Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 170, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 6, 1900 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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2
THE GALVESTON TRIBUNE.
Work
CURES
THE
^7
/
BUT HE DIDN’T KNOW OF IT1
U
Serpent’s
7/
years.
SALUTING IN THE NAVY.
5ting
1
£
He
war
one
—•
-i
i
a
T,
£ /
THE ONLY ANTIDOTE
COVERED WITH SORES.
his respects.
ex-
now.
ARMY AND NAVY.
!omj)leted
j
am
run
reporter
R.
was the
the un-
<
X
re-
rear
w.
of
INCONSISTENCIES OF ENGLISH.
WHOLE EAGLES ON .SHOES,
a
re-
r"
n SU
Let
■SIMPLY COLDN’T SEE THE JOKE;
LUCK.
And
way
was
iw
'If,
upon
s
OlC
to-
F
•-
W
i
25c a
Try Tribune Want ads. low aa 15o.
i;
Never Oisappp,
Yet Employment Was Awaiting
Eddie Dodds.
appointed hour. He sends-
Quartermaster and orders
of the government of the
DIED BECAUSE
HE HAD NO WORK.
Weighed Down by Troubles and in
Despair He Took a Dose of
Strychnine.
In the
suddenly
A true genius imagines that people mis-
understand' him.
1 '
M
WU1 11 < <
»*■
&
/T"tu
/
[St) OM/d. (
| G O o fc \ |
°
bl*
J
w.
New York World.
Sam Levy, the Chesterfield of the -east;
side, who will outshine “Bathhouse John” :
of Chicago when he appears on the Bow-!
ery with his new spring suit, which is:
now being -made, has announced that he i
will revolutionize shoemaking in this COun-i
D. By-
num as general appraiser at the port
New York was rejected by a tie vote.
I
r
•1
• m
ay-'M
For the Love of Gold—Nell: “(Nara
certainly never married that man for
love. He’s old enough to be her grand-
father.” Bess: “Oh, yes she did. Shq
loves money, and he’s a-millionaire.”
rar ■'
jB®
P
!* 77ie constant care causes sleeplessness,
toss of appetite, extreme nervousness, and
that tired feeling. But a wonderful
change comes when Hood's Sarsaparilla
is taken. It gives pure, rich blood, good
.appetite, steady nerves.
Matinee actors and summer girls ara
alike in one thing—they are only engaged
for a season.
O Of
I
L
W J
ili X
MRS. WINSLOW’S SOOTHING SYRUP
has been used for over 50 years by millions
of mothers for their children while teeth-
iuk with perfect success. It soothes the
child, softens the gums, allays all pain;
cures wind colic, and is the best remedy
for diarrhoea. Sold by druggists in every
nart of the world. Be sure and ask for
“Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,” and
take no other kind. 25c a bottle.
I®
w/
BAD JUDGMENT. a
"What seems to be de trouble ober dar at Bass ones’?”
“Why he hawled a load ob chickens to market yisfedy, and dat onery mewl ob
his’n backed de cart inter de ribber an’ dey all got drowned; an’ now de ole woman;
she’s Taisen’ de debbll bekase he didn’t have ducks.”
FISHERMAN’S
‘‘Hello, Bill! Chtchin’ fish, eh?”
“Nope; fishin’.”
f
/©x Ri
© ipWifitk
A!
afiiLrWIWilli
UislfBn Before Bailie
f
STORY OF A SLAVE.
To be bound hand and foot for years by
the chains of disease is the worst form of
slavery. George D. Williams, of Man-
chester, Mich., tells how such a slave was
made free. He says: “My wife has been
so helpless for five years that she could
not turn over in bed alone. After using
two bottles of Electric Bitters, she Is won-
derfully improved and able to do her own
work.” This supreme remedy for female
diseases quickly cures nervousness, sleep-
lessness, melancholy, headache, backache,
fainting and dizzy spells. This miracle
working medicine is a godsend to weak,
sickly, run down people. Every bottle
guaranteed. Only 50 cents. Sold by J. J.
Schott, druggist.
