The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 6, 1904 Page: 4 of 8
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THE AUSTIN STATESMAN WEDNESDAY APRIL 6,1904.
4
GREI
“JEFFERSONS BIBLE."
A Family Meal for 15c.
FERT
Austin, Texas.
THEY CAN’T BITE YOU
government and the violent seizing of
H. & T. C
Railroad
D
Calcasieu Lumber Co.
ou
W. R. Smith
Hotel Directory
106 West 6th St.
C, P. & T. A.
Both Phones 865.
(
HEARNE,
. TEXAS.
DID YOU EVER
McMeans House
i
THE SUN SET ROUTE
HOUSTON, TEXAS.
53
#
our-
2
HIGH FLYER
GROUNDS OF IMPEACHMENT.
Routes
DRISKILL HOTEL.
F
IV
THE PARIS MEDICATED CRAYON.
AUSTIN, TEXAS.
1
i
1.)
V
EUROPEAN PLAN
congressmen gin introducing
of Impeachment in that body,
matter whether they would be suc-
-A
1
W. J. SUTOR, Prop.
is,
505 A ve. C,
San Antonio
tempting to get the manuscript from
the national museum in order to print
Gove
ern
MEXiC
GEOI
MAR
NOT
quletly to sbmit without a single con**
gressfonal protest, to the utter disre-
gard of these organic powers of the
the three branches of'the government
distinct in authority, the executive, the
#
#
In Vici
tensi
Stan
trols
Perfect sanitation, commodlous,
well furnished, beet .'.qhted and
ventilated rooms in the south.
Artesian water throughout.
EO. SEELING, Proprietor,
CARL LUETCKE. Manager
For Further Information Call
On..........
It is asserted that Kuropatkin, the
Russlan commander in chief, is a nan
of few word.. If he speaks in his
native language he could hardly be a
man of many words. Life is too short
to crowd many Russian words Into an
ordinary life time of three score and
ten years.
The French' court has decided that
the canal company can sell to Uncle
Fam for 140,000,000. but how about the
American court before which some n-
tv rested litigant has applied for an in-
junction against the sale
selves. Jesus a supplement of the du-
ties and charities we owe to others.
This volume will create a big stir in
the theological world.
it and give It to the world.
All these difficulties have been, a
Rentaurant in connection, sup-
plied with nil that the market
affords; cuisine nusurpassed;
service unexcelled; rates rea-
sonable. •
V
\
th, white house by introducing im-
peachment resolutions against Presi-
dent Rooseveit into congress.
Are we, as a people living under a
I. ANDERSON,
General Paseenger Agent.
ce several senators in
the democrats of at
ucing four territories
Ten Days*
Free Treatment
Offered Men.
The Traveling Man’s Home.
MRS. H. A. M’MEANS, Proprietress.
San Marcos .......... Texas.
:188
BURNET HOUSE
Health Seekers* and Tourists’ Hotel.
Burnet is the Highest Point Between
Galveston and Llano—1300 Feet
Rates $2.00 Per Day.
SUTOR HOTEL
OPPOSITE BOTH DEPOTS.
8 TO 12 HOURS SAVED 3
*
%%
How to Make a
Fortune In Literature
I
*
*
*
3
*
*
*
*
*
*
#
*2
*
*
*
*
*
*
*3
*
*
*
$
Meals, Mederate In
Unsurpassed i, fun, and Servkce.
ONE PRICK
—15OoJ—
Geor
ness m
terday.
ed fro
Mexice
many
vestme
money
He i
pico a
about
Tampl
sugar
world,
enoug
that i
whole
greate
The c
hardly
says,
sugar
enorm
variet
The
sugar
tatned
other:
McGe
comp;
ppmei
romp;
ceedil
velop
He
. ico pc
world
cordit
tion
opme
from
tance
many
are fl
said
Ite ir
ard
contr
alrea
Tami
oil is
feet.
Ma
Mexi
dust
a me
I
TELEPHONES.
Rvsiness Office............
Editorial Rooms............
Society Editress...........
