Featured in this lot is this rare, "Commercial Advertiser" newspaper pages from Tombstone, Arizona, February 4th, 1882, framed. Provenance: Tombstone Western Heritage Museum, Tombstone, Arizona. The "Commercial Advertiser" was a newspaper published in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, during 1882. The Commercial Printing Office, a key part of Tombstone's history, was located on Fremont Street in 1882. It was the printing facility where the Tombstone Epitaph newspaper was initially produced. The attached Tombstone Western Heritage Museum labels read from left to right, "COMERCIAL ADVERTISER TOMBSTONE, A. T. FEBRUARY 4, 1882", museum code, "N-029", and the second label, "ONLY 3 COPIES KNOWN TO EXIST! The Commercial Job Printing Office Owned by H. W. Hasselgren". The framed newspaper is of two separate pages, each featuring news articles from outside Tombstone and Arizona Territory and individual advertisements for Tombstone businesses, includng one for "FLY'S Photograph Gallery", for C. S. Fly. Camillus "Buck" Sydney Fly (CS Fly, C. S. Fly, C S Fly, Buck Fly) was an Old West photographer and lawman who is regarded by some as an early photojournalist and who captured the only known images of Native Americans while they were still at war with the United States. His photographs are legendary and highly prized. Based in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, C.S. Fly documented the peace treaty between Apache Chief Geronimo and the U.S. Army in 1886, as well as other iconic moments of the Old West. Fly gained access to some of the most iconic names of the 19th century: Apache Chief Geronimo and the bandits behind the shootout at the O.K. Corral. Without his studio in the notorious boomtown of Tombstone, Arizona Territory, we would be sorely lacking some dimension to our ideas of the frontier. While Fly didn't get any photographs of the actual gunfight which only lasted approximately 30 seconds, he did manage to capture both the outlaws and the lawmen on film before and after the bloodshed. Fly also served as Cochise County Sheriff from 1895 to 1897. Fly's images are very collectible and command premium prices today. The newspaper is in amazingly preserved condition, edge tears noted. Normal age tanning and wear exhibited, wood frame is in good overall condition with slight scuffing to edges. Visible image measures 19.5"W x 24"L, frame is 21.5"W x 25.875"L x .625"D, weight is 6lb.