I was afflicted with a terrible blood disease ; my
mouth was full of sores and ulcers, eruptions
appeared on my body, in spots at first, but afterwards spread all over my body. These soon broke
out into sores, and it is easy to imagine the suffering I endured. Before I became convinced that the
doctors could do no good I had spent a hundred dollars, which was really thrown away. I then, tried
various patent medicines, but they did not reach the disease. When I had finished my first bottle of
S. S. S. I was greatly improved, and was delighted with the result. The large red splotches on my
chest began to grow paler and smaller. I regained my lost weight, became stronger, and my appetite
greatly improved. I was soon entirely well, and my skin as clear as a piece of glass.—H. U Myers,
ioo Mulberry street, Newark, N. j. ' ' ' 5 a '
THEY LOOK BAD.
’Old, worn out Pianos and the new cheap,
shoddy kind in the p.arlors of musical peo-
ple and people of culture who can afford
better instruments.
We take these in exchange, and after
renovating, sell them to people of limited
means on easy payments.
THOS. GOGGAN & BRO.,
Corner 22d and Market Streeas, Galveston.
Try Tribune Want ads. low as 15e.
read:
“Found—A fine sealskin glove. Owner
will confer a favor by leaving the other
glove at this office.”
They all laughed except the English
clergjAnan. His face wore a puzzled look,
and one of his friends, noticing.it, said:
“Don’t you see? Man found a glove,
doesn’t offer to return it, but wants the
owner to send him the other. See?”
“Y-e-s,” said the clergyman, evidently
not reassuring, “but, then, don’t you see,
the advertisement would enable the owner
of the lost glove readily to, get on the
track of it?”
apprd
■■Lr-h of the visitor, and .
^een to have “shoved off” ■
^word is passed to the commanding officer
and‘subordinate officers who are concern-
ed. in the demonstration. The visit is at- :
tended with much ceremony, including
the calling out of the marine guard, if ■
One be on board the ship. The visitor is
escorted to the- captain’s cabin and is en-
tertained at the expense of the com- .
Jnanding officer. The call ’ is usually of ;
only a few moments’ duration and, in'
moSt instances, is of a stiffly formal char- '
acter, sometimes carried on with the aid;
of an interpreter. I
•It is when the visitor leaves the ship;
that the salute is fired and not until he !
,1s well free of the vessel. This custom is
observed as a protection against disaster.
and is dictated by experience. Serious i
and sometimes fatal, accidents have oc-
•curred to members of the visiting party
by the discharge of a. gun. Simultaneous-;
‘ly with the firing of the. gun, the flag of:
the ship’s country and the flag of the vis- i
.i-tor’s country are displayed. They are
.•hauled down together when the last gun
salute has been fired.
“ ■
try.
The lastest in that line are Sam’s new
tan colored shoes. The uppers will be dec-,
orated with a large-spread American ea-;
gle. The head of the bird will rest on the
front part of the shoe and a wing will be
on either side. The eagle will be hand-
stiched with yellow and black silk. The:
upper part of the shoe will be shaped Tike
a pair of wings. Then the double soles
will be stiched in a manner that suggests
a stairway.
A correspondent says that in Manila at
this time drunken soldiers are found
every day in the city streets, which would
indicate that the jag follows the flag.
The German art journal, Kuntswerk, is
waging war against the monotonous ap-
pearance of city houses. It wants them
painted in the divers colors of old villages.
--•------------
A hungry man usually disregards all
rules of table etiquette.
Poultrymen, Germozone cures sore heads,;
warts, chicken pox, and cancer. Use it;
freely and keep your poultry healthy. ’
Phone 703. HANNA & LEONARD.
The nomination of Gen. Wheeler to be a
brigadier general and Gen.. Elwell B.
Otis'tb be major general were confirmed.
C. R. Breckinridge of Arkansas, to.be
commissioner to negotiate with the In-
dians of the Cherokee and Choctaw,
Chickasaw, Muscogee and Seminole. na-
tions.
Court of private land claims: J.
Reed of Iowa to; be chief justice and T.
C. Fuller of North Carolina, W. W. Mur-
ray of Tennessee, H. C. Sluss of Kansas
and W. F. Stone of Colorado to be .assist-
ant justices.
The senate also confirmed the Porto
Rico appointments made by the president
yesterday.
The nomination of Hon.
Mail and Express.
Speaking of the inability of some word
thy people who reside in the British isle
to appreciate a joke, let me tell you of
•what happened in southern. France one
evening last winter. It was after dinner
at one of the big hotels, and a little com-
pany of tourists sat smoking and telling
stories. When my time came I repeated
an advertisement sent to a Boston paper.