%
38
#
#
#
Leaves Austin at 5:20 p. m., Arrives In *
St. Louis 8 Hours In Advance of All Other *%
I1
Dm b. h»d how your grow by
b»yi^ * Lwry. Two-Pound
l*.»Uy Mix Cm at "WbIXt1*
R.aHot Chicken Tumnlu.*Thoy
are so satisfying and toothsome.
Oalyilefor targe 14k Lunch Size Eana.
My Ik for large 2< Family Mie Cant
Oaly n Ik tor large 3. Hotel Sh Cans.
JOS. HELLEN,
sst Gen. Pass. AoL
Whether it be a big "He
Mosquito” or a samll “Sissy
Mosquito,” it must sing its
little lullaby on the outside
when.you are using our
Screen Doors and Windows
■
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
• -
PIONEERS OF THE
SUTHERLAND SPRINGS OIL FIELD,
Wilson County, Texas,
For information regarding same. All indications point con-
vincingly to the fact that this is the finest field in the State now
being developed,—the duplicate of the Sour Lake field. Land is
changing hands rapidly and the purchasers are among the best
business men of Texas. Prices are steadily advancing. Now is the
time to buy to obtain the best results.
Tracts of from one-sixteenth of an acre up at reasonable prices.
We are only placing a small amount of our holdings on the market,
and retaining personally the adjoining lands.
Watch papers for announcement of our big excursion to th®
field. Seeing is believing. Come and see for yourself.
WRITE AT ONCE FOR PARTICULARS.
*
§
8
8
8
—bh Q ■ P
1s wise, notwithstanding it
with republican expediency.
cessful or not. Such a flagrant vlola-
tion of the fundamental and organic
laws of the land can not afford to go
unrebuked or an entort mad. to rebuke
3 To the North and East by taking this last Flyer. Sleep- *;
S ers and Free Chair Cars, Austin to St. Louis, without 3
3 Change. For tickets and information call at City Ticket 3
* Oilice, 522 Congress Ave,, Cor. 6th Street. Red Front *
# P. J. LAWLESS, -.....ACENT $
Hunuuuuenuuunuuuuauuuouunk
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store
day.
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from
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WHEN YOU TRAVEL
SELECT A RAILWAY AB
YOU DO YOUR CLOTHES.
KATY SERVICE
(MIMOURI, Kansas * TExAS RAILWAY)
Suggests Comfortabte and comveslent Tia,
THE GIKATY FLYER” AND
KATY DINING STATIONS.
Upon the receipt of the dispatches
announcing that President Rooseveit
had arbltrally declared that a Union
soldler would be regarded as half dis-
abled and half incapable of maintain-
ing himself by physical labor at 62
years of age, and was therefore en-
titled to a pension of 36 a month, scal-
ing up to $12 a month at $10 years of
age, The Statesman declared that it
afforded stronger reasons for impeach-
ing President Roosevelt than existed
for Impeaching Andrew Johnson, but
other leading dally papers ignored the
warning for ten days, and then only
was It taken up upon the suggestion of
papers outside of the state. Now the
BL Louis Dispatch is quoted as declar-
ing: “Dangerous ns the precedent is,
the partisan majority of congress will
save the president from Impeachment
or a severe rebuke.”
That makes no difference and is no
excuse for the timidity of the press
of the country, especially the demo-
cratic press of the southern states. in
not at once, when the heat of indig-
nation nt the assumption of the pres-
ident of the law making power was
hottest, in urging southern or demoi
, • merit ns condensed and written by the
The S. C. Beckwith Special Asency,
exclusive eastern advertising agents,
41, 64. 46 47. 43, 49 Tribune Building.
New York City: 610-613 The Tribune
Building. Chicago, III.
Mr. Jefferson with a table in front
giving the pages and citing the chap-
trs and verses from which the dip-
pings are taken.
In a marginal note he gives the Ro-
mon law on sedition, under which Je-
sus was tried. He omitted everything
of a spiritual nature and confined his
clippings to the pure teachings of
Hsus.
Mr. Jefferson makes a fine distinc-
tion between the pagan philosophers
THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL
MRS. M. E. BROWN, Proprietor.
$1.50 PER DAY.
