El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 33RD YEAR, Ed. 1, Monday, August 18, 1913 Page: 3 of 10
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THR1
FOUR C'S IMPROVING
COUNTESS TARNOVSKA
WEST
UNION
A SIGN LIKE THIS
MesMSjral Russian
Recently
ATOrrsjT RFTOIUl W11X TOTAIi
7 -.on non lin vn-
TEL
AM
EL PASO MORNING TIMES. MONDAY. AUOUST 18 1018.
EBN
uAJ :
-BS 155
Reieaeed Frnen PtSsvmb Pound
Head on Trass).
THE WESTERN UNION
From Thieves to Soldiers
Evolution of Mexico's Rurales
Picturesque Mounted Police Mom DAntnow lighting Men Uncle Sam's
Bora Would Men In Caee of Intervention Were First Recruited from
Robber Bands by President Com on fort In the Fifties.
Most picturesque and also d njmr-
eus. of the fighting men of Mexico
that United States soldiers would have
to conquer In case of Intervention
are the rural police los Rurales de
la Federation In official language.
Hard riding desperate fighters these
men will give a good account of
themselves against any foe.
The rurales were organised shortly
before the civil war by President Co-
monfort. -The nation was overrun
with marauding bands. The author-
ities were powerless. President Co-
monfort conceived the Idea of using
part of these lawless men to stamp
out the others. Bo the rurales wero
born a testament of the old adage
that it takes a thief to catch a thief.
A Worry to Maximilian.
The first rurales were known as
cueradon "leather clad" because of
their leather uniforms. Most of them
turned rebel when Emperor Maxi-
milian usurped the Mexican throne
They never surrendered to the French
troops; never stopped their bitter
guerrilla warfare. Maximilian or-
ganised a similar corps known as ea-
xaderos "hunters" and under the
leadership ef a French veteran known
as El Tlgre. they wero his atancheat
native supporters.
Under President Porflrlo Dlas the
corps was brought to Its present or-
ganisation and efficiency. He con-
tinued the practice of enlisting out-
laws and soon the rurales won a
worldwide reputation as irregular
cavalrymen.
The Beet Cavalry of the World?
Home foreign military officers who
have observed the rurales class them
as better cavalrymen than the Cos-
sacks of Russia the wild Hungarian
hu ars of the Austrian army or even
the Arab apahees of Egypt whom
Kl .Ing believed the superior of any
fighting men. American officers do
not rate the rurales that high and
probably they do not deserve such
distinguished classification.
Prior to the Msdero revolution the
rurales numbered about three thous-
and men. Since then the corps prob-
ably has been Increased to five thous-
and most of whom are Used as pa-
trols along the various railroad lines.
Are Really Only Policemen.
The organisation of the rurales Is
different from any military organxa-
tlon in the United States. Strictly
speaking the rurales sre not sol-
diers but policemen. They are at-
tached to the department!) de gob-
ernaclon which corresponds to our
department of Justice. The battalion
formation is used each unit consist-
ing of two hundred men and known
as a corps. A commandante rank-
ing with a major commands a corps.
He has a captain three lieutenants
end twelve sublientenanU called
i Alios "chiefs." as commissioned of-
ficers under him. Three top ser-
geants twelvs sergeants twenty-four
corporals nine buglers and two
standard bearers are the noncom-
missioned officers.
Many -- on Their t nlfornts.
Few corps are ever together for
more than brief periods. They will
have headquarters in a state capital
and keep squads of men in a dasen
or more smaller towns surrounding
It. They are continually patrolling
the highways of the nation In groups
of from three to a dosen.
The uniform of the rurale Is his
moat distinctive feature. A private
wears .gray form fitting trousers
laced at the bottom to term a legging
A short. bolero-Ilka Jacket also gray
is trimmed with a single band of sil-
ver lace down the froat and around
the bottom of the Jacket. A silver
frog draws It tight Just above the
waist allowing an Inch or two of the
light colored shirt to show. The
hlrt have low soft collars. Crim-
son ties simllsr to those usually worn
by comic supplement poets are worn.
The hats are high peaked sombreros
trimmed in silver laee with the nu-
meral of the corps In silver on the
Ida. All wear large spun.