This was the way the advertisement
RAG TIME AS A BOND OF BROTHER-
HOOD.
Cincinnati Enquirer.
Cleveland—Because many Cleveland min-
isters have opposed Sunday band concerts
in the parks Conrad Mizer,chairman of the
. citizens’’ committee on the park concerts,
today addressed the city ministers, declar-
ing that rag time music is just the thing
for park concerts.
“Rag time,” said Mizer, “has done more
to bring the negro to the white man’s af-
fection than any other known power since:
the civil war. Gentlemen, rag time has un-. {ngV ^iih, perfect success,
consciously established a brotherhood be-
tween the two races.”
.There is one particularly pathetic Inci-
dent connected with the death of Eddie
Dodds, who committed suicide yesterday
evening by taking-strychnine. Dodds was
in desperate -financial straits. He had
tried in dozens of ways to get work. Ap-
parently every avenue of employment was
closed to him, and, discouraged by reason
of the many troubles that had been, vis-
ited upon him recently, .and despairing of
his ability to make a living for his family,
he killed himself. Yet at the time he was
most dejected—at the time he was plan-
ning to take his life—a reporter of The
Tribune, to whom Dodds had appealed for
assistance toward getting employment,
was on the lookout for him, having made
arrangements whereby he could get work.
Shortly . before noon Monday .Dodds
stopped the reporter at 22d and Postoffice
streets and asked if the reporter knew
of any kind of work he could get.
“I have to get something,” said Dodds.
“I don’t care what it is as long as I can
make-enough to live on and feed the chil-
dren. Do you know of anything I can
Hot Words in the Senate Over a Charge
Made by Pettigrew.
Washington, D. C., June 6.—A tornado of
partisan debate swept over the senate yes-
terday, with Senators Hanna of Ohio, Pet-
tigrew of South Dakota and Carter of
Montana the chief figures. For sensation-
al criminations and recriminations, for
bitter personalities and for poignant in-
vective the debate exceeded any heard
on the floor of the chamber for many
The lie was not passed directly,
but the truthfulness of statements was
challenged sharply.
Senator Pettigrew declared that $400,-
000 had been giveq to the Republican cam-
paign fund in 1892 by the Cramps of Phil-
adelphia, the same to be returned to them
through the medium of extra contracts
for war ships. He quoted one of the
Cramps as his authority.
Senator Clark vigorously denied this al-
legation. The senator was chairman of
the Republican national campaign com-
mittee in 1892.
Mr.
YESTERDAY'S DEBATE.
the enjoyment of domestic happiness.
disease, or perhaps it will make its appearance
in the form of Scrofula or some terrible skin
trouble. What a horrible inheritance to leave
to innocent posterity.
S. S. S. has for fifty years been curing Con-
tagious Blood Poison in all stages. It is the
only antidote, the only remedy that can over-
come this peculiar virus. It searches out and
removes every vestage of the poison from the
The cure is thorough and permanent. No matter how
x — -------> - — when the constitution has been broken down by the inroads of disease and effects of Mercury and Potash,
S. S. S. will build you up and restore your blood to a healthy, vigorous condition. It is the only purely vegetable blood purifier known. It contains not
one parJa^l&Tpf Mercury, Potash, Arsenic, or any
poisonotfsldrug. It leaves no bad effects, no matter how
long it i|^t^l<eji, but builds up the general health while
purifying-ithe,blood. It is nature’s remedy, and guar-
anteed abstflhtely harmless. 0
.fid- bo
CURE; YOURSELF AT HOME.
b awed . ' ‘ “
Ouri-bookj on Contagious Blood Poison contains
valuable' tHlormation about this disease, with full and
complete*jtireepons for self-treatment,
any one diwi-ng it. Write for it.