Largs, Airy Rooms, Everything Clean,
Cool and Nice. AH Commercial Trav*
tiers Stop at the Commercial.
Travel over a road using
Oil Burning Locomotives?
Take a Trip to CALIFORNIA while you are about It The CLEAN
___ way to travel ie via
Huuuuu*uwNNNNNNNNNNH
h. & C. N. R. R°
legislative authority by the president,
whose powers are solely executive?
The only defense for the action of
the president that has been made has
been a reference to the fact that con-
gress enacted that the veterans of the
Mexican war should be entitled to the
presumption that they were physically
incapable of earning a support when
they arrived at 62 years of age, and
the argument was that this was a
precedent for the action of the presi-
dent. The two cases are as different
and as wide apart in the application of
a princlpleas the poles are apart. In
the matter of the Mexican veterans,
"congress" enacted the law by which
the veterans of Mexico were presum-
ed to be unable to earn a support at
62 years of age. In the matter of the
veterans of the Union armies of the
Civil war President Roosevelt, of his
own motion, and without the aid of the
legislative branch of the government,
issued a decree, or enacted a law, by
which the latter veterans began to
draw a pension on a scale running with
their respective ages.
Congress had the power to enact
such a law in behalf of the veterans
of the Mexican war; President Roose-
velt had not the slightest shadow of
right or power under the constitution
of the United States or the laws of the
land, to issue any such decree, and he
should be summarily impeached for the
violation of organic law and prosecut-
ed with vigor by a body that, as Cicero
sald of the Roman senate, has yet
some shadow of independence.
When Mr. Bryan once puts his foot
down it stays there. Everything most
remotely connected with his original
decision is colored by that decision.
His Infatuation is so great that he has
recently declared that New York state
is not necessary to the election of
either a democratic or republican pres-
ident. The republicans may be able to
pull through without New York but
every unprejudiced democrat of polit-
ical sagacity will admit that New York
is necessary to democratic success.
,It is now announced that the diffi-
culties in the way of publishing "Jef-
ferson’s Bible" has been obviated and
that the government will Issue the
work about June 1 of this year,
The publication of this unique book
was authorised two years ago and
there have been conflicting reasons
assigned for the delay. A number of
ocrats toning one men- cratg c
al, where it otherwie measures
the republeans being no matter
“Sage of Monticello” in four languages,
, ... , , , legislative and the judiciary, are we
and probable publishers have been at-
clergymen objected to the publication
, . ,, pg, , republican form of government, with
and distribution of the , New Testa-
JOHN P. SHEEHAN
HEAVY HAULING OF ALL
KINDS DONE ON SHORT
NOTICE. • • • MAKES A
SPECIALTY of REMOV-
ING MACHINERY AND
• HIPPING SAND.
. . . Phone 678. . . .
« Ralney »tr,.t . . . AUSTIN, TEX
Secretary Shaw ha* a new financial
plan but the man who thinks he com-
prehends it had better consult an
hilenist. He la imagining thing, and
the first thing he knows,he will know
nothing.
The anhiversary of the “Code Na- „ ,
. . . ...... Epicurus gave laws for governing
poleon" was celebrated on March 11
in France. Napoleon Bonaparte 1.
known more as the genius of battle
than a civil lawmaker, but hla ability
as a statesman is shown in the Code
Napoleon. It not only forms the basis
for all .the laws of France, but for Bel
glum, Holland, Italy and Switzerland,
as well as the South and Central
American republics.
(Original.)
They had met at Lake George. Now
they were on the day boat going
from Albany to New York, thinking
of the charming days they had been
spending‘in idleness. Seated on Camp
chairs on the upper deck they enjoyed
the scenery and talked of their outing.
The men smoked and the woman held
a magazine in her lap.
'Tomorrow.” said the former, "I
•hall be back in my omce."
"Do you work bardr"
"No; my work la very easy. People
who have anything to sell come to me.
I only buy what la cheap; therefore I
have no trouble In selling it"
"My work, too, is pleasant. I sit In
the morning after breakfast in my coxy
room by sn east window where I get
the sunlight and scribble for hait s
day. In tbs afternoon I do a little do-
mestle work, then amuse myself."