Officers follow the same cut and
color In their uniforms; but each
man decorates his clothes to suit his
own taste and pocketbook. Captain
Alvlrex. commanding the rurale de-
tachment at Mstsmoraa a fatw months
ago wore so much sliver lace thai
only In a few spots cuuld ths grsy of
the Jacket b seeu. A row of silver
tassels hung from his hat brim and
a strip of silver lace at least two
laches wide went down the outskd of
each trouser leg. He also wore a
wide red silk sword sash completing
a uniform that for dash snd plcturee-
queneas could not be surpassed la
Europe.
Tha equipment of a rurale Is sim-
ple The government furnlsbsa him
with Mauser carbine a long heavy
u-valry saber a red serape sad a
horse. Bach man furnishes saddle
bridle lariat spurs hunting knife
and as aaaay revolvers as be can af-
ford. Ammunition Is carried la baa
duller una bells
The eaprtt du eorpe of the rurales
TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Is far above that of any other Mexi
can military organisation A man
will accept death gladly rather than
break one of the organisation's un-
written laws. One of these Is that
no rurale. once sent after a lawbreak-
er shall return to barracks until bis
man Is a prisoner or dead. Most
times the prisoner dies a victim of
ley fuga.
The rurales are the least encum-
bered with baggage of any soldier.
Bach man carries all his own equip-
ment and rations; no commissary wa-
gons hinder their movements; they
scorn field hospitals. In ten min-
utes a corps of rurala can be on the
march equipped with everything ex-
cept reserve ammunition for a year's
campaign.
Rurales never marry. That Is an-
other unwritten law. Mexican regu-
lar soldiers take their women and
children wherever they go even on
campaigns; but the mounted police-
man "kisses and rides away like a
rurale" as a Mexican proverb runa
In military drill the rurales are
not expert. Usually they are trained
In all that Is necessary for them to
know before they enlist. Most of the
recruits come from the hard riding
sharpahootlng vaqueros of the cattle
ranges. They are skilled horsemen
before they are rurales. They are
marksmen with rifle and revolver
both afoot and from the saddle. They
are trained to hacking patha through
the mesquits and chapparal with
long bladed machetes which train-
ing enables them to become profi-
cient with the saber quickly. A few
days suffices to teach a man the sim-
ple rifle drill and mounted evolutions
they use. Then he Is a rurale.
In a charge against Infantry or
artillery the rurales probably would
prove very Ineffectual. It Is doubt-
ful If they could claah profitably with
other seasoned cavslryraen; but In
raiding harassing and cutting lines
of communication they would be ex-
tremely troublesome.
it it ll n l IS ii i l
Charged With Murder and Heed With-
out Bond at Douglas.
Douglas Aria. Aug.' 17. As a re-
sult of the preliminary hearing giv-
en J. W. Rlchart the Apache mer-
chant who is charged with murder
In the first degree as a result of his
killing Deputy Sheriff E. J. Miller In
the former's store st Apache last Mon-
day which waa held yesterday morn-
ing before Justice Maclay the priso-
ner was held to the action of tha
superior court without bail. He was
remanded to the custody of Sheriff
Wheeler who will take the prisoner
to the county Jail at Tc m batons to-
night or tomorrow to swalt his trial
next month.
County Attorney Alexander Mur-
ray prosecuted the case and Doan A
Do an repreaented the defense which
did not introduce nnv wltnessss of
their own confining their activity to
cross-examining the witnesses sum-
moned by the state. Judge Doan ar-
guing for the defense did not ask
that the prisoner be discharged but
argued that he should be admitted to
hall basing his plea principally on
the statement which sll the witnesses
testified to hearing Miller make when
Rlchart left the store that "he has
gone to get It and he better uss It
too" or Words to that effect
Rlchart did not take the stand In
bis own behalf nor did he manifest
much Intsrest In the proceedings. Ap-
parently he was the least concerned
man In ths courtroom which waa
crowded with people.
He showed not the least qualm
even when the 11-gauge Remington
hammarless shotgun with whl-h he
killed Miller waa Introduced. The
gun was Identified and offered In evi-
dence. At the time of the killing It
was loaded with buckshot the charge
tearing off part of Miller's head.
The InsporUUM of Trifles.
A proofreader aaent the Import-
ance of trifles read from his note-
book these absurd sentences each
made absurd by ths ommiaslon of
a single letter:
The conflict waa dreadful and
the enemy was repulsed with great
laushter. "
When the presidsnt's wtfs entered
the humble silting room of the houss
she was politely offered a hair "
"A man was yesterday srreeted on
the charge of having eaten a cabman
for demanding mora than bis fare "
"As employe la the service of the
government was accused of having
stolen s small oa from ths mall.
Ths stolen property was found in
bis vest pocket."
"The Rusataa soldisr. Knavklnoff-
oskswshy. was found dead with a
lane ord atlck tag la hla throat."
(Mher Hnstora Mhsea Are Ordng Ahead
natural ""HI Men Metals
Snip Cnw-eejtraten to ft Paan
Cananen. Son. Meg.. Aug IT.
..minions at the varloua properttea
of the Cananen Consolidated t opper
company ere Improving steadily sad
It Is probable that In a short time the
company will be permitted to.operate
at full capacity. At the smelter con-
ditions are excellent " and there Is
promise of the output for this month
totaling clone to 7.660000 pounds
gross. There are four furnaces In
use. besides three converters snd both
reverberatory furnaces are In opera-
tion. Tha Mexican Metals I Mocteauma-
Arlspe Development company 8. A)
haa received a car load of new ma-
chinery during the week and It as at
present being freighted to the prop-
erty about eighteen miles southesst
of Cananen. In the shipment were a
new Ingergoll-Rand sir compressor of
1400 cubic feet capacity a Bessemer
twin cylinder I OS horsepower oil en-
gine and some smaller pieces. An-
other ef tha Bessemer engines of tha
Identical slse and pattern aa the one
received this week Is now on the way
fiom the manufacturers.
Underground conditions st the
property are excellent. Sinking ope-
rations have suspended for the pres-
ent. The Alacran shaft Is down to
the SOO-foot level while the Palo Seco
la 100 feet deeper. Sinking will
probably be resumed this fall.
Concentrates are being shipped to
the El Paso smelter at the rate of a
car load weekly. They average the
company III 1'nltcd States currency
net according to the amelter returns.
The concentrator is operating steadily
at almost capacity and after the In-
stallation of the new machinery It will
be running at full cspaclty shout 110
tons dally.
The company has been using a
Plerce-Arrow auto truck for freight-
ing supplies to the property and Its
production to the railroad In Cananea.
Espedslly good have been the re-
sults during the rslny season which
la now on. With the roads almost Im-
passe tile for wagons the truck has
been able to make the trip loaded
without any trouble whatever.
The 76-ton smelter of the Mlna
Mexico property of the Chicago Ex-
ploration A Development company
which Is located about forty-five miles
northeast of Tonlchl will be Mown
In the latter part of the month. Char-
coal Is being used for fuel instead of
coke. The company Is unable to se-
cure coke and has burned a large
quantity of charcoal. The amelter
waa constructed a little over a year
ago. Since its completions conditions
became so unsettled that no fuel could
be secured as the railroad was put
out of commission. There are about
S00 tons of silver and copper concen-
trates stored ready for smelting which
will average about 100 ounces In sli-
ver besides ths copper. There hi
also a large pile of smelting ore In
the dump rady for the smelter. W.
E. Pomeroy Is manager while the
smelter Is In charge of George Squire.
The mining division Is in charge of
Charles Oercken.
Five men sre being worked at the
Copete property located near Carbo
under the management of Francis O.
Nichols. There haa been a large ore
body encountered at the property
which bids fair to become of some
Importance. The properties of the
company are the Copete Broncn and
Jalisco denouncements comprising
about 300 pertenenclas. The Copete
ore body is the most important de-
posit of the holdings and Is approx-
imately 150x226 feet In slse. The ore
averages 2 ounces gold 2 1-2 ounces
silver 3 per cen copper and It Is es-
timated that it can be mined at a coat
of 1. 60 a ton. The Mexican corpor-
ation Is the Melcaer Mining Co.
TREASURE UNDER FLOOR
Hum of 9100 In Gold Pound on Old
Saloon Kite In the City of
Phoenix.
Phoenix Aria. Aug 17 Old rimers
Id the stst will remember ths Yellow-
stone saloon a Phoenix landmark of
ths early days one of lb most fam-
ous snd popular resorts In the olden
golden dsys whsn gambling wss a
recognised business. Ths Yellowstone
waa situated on Washington strset ad-
JolDlng the Goldberg store at ths cor-
ner of First street both places now In
ths rourss of demolition to be sup-
plsnted by s hsndsome four-story build
Ing. the future home of Korrlck's Nsw
York store.
The Yellowstone wss started before
the days of cement sidewalks and ths
walk lu front of ths building and one
In the rear leading to the alley were
cosstructed of beer bottles thrust Into
the dirt the bottoms forming the walk-
ing surface Aa tlms went on ths
building wss snlsrged psrtly covering
the wslks snd cement Isld ovsr ths
remslnlng psrt.
While tearing up the old flooring
laat sight workmen uncovered part of
tha old bottle wslk. An eslerprlslng
young Mcxlcsn wss quick to grasp the
opportunity sftsr ths workmsn left
proceeded to work the bottle mine; as
hsd tsksa out probably a dosen when
one of a different color sltraclad hla
attention This one proved la be full
of sums sort of liquor snd while ths
youthful operator was rsrefully remov-
Isg ths dlrtsurroundlug It. his flsgers
came In contact with a hard round ob-
ject which proved to be twenty-dollar
goldplece. ons sftsr snother he dssg
them out until esrth-stalnsd coins
smountlng to nssrl list hsd been re-
covered. The buttle of liquor marking
the rstbe was broken la lb i luui.nl
nad the flader heal s hasty rstrsat.
John It-1 ll an old time mlnlag man
advance the nioet probable solution of
the rircumstsacaa of the hiding of ths
taoaey. He says that be snd several
companions were In the Yellowetoue
eae ssornlag sbuut t o'clock when n
lusts bevr.dll entered and after lining up
tboe r.resssl pocketed the geld oa the
faro bank layout snd hurried out. A
saemeal after the alarm was glvsa the
plane was tilled with atea. oae ef whom
waa imii.edi.isi suspected but when
searched no wm was found sad be
was i leasee Ties same morning Ibis
anas was killed la a dispute user a card
s re SeserSSSrS Press
St. Petersham. An It The t'nnntees
Tarnnrsk. who Is into was rmseMed la
Venire of eesapltctly In the murder nc
reset Kasasrwwskl and seeteaeed to eight
years Imprlsensjest. wss found dead en a
m Petersburg -a" 1st express trsla today.
She hsd bees hanged The police are In
The essntsss was pardoned last year
The Ceemteee Tareeseha. a beautiful
Ruealaa woman wss charged and rea-
tried ef baring urged a Jealous youth
HI pi I" ten Ire iM kill I mint Iv
manwakl In order that she might sere re
lion nnn life Insnranre lbs peltry for
which Ramarnwakl bad taken out In ber
Basse. The countess. It waa mid. waa en-
ssaed to marry Kamarowskl II waa
rharged at the trial that the countess bad
a mania for aaaklng men love ber and then
turning them agalset one another. It
waa testified that she had repeatedly em-
braced i 'mini Ks wis row ski In the presence
of other admlrera.
LIGHINIHG STRIKES DISTILLERY
Illinois Boose Fa tiory Pat (rat of Boari-
ncem During Storm Yes-
terday Hp Thr aeeodnfed Press
Pekls Ilia.. Aug 17. Fire startlns frfim
llshtnlng daring a storm at 9 o'clock to-
night completely destroyed the bsrrel
honae cistern room and bonded warehouse
at the plant of the Mete distillery cans-
ins s loss estlmsted at tl2SntVl.
Ths flames were discovered to the bsrrel
house sad by the time the firemen ar-
rived had spread to the rlstern room and
nllhln twenty minutes bed taken In the
bonded warehouse. These three buildings
were rompletely destroyed. When the dre-
men arrived the hast of the burning
spirits and building waa so Intense that
the fire fighters could do nothing toward
extinguishing the blaae and confined tbelr
efforta to keeping the flames from spread-
ing to the main distillery building and
cattle aheds.
The fire was spectacular there being
lint little smoke after the spirits in the
cistern room and warehouse took fire.
Explosion after explnelon followed the
flumes ahootlag hundreds of feet Into the
air. Thla waa repealed aa the racks on
ehleh barrels In the warehouse were piled
eollnpeed.
MEXICAN M NOT Bli.
High offlrlals of the department of
Kiihernarlon In Mexico tity have stated
that General Pascnal Orosro la shortly te
be made governor of I'hlhuabua to succeed
General Salvador Marcnde according to
Mexico tity papers
Pedro l.asciiniln. minister of foreign re
Intl. .us in. the Mnder.1 enhlnst. will prnb-
shly be tbs choice of the Catholic party of
Mexico na their candidate for president In
the coming elections Ijieouraln vlaited
Kl Paan while minister of foreign rela-
tions last January and waa the guesl of
T. It Ryan truffle manager of the Mex-
ico North-West em railway.
David de la Kuente minister of commu-
nications in tbs HUerta cabinet. Is tv re-
tire shortly and take thefield at the bead
ef a Federal column to fight the rebels in
northern Mexico. President lluertn has
conferred the rank of brigadier general
on blm. ' lie la Fuente was Xnlsssr's
chief of staff In the Oroxco revolution.
General Itublo Nat-arete will probably
succeed General Pedro GJeda aa chief of
the Federal division at Gnaymss. GJeda
will he recalled to the capital. Ths gov-
ernment according to Mexico lily papers
la not satisfied with the Federal campaign
against Ihe rehrle In Honors
Rafael Mullnar of I'hlbuahua. an offi-
cer Hi the Federal volunteer column of
General Mareelo t'arraveo and a former
reToliitlonlat cblef. haa been arrested In
i'hlhuabua an s charge of mtirdcrlntt
Captain Martin t'aloca a Federal officer
at Chihuahua over a year ago according
to a message sent by General Salvador
Merrado to President lluertu.
General Felipe Angeles who refused to
recognize Huerta aa prealdent after the
execution of Madero. haa been released
from the penitentiary In Msxlro City
where he lies been held s prisoner since
the February battle. Huerta haa exiled
him to France.
General Franrisco H. Garcia baa been
appointed by Prealdent Huerta aa mili-
tary governor of the siatc of Sonora. He
has left by steamer from Maaatlan for
Sonora and will eatsbllsb the stste gov-
ernment st Guarsssa. Uls eacnrt Is
guarding .Has rifles and a million rounds
of smmualtlon.
A delegation of Amerirsn foreign and
native business men from the elty of
Durango. who lost heavily when Tomas
I r til n i - rebels looted Dursngo sfter the
rapture of the rlty has reached Mexico
in- lo presest tbelr rlalma for damages
The Mexican cousul st Hsn Autosln.
Tex has reported that General Veuus-
tlsn.i Carrsnts Is prenerlsg to flee from
foebulla lo Ihe I mted States and will
glfs up the re notion The report stslss
Ihst be has already moved his family and
bis personal possessions to Man Aaloalo.
Two mllllsry Irslsa recently srrlved lu
Mexico Iltr with W-' Zapatista prisoners
The prlsosers will be conscripted In Iks
redersl army.
General Gnrdlllo lrurder.i aad General
Rafael I aula I.I of the Federal army
have resigned III health la given as the
tessos They bete been fighting iSapata
Ib Moraine.
Ties Mexican government has Imported
aintnualiloo machinery from Prance ami
opened an ammunition factory In ths
Meilrnn rspltal Tbs fsiiory Is mining
out I ..-! Mauser rifle cartridges every
day
Big 1 1 a. I for Chihuahua Today.
Several thousand dollars worth ef
provisions will be purchased today
from Kl Paan merchaats by ths Psd-
tral arm officers from Chlhushus
wbo arrived at the border Saturday
night Ths provislona will be taken
to Chihuahua in a day or two. eacort-
eaj by mi troops commanded by
Colonels Homero and Alberto Terra-
aaa This hi the third time this sum-
mer that Federal military trims have
come to the border to convey sup-
plies to ihs stats capital.