Our physicians have made a
medical advice.
men en-
GM ■
Contagious Blood Poison is
the most treacherous, the most
degrading and humiliating of all
diseases, and no other is so surely
handed down from parent to child
—from generation to generation—
and many severe cases of Rheuma-
tism, Scrofula, Sores and Ulcers and obstinate skin troubles can be traced to this
blood poison taint. The doctors know as little about this diseasgmow as they did
one hundred years ago, as they still prescribe Mercury and- Potash to be taken from
two to three years with the result that at the end of that time the patient is in a
worse condition than when the treatment was begun—aching bones and muscles,
offensive sores and ulcers, spongy gums, and loss of hair and finger nails may be
expected when the system has been saturated with these poisonous minerals. ; w _
Mercury and-Potash do not cure Contagious Blood Poison. Under their use
all signs of the disease may disappear, but when the treatment is left off the same ' V
old symptoms reappear, and those who rely upon these minerals find to their fy/B
sorrow ‘‘thb-snake has onl^- been scotched, not killed W-W
Contagious Blood Poison is a dangerous disease — always at work, though
you may see no sign of it on the outside. You know from the frequent pains and
general run - down condition of your system that the poison is doing its deadly
work within you. A person afflicted with this terrible disease is unfitted to
occupy the station in life he aspires to in the business and social world, and must deny himself
__ __ __ If your blood is tainted, it is certain that your children will inherit the same
is Never Done."
FOR THIS DEADLY POISON.
System, and there is never any return of this vile disease to embarrass and humiliate you.
long this poison has been in your blood, even
Poor Blind Love.—Fond Mother: “Why,
Ethel, you’ve got white powder all over
your face!” Ethel: “Yes, mother, dear,
you see George is going away for a month
and I want him to see how terribly I
suffer.”
-
gi^^vodds a note to Travis, just as I tell
you.” '
The reporter went to Dodds’ old store,
pn Market ’street, .next to Goggan’s, but
Mr. John A. Caplefi said he' hadn’t seen
Dodds in a month. Expecting to
across Dodds on the street, and being too
busy to go hunting for him, the
did nothing further.
The next thing that developed
news of the self-destruction of
fortunate man.
Saturday Evening Post.
Some one has estimated that it costs a
million dollars a year to fire the military
and naval salutes of the world demanded
by international and service etiquette. All
governments use an inferior grade of am-
munition for the purpose, the United
■States, for instance, expending its con-
demned powder in this way, but with even
ihis economical resort, the cost of the
noisy salute, is prodigious. It has Ijpen
said that the roar of the saluting gun
never ceases—that is, at some place, dur-
ing every second of time, a salute is be-
ing fired. This furnishes an idea, of the
generous- impulses which are demonstrat-
.< ted between nations or as marks of indi-
vidual respect. '
The saluting-customs are most critically
pfoserved by those whose duty, it is to
■parry them out. In the army the regula-
ifdns are comparatively simple, but in the
navy, where our ships are constantly vis-
iting foreign ports, and are encountering
new observances, the etiquette of salut-
.. ing. is quite formidable.
Usually on our ships of war rapid fire
guns of three-pounder type are- used for
-firing salutes. They make sufficient noise
-with the minimum expenditure of powder,
and noise is the principal feature of the
gun salute. When an American vessel is
in a foreign port -where there is also a
disting-uished naval officer of another gov-
ernment, the latter sends a- formal note to
the American officer advising him of the
day and hour of his intended visit to pay
The American officer calls
his orderly and sends word to the first
lieutenant, who, in. turn, advises the ord-
nance officer. The latter sends for the
gunner’s mate and directs him to have ev-
erything in readiness for the- regulation
salute at the
also for the
that the flag
visitor be made ready for proper display.
An hour before the time of the visit
active preparations; have beezj
i +h.e .spectacular recept*
n _ ;*1,? cart-
fcartridges are Laid several extra
is kept-of the annrc^B^- A careful watch
.when he is
“Inner Life of Lee.”
When the armies of Gen. Lee and Gen.
Meade were confronting each other at
Mine Run, Va., in November, 1863, Gen.
Lee, with his staff, was riding along his
battle line, inspecting his own troops and
reconnoitering the opposing lines.
of A. P. Hill’s corps he
came upon a large number of
gaged in one of those prayer meetings
which we frequently had on the eve o-f
battle. The general at once halted, dis-
mounted and joined in the simple service,
and when those humble private soldiers
arose from. their knees they found that
they had been leading the devotions of
their honored and beloved chief.
