The Pioneer Exponent. (Comanche, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, May 6, 1910 Page: 7 of 8
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1
, ' — *
!*.,«*■**.
riBkTi
castoria
■from*** Yon Have Always Bought, and which has
In us© for over 80 years, has
C&AffZz&i \
and has been made under hfs per*
Fnnal supervision since itslnfoncy.
________ Allow no one to deceive you In this.
JU1 Counterfeit*, Imitations and ** Jnet-os-frood ” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
■nfitats Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTORIA
Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare,
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It ip l’leaaant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age Is Its guarantee. It destroys-Woiyns
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea gnd Wind
Celle. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures'Constipation
mud Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, gfring healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
carload of
Tke ITS
|M » POT
BLOWING
_ ~r~
Through
Although the oldest bottles
known were made of skjns, glass
bottles containing wine are repre-
sented on Egyptian monuments
. - , „_____.which are more than 4,000 year*
at a salo of MoofiedPotsad^OKtan jg ^ ^ ^ ftonSU
_
jlj
I E II j 1 To the SUH’kholdf’
fthTmtp
m/ml ■ * 1 1 /■ I lj 1 I
mm ■ ■ ■ . fB I m ■ ■
a If p*r-
nd si von
to Uo tn
cenuine CASTORIA always
Bean the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
. In Use For Over 30 Years.
TO, tlMTaul H,P»W. TT BO**.. .IBH. I
- I1"
QM<MMMSSMS<MS<
Blanks
ST. - ~ .
The Exponent has forsale all kinds of Le-
gal Blanks—warranty deeds, release deeds, bills
of sale, notes, Chattel mortgages, rental and
farm leases, vendors’ lien notes, etc.—in any
quantity you want. Give tfs a call.
Kil* i:
Iserve !!
che :
IttfSSM
it Un-
pltn it
YOU
LOSE
MONEY
When you allow any of your
■lock or poultry to remain tick
• day.
They give you less results in beef,
pork, work, or eggs, when they are
not in perfect health. Take a little
Interest in your own pocket book
and doctor them up with
Blaek-Draaght
Stock and Poultiy
It wilt pay you lo do this.
it has paid thousands of other
successful farmers and stock and
poultry raisers.
This famous remedy is not I'
food, but a genuine, scientific med-
icine prepared from medicinal herbe
and roots, acting on the liver, kid*
neys, bowels and digestive organs.
Sold by all druggists, price 25
cents, 50 cents and |1. peif can.
Notice of S*l. of R**l Colt!* Under Ex-
cution.
THE STATE OT TEXAS
County of Comxneh#
—ie the -Alstrlet .court of Comanche
county. Texas- D. M. Smith vV. Wilt
McClelland, et al, 0. F. GUlman, In-
ter,renor.
Whereas. by virtue of so execution
Issued out of the. district court of Co-
manche county, Texas, on a Judgment
rendered In .aid court on the the 28th
dfcy of Miy 11*08, tn favor of the said
O. F. Glllman, intervenor, and
against the said Will (G. W.) Mc-
Clelland. No-202.1 on the docket of
said court, I did, on the. loth day of
April, A. D. 1910, at 4 o’clock p. m.,
levy upon the following described
tract of land situated in the county of
Comanche and state of Texas, and be-
lodging to The said Will. (G, W ) Mc-
Clelland, to. wit;
All that tractor parcel of land situ-
ate.d 1r the couDty of Comanche and
I state of Texas, and being a part of a
survey In che name of Adolphus Hope
i abstract No. 421, pai. iY«i. 118, rol, 6.
| Beginning o'n the west line of said
Hope survey, a', the nw corner of a
subdivision of said survey made for
W. M. Robinson; thence s 11 e with
the s line of said Robinson subdivis-
ion 1*«H varas to the sw cor. of a tract
sold to Joe Richey by W. M. Robin-
son et ux by deed dated Dec. 12, IW4;
thebce n lw e with Richey's west Hoe
840 varas to nw cor. of sal/1 Richey
tract on n line of f.ald subdivision,
out of same survey roedefor Joo. W,
McCullar: thence n 11 w. with n line
of said McCullar subdivision 1021 8
varas to ne cor. of a tract of 38 acres
conveyed by W. M. Robtnson and
wife to Mar? E. Robleson. by deed
dated Dec. 21. 18X3; thence s 19 w 420
varas the se cor. of said Mary E.