"What is your line of literary work""
“Fiction."
"So you are the Irene Buckingham
Whose story appears in that magazine
you are holding so lovingly F
"It is my first published story,” she
replied, smiling from her brows to her
chin.
"How many times bare you read it
in print?'
“Let me see. I think it is sir"-
blushing.
"I must have read my first produc-
tion in print sixty times."
"You) I did not know you were an
gut hoc.”
"Not very many people know that.”
"You keep modestly in the back-
ground. How delightfull Your works
go out incognito.”
"No; they have usually been pub-
lishod under my own name.”
"But I never heard"-
"Of Matthew Briggar
"Pardon me; I"-
"Singular, since I have had consider-
able success. I have made a fortune at
literature.”
"You surely don't mean that you
write this trash tbit la ao protitabler"
"My work bee been as good as my
talents would produce. I think I can
My that It is fsr above the average.”
"You made a fortunate hit—wrote
something that was original."
"I wrote severs! original things, but
the more original they were the great-
er difficulty I found in securing a pub-
Haber. One very original bit of mine
was published, but I mismanaged the
disposal of it and made nothing out of
it, though It took like wildfire."
"Do, please, natinfy my curiosity.
You say that you have done good, le-
gitimate work which it doea not ap-
pear. from what you aay, has been re-
munerative, and yet you have made a
fortune by it."
"I will give you a brief account of
my career. My first productions were
in imitation of my favorite author.
They were not even accepted. My sec-
ond were my own peculiar Ideas writ-
ten in my own style. They, too. re-
malned unsold. Finally I meds up my
mind to write what the people wanted
rather than what I wanted. Fortu-
nately there waa n field in which I was
very much at home. There was plenty
of romance in it and this I extracted.
I wrote what seemed to plense every
one, but my productions did not roach
the great mess of the public. The re
suit was a failure. At last I found n
friend. s dartner.tu a publishing house.
By a wonderful method, successfully
used for years and now for the first
time Introduced to the public, it is pos-
sible fr any mail, no matter how bad
off. to quickly regiin the vigor of young
manhood Without taking any medicine
Into the stomach; and to prove that it
orritorles are not so influential with
grass an to get Into the Union on
r own terms. New Mexico has
1 knocking for a long time in vain,
now congresa signines lis pleasure
take in Naw Mexico with Arizonn
k on to It as one state, when each
been clamorous to get in as one
e. The same may be he said of
ahoma. It can get in, provided it
absorb the Indian Territory. The
I adopted by congress may have the
We Check Your
Baggage at Ho-
tels or Resi-
dences s a .
And the Flies—well, they
can’t do anything but stand
off and peep through.
Be sure and see our big line
of Screens before you buy.
They’re the best stock goods
manufactured, and If we
haven’t got what you want,
we’ll make it.
Mr. Bryan is appealed to by the
democratic newspapers to get out of
the way of the party, they asserting
that the party has gone out of its way
Io accommodate him several times,
but the misfortune is that Mr. Bryan
thinks he himself individually. col-
lectively and representatively is the
democratic party and he can’t get out
of his own way.
i£not, now is the Time and Opportunity
THE SOUTHERN PACIFC
Uses "Oil Burners" from
Terms, of Subsoription After Feb. 1
(In the City.) 3
One month—in advance..........$,-75
Three months—in advance........ 2-25
Six months—in advance.......... 425
One year—in advanco. ........... 840
(By Mali.)
One month—in advance...........$,-50
Qne year—In advance............ 6-22
Sunday only—one year in advance 2-1
Semi- Weekly-one year......... •. 109
NOTICE.
THe following are the authorized col-
lector* of the Gammel-Statesman Pub:
lishing company:
8. B. Throop, Traveling Auditor,
J. M. Bell,
iJohn Johnson and
lGuy Montelin.
Subscriptions paid to any one else
(except at office) will not be recognized
by the
GAMMEL-STATESMAN PUB. CO.
