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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 5, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 8 total hits in 4 results.
Manchester (New York, United States) (search for this): article 19
Confessions of a horse thief
--Important to Horse Owners.--A few days since the police of Buffalo, N. Y., arrested a man who had stolen two horses from Niagara Falls.
The property was recovered and the thief has since been in jail, where he has had leisure to write the following letter.
We print it, as it contains many valuable hints, and to altogether a literary curiosity:
Buffalo Jaye, June 16, 1861. Mr. Editor:
Being, as you are aware, under arrest for the crime of horse-stealing.
I deem it my duty to give people a little advice in regard to preventing their horses from being stolen.
First, never put a padlock on your burn; it is of no more use in keeping a thief out than a straw.
Put on all your doors good house-door locks; then carry your key with you, or, if you leave it in the house, put it in a drawer, or some place where it is out of sight.
If a thief sees a good horse go into a barn that has a lock on with which he is not familiar, he will go to the
Buffalo, N. Y. (New York, United States) (search for this): article 19
Confessions of a horse thief
--Important to Horse Owners.--A few days since the police of Buffalo, N. Y., arrested a man who had stolen two horses from Niagara Falls.
The property was recovered and the thief has since been in jail, where he has had leisure to write the following letter.
We print it, as it contains many valuable hints, and to altogether a literary curiosity:
Buffalo Jaye, June 16, 1861. Mr. Editor:
Being, as you are aware, under arrest for the crime of horse-stealing.
I deem it my duty to give people a little advice in regard to preventing their horses from being stolen.
First, never put a padlock on your burn; it is of no more use in keeping a thief out than a straw.
Put on all your doors good house-door locks; then carry your key with you, or, if you leave it in the house, put it in a drawer, or some place where it is out of sight.
If a thief sees a good horse go into a barn that has a lock on with which he is not familiar, he will go to the o
Editor (search for this): article 19
Confessions of a horse thief
--Important to Horse Owners.--A few days since the police of Buffalo, N. Y., arrested a man who had stolen two horses from Niagara Falls.
The property was recovered and the thief has since been in jail, where he has had leisure to write the following letter.
We print it, as it contains many valuable hints, and to altogether a literary curiosity:
Buffalo Jaye, June 16, 1861. Mr. Editor:
Being, as you are aware, under arrest for the crime of horse-stealing.
I deem it my duty to give people a little advice in regard to preventing their horses from being stolen.
First, never put a padlock on your burn; it is of no more use in keeping a thief out than a straw.
Put on all your doors good house-door locks; then carry your key with you, or, if you leave it in the house, put it in a drawer, or some place where it is out of sight.
If a thief sees a good horse go into a barn that has a lock on with which he is not familiar, he will go to the o
June 16th, 1861 AD (search for this): article 19
Confessions of a horse thief
--Important to Horse Owners.--A few days since the police of Buffalo, N. Y., arrested a man who had stolen two horses from Niagara Falls.
The property was recovered and the thief has since been in jail, where he has had leisure to write the following letter.
We print it, as it contains many valuable hints, and to altogether a literary curiosity:
Buffalo Jaye, June 16, 1861. Mr. Editor:
Being, as you are aware, under arrest for the crime of horse-stealing.
I deem it my duty to give people a little advice in regard to preventing their horses from being stolen.
First, never put a padlock on your burn; it is of no more use in keeping a thief out than a straw.
Put on all your doors good house-door locks; then carry your key with you, or, if you leave it in the house, put it in a drawer, or some place where it is out of sight.
If a thief sees a good horse go into a barn that has a lock on with which he is not familiar, he will go to the o