Roblason tract; thence n 71 w with
Mary E. Robinson s line 410.8 varas
to the w line of the said Hope survey;
thence ■ 19 w with said w line 420 va-
ras to the place of beginning.
And on the 1th day of June, A. D.
eewe at Harlan, losra. last week
first twenty sow* sold a«n*M $!•».
er J the entire herd sold averaged SIM
per head. They went te sight dtf
{•rent state*. Tutae former* note
this and get busy.
r— --» » -h——,
At a sale of pure blooded Berkshire
hogs et Whitehall. 111. test week. H
head were sold at an average prtoe of
SIM per head. There 1g money la
raising pare blood hlgh-c4eee hogs.
• n * -
"1 have not great learning, but what
little 1 have ncqntred was paid fur
from the proceeds on some wheat and
hogs.”—President Benjamin Harrison.
M * M
Plant alfalfa and hogs on the seme
harm; they make a combination that
can’t be beat One acre of Alfalfa will
furnish more forage than two acres of
clover, as It grows faster and keeps
on growing as fast as It la satan down
| by the bogs. ,,
Pigs will malts better gains If
mlttsd to tuo tn pasture* and
a good dry oomfortabl* place to —
than they do w hen shut up In a small
Pen.
m m m
If you owe a mortgage on your farm
or owe any other kind of debt that
you oan’t eee your way elearly to pay
oft get busy and raise hogs for next
I winter's mark*t. and you will eoon be
I on easy street. No charge for this ad*
vice.
HUM
Farmers la Texas are now busy
planting crops and they should net
feryet to put a good acreage In bogs.
They will be wig* tf they do
L EMM
Don’t sell your brood sows hecaCss
feedstuff* are high. Many are doing
this and the reeult will a# that the
prtoe for gobd brood *ow* win tn a
few month* be as high SS an eighteen*
I story office bunding.,
M M M
On* thing that a brood sow needs
Is feed that eon tains a Urge percent-
age of protein The more protein fed
to th# eow will cane* the pig* to de-
velop Into stronger hogs. ■
M M h.
What th* hog raiser wants to study
Is e place ofLfeeding that will develop
tli# hog with as little corn as possible.
A oornWss hog ration la one of the de-
mands of the hog business. m
• MW'
I Breeding hog stock shCuld be looked
t --r-fully ghd their need* provided
fox * the beet plsn to keep th#
breeding stock In e thrifty and healthy
condition Don’t neglect them.
ig W M------
The previous condition and treat*
•sent of th# bogs when lb* fattening
procees begin* hav# as much tnflu
enoe oh subse-jaent gain* as doe# th#
kind of feed used.
• MM
In 1MT the United States paid »Z«.-
411.181 In tntereat and about the earn*
In ISOS Th* hogs on th# farm* th
th# oeuntry at this time would pay the
tntereat on th* pehlle debt for eevdn
tooh years Think of It. will you. und
then never think the hog I* an animal
to be neglected.
STOCK YARDS COMPANY
NEW EXPERIMENT FARMS
Men to Demonstrate Profit* ts B*
Mad* by Bslsln* Hog*
Seientlfleally.
The Port Worth Stork Yards Com-
penv has beguh s good work In **
tabltshlng hog experiment farms tn
East Texas. How fur It I* going to
push this work could not be learned,
by a Cltlsen-Star man who called on
Manager O. W Matthew*. H# did not
seem disposed to talk.
Anyhow two farm* have already
been established by Mr. Matthews and
Iff. C. U. FYencb, also of the stock
yards company, one at Athens and one
at Nacogdoches and they are under
the management of competent men cf
that eertlon. The object of these farms
ts to demonstrate ths profits to ba
mad* Tn hog raising and tfi# results
e _ . lldtfBsmskl
AH Cr »11*1 BMT rMlIIMIB.