Offices: 401, 403 and 405 Congresb
Avenue, corner of Fourth Street
find Jesus. He says "Epictetus and
Secretary Tatt is throwing some
shells Into the camp of his own party.
He disagrees with the policy pro-
posed to be adopted towards the Fili-
pinos. The secretary know* all about
the Philippine islands and his advice
Anciet. .u-hip of Animnls.
The figures of the gods in ancient
Egypt were’represented on the mnonu
men is for ages injanimalform. The
organizntion of the lecal"population ran
on totem lines. Knch city had different
beast gods. in the royal genealogle:
beasts are named a* ancestors, show
Ihg that the early Egyptians actually
considered themselves descendauts of
animals. The primitive element in tin
early Greek-religlon lint been preserv
ed in the "sacred chapters," fragments
of which have been given us by He
rodotus, Pnusanias and others, provin;
that the oldest images of the Grecint
gods were represented in animal form
and that the different royal house
clnimed descent from animals, ns do
the savages of America and Australia
Mr. J. McLennnh In his papers oi
"The Worship of Plaits and Animals’
calls our attention to many evidences
thnti the early Romans as well as the
Greeks worshiped totems
such an assumption by the executive
of legislative authority.
But perhaps it is stranger still that
democratic congressmen, without the
stimulant of an indignant pre**, did
not voluntarily and eagerly seize the
opportunity to fire a broadside into
GUADALUPE HOTEL.
(Successor to Plats Hotel.)
Philip Holzman. Proprietor.
12.00 Per Day. Bar in Connection.
Clean, airy rooms and beds, polite
attention, splendid table fare, center of
business. Traveling Men’s headquar-
ters. New Braunfels, Texas.
Great Direct Method That Cures Sem-
inal Weakness, Varicocele, Stricture,
Gleet, Gonorrheea, Unnatural Dis-
charge*, Irritation and Enlargement
of the Prostate Gland, Bladder and
Urinary Disorders, Without Taking
Medicine Into the Stomach, and in
Their Own Home—It Will Be Sent
Every Man Absolutely Free.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
Anv erroneous reflection npon the
character, stnnding or reputation df
any person, firm or corporation which
may appear in the columns of The
Ftatesman will be gladly cerrected
upon it being brought to the attentlon
of the publishers.
well as that of making the photolith-
ographic plates, as a few has been
found in New York that can utilize
this highest style of publication, and
that firm is working upon the repro-
duction of the book.
Dr. Cyrus Adler was designated by
the act of congress authorizing the
publication of the book to write an in-
troduction of about twenty-five pages,
the resolution passed the house of
representatives In May, 1902, and au-
thorized the publication of 9000 copies
of Thomas Jefferson’s ' Morals of Jesus
of Nazareth," 3000 copies for the sen-
ate and 6000 for the house of repre-
sentatives.
The original of the work is a small
volume of 164 pages bound in red
leather by a Richmond, Virginia, book-
binder. Mr. Jefferson read Marcus
Aurelius, Epictetus and a number of
other ancient writers on moral philos-
ophy and he conceived the idea of
condensing the life and teachings of
Jesus in a small volume In which ev-
erything supernatural was to be left
out and the story told consecutively
as gathered from the four evangelists,
evidently believing that the great
spiritual truths revealed by the Savior
would lose nothing of their effective-
ness by being separated from the nar-
hation of the miracle* of Christ. Mr.
John Adams and Mr. Jefferson were
reconciled of a long enmity by a cor-
respondence between them on the sub-
ject of’ th book.
Mr. Jefferson In alluding to the work
called it the “Philosophy of Jesus,”
raying It is a paradigm of His doc-
trines made by cutting the texts out of
the books and arranging them on the
pages of a blank book in a certain
order of time or subject. A more
beautiful or precious morsel of ethics
I have never seen.”
This book is a duodecimo volume of
elghty-two double pages, or 162 pages
in all. On the left hand Mr. Jefferson
pasted with great care the clippings
in two columns, first in Greek and then
in Latin. On the right hand he put
the French version first and the En-
glish in the last column. The whole
is neatly pasted in four finely printed
Columns, in Greek, Latin, French and
English,
___________________I
HanuuuusuuuuunuuuuuuaE
Refurnished and remodeled,
mast comfortable rooms in
Austin. All conveniences.
clashes ,,
There are also marginal notes by
HOTEL HANCOCK.
