n t y,
T e nnessee,
in a letter
from Mc-
M I nnville,
T e nnesaee,
writer:
"Thad
throat
trouble
and had
t h r ee doe-
tors treating
Di e. All
failed to do
me any
good, and
p r onounced
irv health
gone. 1 con-
e 1 u ded to
try Peruna, and after wring four botttaa
can say I was entirely eured.”
Unable to Work.
Mr. Gustav Hunmelreich, Hoihheim.
Texas, writes:
“For a number of years I suffered when-
ever I took cold, with severe attacks at
asthma, which usually yielded to the
m<m home remedies.
"Last year, however, I suffered for eight
mtn ths without interruption so thut 1
could not do any work at all. Tbe va-
rious medicines that were pmcribed
brought me no relief.
‘After taking six bottles of Peruna,
A careless grocer left the wrong,
package at a Michigan home one day
and thereby brought a great blessing
I to the household.
> “Two years ago I was a sufferer from
stomach troubles, so acute that tbs
effort to digest ordinary food gave me
great pitin, and brought on a condition
of such extreme nervousness that I
could not be left alone. I thought I
should certainly become insane. 1 wan
"Look at ft." said Daylight, ex Lend-
ing his srm to a sweeping gesture.
"A hundred thousand people there,
and no reason there shouldn’t be half
a million Theie's the chance to make
i five people grow where one grows
How about planting min- now Here’s tbe scheme to a nutshell.
i Why don't more people live to Oak
land? No good service with San Fran-
f*w j £fsco. and besides. Oakland Is asleep
of | t s a whole lot better place to live tn '
I • than San Francisco Now. suppose I
cisco one-half by building a big pier I
uu.yiuK ou. mere aiuiuoi LV v»uat isiuuu auu , . , , —•
•vthing ! estab ishlng a ferry system with mod l? eal ®B.JthinR e _8f aW*,*,e fao-
much is guessed about II. and I don’t | ern up-to date boat??
want to live over on this side
You see that bill over there j good
build
j But the land’s cheap now
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Bailey, Charles B. The Alvin Sun. (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, February 9, 1912, newspaper, February 9, 1912; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1249551/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Alvin Community College.