The Stock Yard* Company furnishes
thlrty-thre* heed of pur# blood Po-
land Chins, Duroc and Berkshire bogs
—eleven of each, to ooet 11.10* to a
FSTfrpgny vfbn are to breed and feed
them and to take alt th* Income of ths
farm for two year* and then return
the Exodus there. Were bottles made
•f bronze, silver, gold, porcelain
and alabaster, which from their an- n * p Dlnlham'el
KCMK vyJS Compound *
period, the art of bottle makingwaa Jefferson, Iowa. —“When nit babr
r',-
1910, being the first Tuesday of said
, . _ month, between the houf*of 10o*ulock
Th* Nigh Cost el Living (i m an(j 4 o’clock p. m. on said day,
Increises the price of many, necesel-the court house door of said county
Ithere
|ay, fefrour
Colorado
tie* without improving -th» quality.*
Foley’s Honey and Tar maintains Its
high standard of excellence and its
great curative properties without any
isefease In cost It is the best remedy
for {coughs, colds, croup, whooping
cough and all alhnent* of the throat,
chest and lung*. The genuine Is in a
vellow package Refine substitute*.
Sold bj£ 8. P. Smith druggist.
It is said that Mrs. Jack John-
son, wife of the negro pugilist,
wears 130,000 worth of diapnonda.
The past week has been very
udf&vorable to growing: crops in
all parts of the iTratitry:1
Watch lev Hw Casket
The Red Dragon,«f thssky. Watch
the children for spring coughs and
colds. Careful mothers keep Foley’s
Honey add Tar lu the house. It is
th* best and safest urevenation and
cars for ri-oup where the need is ur-
gent and immediate relief It a vital
ndoeeetty. Its prompt uee net saved
many little Uves. Contains no opiate
or harmsul *
Bold by ft.
or harmsul drug*, Refuse substitute*.
~ P Smith.
Twill offer for sale end sell at public
auction, for cash, all the right, title
and Interest of the said Will (O W.)
McClelland in and to *%ld property.
Dated at Comanche, Texas, this the
15th day of April A. D* 1810.
V. L. Jaoksom, Sheriff,
Comanche County, Texas.
Kissing ia unknown »Japan.
It is not surprising t-hsy have
been backward many years in
civilization.
• ■■ .....I^B ......I ^
Foley’s Kidney Remedy will cure
hay case of kidney and bladder trou-
ble not neyond the reach of medicine
‘ mnr* Bold hv
Nu DX
8. P. Smith, druggist.
th* orlglpel hoga to th* Stock T<rds
Company or other hoga aa good.
PASTURES BETTER THAN
CORN IN HOG RAIBINO
F**d for
Profitable te Buy A
Pattenlea Porker#
Market.
All
far
Oood pasture# ure More .mportent
In hog raising than oorv. and no men
who page for whet bt* hogs eat can
raise them in enr considerable num-
bers sa profitably without postures a*
b* cun with them.
T. r> Coburn, oh* of the best an-
thorltl** In th* United State* on hog
raising for profit, la Ms book "Swine
tn America,” has this to rag of pas-
turage for hoga;
’•Wheresoever situated, no farmer Is
rightly prepared to rale* hog* profitably
tn anv considerable numbers naless
well provided with pasture and grass
er faculties for tworldlsg aeeeptabl*
substitutes. In. th«- a^cnomloal grow-
ing ef p^>rk"there is, no mod Imparts lit
farter to bo con side, rd than that of
pasture Rang* In pasture affords
the art of bottle making wm*
)JT no mean* 111 it* in .mey. The
early history of the bottle is some-
what meager, owing no <loubt to th*
fact that the true bottle has -never
been a thing of much beauty, ex-
cept in a few rare instances, but
rather a humble vessel of no in-
tzinsic valu*.
Bottles are made today in stu-
pendous quantities and are of all
sorts, sizes and' descriptions. In the
manufacture of a common bottle
either sand, soap boiler’s waste,
brick clay or other materials, ac-
cording to loeality, are used. Hay-
ing been run down into a molten
mass, the metal it skimmed, and the
first operator, known as the “gath-
erer,” takes a little of the glase on
the end of a heated pipe. When
this has cooled somewhat he again
dijie his pipe into the glass, having
“gathered’’ in the two dips sufficient
tq mak? a bottle. This he hands op
to the “blower,” who a* he blow*
through the tube rolls the met^l on
a stone, thereby fashioning the bqt-
tie neck. The roughly shaped mass
Is then placed in a mold and tha
operator continues to blow until h*
has brought it to the required
form. After this the bottle is hand-
ed to the finisher, who by touching
the neck with a small bit of iron
dipped in water completely severs
it from the pipe. He attache® the
pontee, an iron instrument tipped
with molten glaae, to the bottom of
the bottle and thus gives it the
usual rounded shape. This pontee
may he used for from twenty to
twenty-four dosen bottles; Then,
winning ths bottle at the furnace,
the finisher takes § small quantity
of the metal on what it known as a
ring iron and, turning It around ths
mouth, forms the ring seen at ths
top of the neck. Taking ths
shears, he trims the neck. In the
center of one Made of the shears is
a niece of brass tapering like a
eorx, which forms the inner mouth,
while the other blade has a piece of
brass fastened to it, for the purpose
of shoping the ring. A boy lifts tbn
completed bottle on a fork, and it i*
telfflf) tn the annpslipg arch, which
contains about ten or twelve gross
of bottles placed in bins one above
the other. These are the process*-
which even the cheapest and most
ordinary bottle has to go through
So i|_can well be^ imagined what an
infinitude of care and trouble u
needed to produce a bottle of the
finest grade.—T,ondon Otobo.
Trousers In College.
As late as 1812 students in Trim
ity and St. John’s colleges, Cain
bridge, were prohibited from wear:.,
tng pantaloon* or iroua«ra in chapel.
Oxford men bad already fought for
and won the right to wear trousers.
i*«.rp first, allowed in Oxford
in 1810, when Rigaud was proctor,
nnd his relaxation of- discipline gave
great offense to the dons. On Nov.
20, 1815, William Phelpa, scholar
of Corpus and afterward archdeaeon
of Carlisle, writes, “I have been in-
vited once to the bachelors’ common
room, where I found all wore black
pantaloons and stockingB and white
waistcoats.” Evidently the discov-
ery caused him tome surprise or he
would not have thought it worthy
of retard. Dean Burgon relates in
his “Lives of Twelve (treat Men"
that as late as 1847 the Rev. Ed-
ward Miles Rudd as senior fellow of
Oriel used to appear at the college
When my baby
1 jualtwuuKMiUia
Id 1 was eoru-
le tel y run down now or
nd my Internal or-
gans were In terri-
ble shape. I began
taking Lydia E.
hnkham’s Vegeta-
jle Compound, and
mother wrote ami
told you Just how I
was. 1 began to gain
at once and now 1
am real welL” —
of director# to apply <
commission of Texas tn
Issue bonds as afore ’
application for the ap.
railroad commission of
Mra W. H Bur&ek, 700 Cherry 8t.,
Jefferson, Iowa.
Another Woman Cared.
Glen wood, Iowa, — ” About three
years ago I had falling and otlier fe-
male troubles, and I was nothing but
skin and bones. I was so sick I could
not do my own work. Within six
months 1 was made sound and wall by
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com-
pound. 1 will always tell my friends
that your remedies cured me. and you
can publish iny letter.” — Mra 0. W.
Dunn, Glen wood, Iowa.
If , you belong to that countless army
of women who suffer from some form
of female ills, iust try Lydia £. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
For thirty years this famous remedy
has been tbs standard for alL forms of
female ills, and has cured tlnfftsands of
women who have been troubled with
such ailments as displacements, flbrold
tumors, ulceration. Inflammation. Ir-
regularities. backache, etc. -
I f you want special advice write
for it to M ro. Plnkham-Lrnw.M a SB.
It Is free and always helpful.
the registration by the Secretary of .
State of the state os Texas, under the -
direction of eald railroad commission,
of such bonis, and to fix the rate of
interest thereon and the denomination,
maturity and tenor thereof, and to
dispose of said bond* and use the pro-
ceed* for the aforesaid purposes, and
lo do all things necessary to obtain
authority to issue and dispose of said
bond* according to the laws of Texas,
end also for th* purpose of authoriz-
ing said company, in order tp secure
the payment of said bonds and the in-
terest thereon, to execute * mortgage
or a deed of trust, aod which shall be
a first lien, upon all of Us corporate
property aod franchise* now or here-
xfter owned, constructed or acquired.
The tines Of railway which the said
company no# has Sod expect* Imme-
diately to construct complete, improve
operate ore se follows;
Its main line of railway already
constructed, and beninnlng in Steph-
envills, Erath county, Texas, and ox-
tdDtUng In a soutnerly direction thru
the counties of Erath and Hamilton to
the city of Hamilton in said Hamilton
county, Texas, a distance of about
42.81 miles.
Its extecslon* sod branch line* In
contemplation ars;
An extension of It* main line from
Indiana democrats have nomi-
nated John W. Kern, vice presi-
dential candidate in 1608, for
senator.
Hamilton. In Hamilton county, Texas,
through tbe-oountles of Hamilton and
Coryell, to so Into ths town of 0*1#*-
Oa* Condwcter that was Cored
Mr. WUford Adam* 1* his name,
sod be writes about. —‘' 8ome time ago
I was confined to my bed with ehron
Ic rheumatism. I used two bottle* of
vllle, In Cor el) County, Texas, a dis-
tance of ab«»t 32 mile*.
An extension of Its m* n kin* rum
Stepbsnvlll*. In Erath county, Texas.,
through the couaty of Erath, th and
Into the town of Thnrber, in Erath
county, Texaa, a distance of about
twenty-six (HJ miles. -
A branch line from a point on Us
I main line in or near the town of Ham
Hamilton county, Texas
Foley’s Kidney Remedy with good ef- *Uon, In Hamilton oounty, Texas,
f^t y.nd the Slrd STtf. put me on my ^ftT^n^of
Comanche! In said Comanche county,
Texas, a distance of about thirty-five
(36) mile*.
Which mortgage and deed of trust
feet and I resumed work on th* Lex-
ington Ky. street railway. It gar* me
more relief than any medicine I had
ever used, end It will do ell you claim
lo cases of rheumatism. ” Foley Kid-
ney Remedy cure* rheumatism by
eliminating the uric acid from the
blood. Sold by 8. F. Smith.
It is said 25,000 persona were
Willed find Injured by the, rail-
roads during the last three
months, —
Rant*
growing animals ths sssratse so
eery to health and proper drtrelep-
ment; and the succulent nr* was. while
Cotton seed of the long staple
v.friety is selling at |80 a-tCfll in
Mississippi; for planting.
There i* -ao-oough medicine so .pop-
ular a< Foley ’* Honey and Tar. It
never falls to cur* cough* and colds
and is especially recommended for
chrnutc aod bronchial cough*.
, tield by Fans Smith. ~
lenals. tend to prevent disease and to
counters’* th# beating and fevsr-hn-
pa-tlng p.-cp#vt1*e-of errn This latter
quality, and exercise, annually »*v*
many thousands ef dohara •« hng rais-
er* In th< United JMkySxi vet tWTbss
do nrt,*cI*upon th# fact that the hog
la, tn htanormal condition, a ranging
and eraae eating animal, la Mill enor-
mous.’* _ ,
EXERCISE PIGS
Porkers Do Seel When ■ Permitted I*
Ore** In Pasture.
Pigs, sbcyld be kept growing from
th* dSy they ere dropped by the sow
jtnlfl th*y nrs sold to th# bulchbr, nnd
should hav#
your ptw#
don’t expect
In growth,
The hog
to as k e*w er a horse, and fattens
best and grows best when given plenty
ef rang* and exnrrte* and an >ipr*»r-
tunllr to forage. Regtdee fhte It lakes
Onel used to appear at tne college
“gaudy” in Mack «hort<.—London
Telegraph. •-
shall apply to said present Una and
contemplated extensions nnd branches
are also to any further extensions of
It* main line and branches, or to nay
branch line* which tt may hereafter
coifttruci. nnd to authorize th* com-
pany to Issue and dispose of its bond*
Which It may hereafter Issue accord-
ing to law, for the purpose of oon-
-truRting siirh further extension- awl
Why Do Yen SnHsr *
With headache, biliousness, consti-
pation and the 111* It entails when Fo-
ley's Orlno Laxative wilt relive and
here you. R tone* up all the rig**-
tlve organs, carries off the. the waste
matter and rtlmulete* the bowels to
their normal activity.. It* a spier.did
spring medicine. Sold by 8. P. Smith.
Gen. George W. Gordon of
Memphis was elected comman-
der of the ' United Confederate
Veterans. The -next re union
wtU-b&b^ldfit Little Rock, Ark.
y castoria'
For Infants and Children.
Tbi KM You Hivi Always Bought
Bears th*
Signature of
Telegraph
A Well Guarded Bank.
The Bank of England is consid-
ered to have one of the most nearly
impregnable vaults of any bank in
the world. It is sixty-six feet be-
low the level of the street. Above
it is twenty feet of concrete, hold-
ing seven feet of water, and below
the same concrete harrier and depth No. 2, Comanche, Texas,
of wster. In this manner tunneling tay§: ”1 wag a victim of rheumatism
for n long time sad the pains aero-s
the small of my back and kidney*
were scut* The re was also an annoy-
ance from the kidney secretion* and
Rath Bryan Leavitt, daughter
of W, J. Bryan, who divorced her
husband several years ago,
announces that she is to marry
an English lieutenant.
EVER WATCHFUL
.■ .44, - - . _
A Little Care will Save Many Co-
manche Readers Much Trouble
Watch the kidney oecretlon.
So* that they have th* amber hue of
health; ■
The discharge* not excosslv* or In-
frequent;
'Contain no “brick-dust like” sedi-
ment.
Doan's Kidney Pill* will do this for
you.
They watch the kidney* and cur*
them when they're sick.
Mrs. W. L. Robertson, rural free
•which It may hereafter lssu* npoord-
aw, fo
branch fines, which *4fd bonds shall
lie secured by ibe terms of said mort-
gage or deed of trust; and to author-
ize the said company te take up, can-
cel and discharge the pseeent out-
standing Issue of bonds of sold com-
pany aggregating six hundred and
fifty eight thousand five hundred
((658 500.U0J dollar* sod the coupons
attached thfreto, and the mortgage or
deed of trust dated October 1st, >907,
securing *^ bonds, and to approva
the action of the board of directors to
amending the article* of Incorpora-
tion of said railway .company and the
action of the offifCrs and board of di-
rectors of said Company, aod to con-
sider all other matters that may prop-
erly come Wore sold wanting. ...
NotlcTTralso hereby given that Im-
mediately after th* adj lurnment of
said stockholders meeting, there will
IS'T.eld k fBWHug uf >l»* kneed nf fit |
rectors of qpld company at said gen-
eral office.
This notice I* given and th* meet-
ing* are called by order of the board
of directors, and by written order of
the stockholders representing a ma-
jority of tb* stock Issued and out-
standing, aod by order of th# proel-
dent. Bi Cl OJWIM," **"
President.
W. 8. Watson, ^S,
Secretory.
StephenvlUe, Texas, April 22, f»10.
IHE WORLDS OHcaIUI btfttNti MACHINE
k J.IGHT RUNNING ^
feoME
beliete in th« security of his “Old
Lady of Threadneedie Street.”. ,
........ ■ -i
1
Thoroughly finjoyedr-
my BtroDgth and energy were tn a low
state. Nothing gave me relief until I ’
began taking Doan’* Kidney Pills, *■
--- —------* Mmitk'a Jam, alrtna Mr
•ft mw yon _fiL the musical* 'yes-
terday afternoon. I’ip so sorry I
ihic-'-L ggt a chance to speak . to
Smith's drug store,
t of their nse was beyond all
my expectation*. They not only
eaused the backache to cease, but
■bade 1t possible for me to sleep well
less work than kaanlng him In a
for the pen most b* hop* risen.
“I thought her accompanist play-
eel awfully loud.” y
“She did. Back where. I sat the
sound of the piano, Mas the only
thing we couia hear.” —• Chicago
Record-Herald.
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Pioneer Exponent and .polls# fisrtl'
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Adams, Jesse M. The Pioneer Exponent. (Comanche, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, May 6, 1910, newspaper, May 6, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1009114/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Comanche Public Library.