Postoffice and Opera House Block
Fifty cool, neat, afry and ele-
gant rooms. Cuisine second to
none in Austin.
Electric light*, electric call*
bells, electric fans, private batbs
free sample rooms.
Everything First Class.
Commercial Trade Especially
Solicited.
Rates $2.00 to $250 per Day.
L T. Hancock,
Proprietor.
Algona Hotel
LLANO. TEXAS,
We make it a point to look fter
the comforts of the traveling man, and
to see that he is well taken care of.
Tourists coming south either lor re-
creation or health, will find all the
comforts of home at this hotel.
No pains will be spared to make
their sojourn a pleasant and memorable
one. Correspondence solicited.
E. MARSCHALL, Proprietor.
BY/THE GAMMEL-STATESMAN
._______PUBLISHING CO.
Incorporated November 1,1962
Dail, 9V9ry day and Sunday; Seml-
Weekly. Tuesdays and Fridays.__.
Entered at the' Postomce at Austin,
Texas, as second-class mall matter.
NEW ORLEANS to SAN FRANCISCO
NO SMOKE NO DUST NO CINDERS
PLABANT, mOoTHINQ AND HEALINQ.
will do this they oprer a full Ten Days’
Trial Treatment '.absolutely free to
every man sending name and address
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lumbus, Ohio. Ybu apply it locally to
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It is the only method known to science
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Write to Dr. tvens A Co., Colum-
bus, Ohio, box 1906. They offer Ten
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to every man. It is no "prescription,’
"deposit." or ”C. O. b.” scheme, as thia
firm is too large to resort to such petty
ways. In addition to the absolutely
free triah treatment, they *end the
meet complete book ever written on
the Diseases of Men, telling all, and
fully illustrated, with forty ngravings
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they merely ask you to inquire what
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trust every gentleman reader of this
paper will write them at once a* above,
and thus get the Ten Days’ Tqial
Treatment and book, both absolutely
free.
vsrzyj
uuuuuhuuuuunununung
I
who gate me Els influence, and tha
concern published a novel for me.”
"I see. This was your chance. How
many thousand copies were eold?‘
"Two thousand.” z
"Only two thousand? Surely this
could not have made you a fortune or
a reputation. By and by you will tell
me of some great work of which I
have often heard.”
”I never wrote another.”
"Wellr‘
"My royalty on my novel was $300.
I made a fortunate investment of this
money and got what men who have
made fortunes declare to be the hard-
eat part of their work—I. e., the first
thousand dollars. I lived ou little
more than nothing and kept turning
over my money. Today I am account-
ed a rich man, all, as you see, made in
literature."
"But you could a* well have made
it in molasses."
"I had no molasses to sell. I had a
faculty for seribbling, and this gave
me a lump sum. Fortunately I had
the good sense not to try to live by
literature alone, so that I could invest
my little capital. While I wa* mak-
ing my living this capital was making
money for me. The disproportionate
ability between capital and labor to
make money is as the sands of the sea
to a single grain. Of the million dol-
lars of which I am possessed three-
hundred-millionths were made by a
very high order of intellectual work
and the rest by capital.**
"I am disappointed.”
"I fear you will be more disappoint-
ed if you set your heart on making a
large sum without any other assist-
ance save your brain. The brain is
simply a lever to put that powerful en-
gine, capital. Into operation. If the
brain and the muscles, after keeping
the body alive and in condition, do
this they will do all that should be re-
quired of them. The rest is the work
of capital.”
"But how about authors who make
great sums from their works?”
"Tell me about the winners of the
first prize in.a lottery, and'I will re-
spond with smething of interest about
these literary price winners."
She, too, made ajfortune at litera-
ture. She marr loathe man who got
his stest as a capialist by writing a
novel EDWARD SANDERSON.
— S. W. WHITE & CO.,
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The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 6, 1904, newspaper, April 6, 1904; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1454899/m1/4/: accessed June 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .