JAMES HAYS answered my question about the old building they demolished. NANCY BAKER also told me the name was not Home Furniture, but King Holt. (I think Tuckey's must have had Home Furniture.) BOB BURTON'S stepfather, A.J. Hendricks worked at King Holt when BOB and I married in 1960. Our whole household full of furniture - including appliances - cost only $350, and came from there. Of course, some of it was used, but I remember the brand new Danish modern (remember those?) sofa and end tables!
The photo below was all I could find of a small portion of the old building (to the left of the insurance agency) before they tore it down. JAMES wrote an interesting little bit of Ballinger history concerning the early years of this location.
JAMES: "The building in question was the King Holt furniture building. I had been in it a couple of times in the early forties to the early fifties. It was rumored to have a printing press of some sort in the upstairs, used mainly for storage in the seventies.
Up until about 1930, it was the T. S. Lankford company, originally a saddlemaker/leather shop but he sold hardware, harness, and wagons. Lankford and his two (?) sons moved to Abilene and manufactured work clothing, where his two sons did their whiskey drinking and gambling at the now defunct Abilene Club.
Sometime after 1908, Lankford had joined a Mr. Hathaway (related to Drury Hathaway the abstractor aka the man with no sideburns after his peculiar haircuts?) at which location I do not know. Hathaway had been associated with James Asa Hays, a saddlemaker who settled in Runnels "City" in the mid-1880s living and working in a lean-to in that location until 1886 when he moved to newly founded Ballinger. He talked his younger brother H. G. Hays, my grandfather, into moving to Runnels County about 1891 or 1892.
I have seen one money-cartridge belt marked with Lankford's name but have been looking for anything made by J. A. Hays for 25 years unsuccessfully. Any help would be appreciated. Maybe something will walk into the Ballinger gun show Nov. 2-3. I'll be there."
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This is a money belt and holster made by Ben Varga Saddlery. Probably a lot like they all wore coming to America.
And you all thought I was just French! More than a little Hungarian gypsy in my soul. Lots of good stories on that side of the family.
Peace -- and good memories to you all,
Marilyn