PERFECT HEALTH WOMAN'S
CROWN OF 810RY
CHd you ever observe a woman who
has reached Ihs age of slgty or eten
event In perfect health and gay to
yourself. "I hope 1 may (roar old as
gratefully as she does"? In sgajar lo
roach a lovely old age womsa should
guard against woman's diseases as
tbsy sre tha greatest menace to Joy
and guineas Laydta r. Pink ham a
VegetshU t'otupouna Is aalure's own
remedy for organic derangements
aafs and certala. Hserly forty year
of eeccaes la a grand aad peerless
record for any wue assdltlna.
lr n
If mfm& Tim
II I In 0
MRVIirn
I
Along the Railroad and Aiitonmbile Roatls Entering El Pmo
WILL GET YOU BUSINESS
New Business Bijj Business Cash Business
Business That Otherwise May Never f - i ti 1 You.
WE PLACE THESE SIGNS Anywhere Within 100 Miles of the City as Low
as $;l.00 Per Month.
LET US TELL YOU ALL ABOUT IT
"jj3e
OUTDOOR AND STREET CAR
Vigorous Support for Tango
Dance from a Suffragette
Bays It In Ancient and Correct and I itclil"iitally Defend Some Modern
Fashions In llmw-Tii the Kuctcnt of Saying They
Arc tilrln' Oun Iltulnnw.
"Why the public Is rsvlng about the
tango bunny bug horse trot and the
other popular 'rags' Is a mystery to
mi" writes an Kl Paso young lady
who signs herself "A Suffragette."
"These dances are not new In fact
they have been danced for centuries
snd nothing hns ever been said until
the last few months. The tango dance
was the erase during the time Cleo-
patra ruled Egypt- The Orcein ns
danced It centuries ago before the
days of the split skirt. But. aa you
know the Grecian costumes in those
days were more flimsy than the split
skirt or so-called X-ray gowns of to-
day. "I have been made a suffragette
simply because of the naughty expres-
sions men mske about women's wear-
In gapparel. If us girls want to wear
split skirts it's nobody's business hut
CABINETS for Your
Victor Records
AT
We have record cabinets that will
match your Victor or small Victro-
la and we are selling them at or a
little above one-half regular price.
Get a Cabinet Take Care of Your Records.
W.G.WALZ COMFNY
103 El Paso Street
ADVERTISING
Yen We Paint All Kinds of Signs
our own. I notice that men always
watch us very closely when we wear
the new faahlons.
"But returning to the tango dance
I think they are perfectly right. T
hope that otlur fllllssejg nf Kl Haso
will agree with me In thla reaped. I
have not the slightest doubt but thM
he tango will he the hit of the winter
In Kl I'aeo among the various social
seta. In other cities tango parties
have hi come the rage. Mttry Harden
and other noted actfrssca put on
donees that arc far more wlerd than
the tango nntl the theater-loving pub-
lic throngs the playhouses to see her.
"Good sense and Judgment must
govern in this matter. You hear a
lot of talk about these 'rags' being
dances that are in swuy In the dives.
This may be true but the Merry Wid-
ow waits two-step and other conserv-
ative dances sre danced in these
places.) Should the tango he con-
demned because It Is dnflced In dives?
1-2
PRICE
more an
tha
should the two-
ntep bo condemned.
"Suffrngette."
Well. "Suffragette" rertalnlyspeaka
up for the tango.
(linger will conduct a column In tha
Times for some time devoted to let-
ters for and agnlnat "rngs." Kl Paao-
ans are requested to mall their view
on the matter to Qlnger. The letter
will be reproduced In this column nnd
though the name of the writer will
withheld If requested all letter-
must lie properly signed with correct
sddress.
The Times will award a prise of
It. 50 to the person writing the best
letter favoring the tango and the aame
sum for the heat letter condemning
Ihe dances. This fall and winter the
social circles of Kl Paso will either
accept the tango ns the dance Ideal
or will condemn It. The Times will
get the verdict for its renders.
IKtN OK RAIM'l.irMC t OLLKI1E.
Hu The ISSeetafSd Prro
Huston. Auk IT. The death at a llrook-
lltie bnaplfal last night of Miss Mary
t'oes. dean of Itndi llffe college waa made
Icnoarh tonight. Miss t'oea waa horn la
Worcester March '.'I iv. I. and bad been
instils aej j Idsallfled artth educations!
fo
iuiy
No!
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El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 33RD YEAR, Ed. 1, Monday, August 18, 1913, newspaper, August 18, 1913; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth196556/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting University of Texas at El Paso.