He closed his order for the observance
of the “.Fast day” appointed by President
Davis for Aug. 21, 1'863, with these ringing
words:
“Soldiers, we have sinned against Al-
mighty God. We have forgotten his sig-
nal mercies, and have cultivated
vengeful, haughty and boastful spirit. We
have not remembered that the defenders
of a just cause should be pure in his eyes.
Let us humble ourselves before him.
us confess our many sins and beseech him
to -give us a higher courage, a purer pa-
triotism, a more determined will—that he
will convert the hearts of our enemies—
that he will hasten the time when war>
with its sorrows .and sufferings, shall
cease—and that he will give us a name
and place among the nations of the earth.
—R. E. Lee, General.”
I can never forget the effect produced
by the reading of this order at the solemn
services of this memorable fast day. A
revival was already in progress in many
of the commands—the day was almost uni-
versally observed—the attendance
preaching and other services was very
large. The solemn attention and starting
tear attested the deep interest felt, and
the work of grace among the troops was
widened and deepened, and went glorious-
ly on until AVer 15,000 of the soldiers of
Lee’s army ffl\d professed repentance
ward God and faith in Jesus Christ.
F ¥
" Woman's
Sheffield Weekly News.
A Frenchman, after toiling conscien-
tiously through a good many exercises, ■
had the following dialogue with his mas- ;
ter: =
Dodds had a large family. Formerly he ;
lived over his Market street store. His
failure was a surprise, as he seemed to en-
joy a very good business. He was. sober, :
painstaking and as hardworking as. man
could be. He was hardly fitted for manual :
labor,’ weighing only 115 or 120 pounds and
being about 40 years old, but after his .
failure he searched this city high and low
in search of work and would have done
anything from digging ditches to screwing
cotton in order to make a living.
Yesterday afternoon, despairing and ;
half crazed, he. took strychnine. He was ■
so bent on death that he resented the, ef-;
forts to have him. !
“How do you pronounce t-o-u-g-h?” i
“It is pronounced ‘tuff.’ ”
“Eh, bien, ‘tuff;’ ‘snuff,’ then, is spelt;
‘s-n-o-u-g-h,’ is it not?”
“Oh, no; ‘snuff’ is spelt s-n-u-ff. As a ■
matter of fact, words ending in o-u-g-h .
are somewhat irregular.” ;
“Oh, I see, a superb language! T-o-u-*g-ii i
is ‘tuff,’ and c-o-u-g-h is ‘cuff.’ I have a'
very bad ‘cuff.’ ”
“No, it is ‘coff,’ not ‘cuff.’ ”
“Very well, coff, tuff and cuff,
d-o-u-g-h is ‘duff,’ eh?”
“No, not ‘duff.’ ”
“ ‘Doff,’ then?”
“No, ‘doh.’ ”
“Well, then, what about h-o-u-g-h?”
“That is pronounced hock.”
“ ‘Hock?’ Then I suppose the thing the :
farmer uses, the p-l-o-u-g-h, is ‘pluff,’ or
is it ‘plohck,’ or ‘plo?’ Fine language—:
‘plo.’ ”
“No, no, it is pronounced ‘plow.’ ”
“I shall soon .master English, I am sure.
Here we go. ‘.Plow,’ ‘coff,’ ‘toff,’ ‘hohek,’
and now, here is another---r-o-u-g-h;
that is ‘row,’ I suppose?”
“Oh, no, my friend; that’s ‘ruff,’ again.”
“And b-o-u-g-h is ‘buff.’ ”
“No, that happens to be ‘bow.’ ”
“Yes, wonderful language! And I have
just e-n-o-u-g-h of it; that’s ‘enou,’ is it
not?”
"No. ‘Enuff.’ ”
It is sent free to
It tells you how to cure yourself at home, and rid your system of this dangerous poison.
life study of blood poison diseases. Write them fully and freely about your case. -We make no charge whatever for
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA.
v -’
5 Z- j
Carter in closing addressed the
Democratic side, saying:
“But let me give a note of warning to
the brethren on the other side of the
chamber. Ever keep in mind the state-
ments made by the senator from South
Dakota today—statements which I brand,
in so far as. I am concerned, as untrue. I
admonish those who manage political af-
fairs on the other side- to beware and
constantly bear in mind the old adage:
‘Those who lie down with dogs may ex-
pect to get up with fleas.’ ”
At 11.40 p. m. the senate went into execu-
tive session.
At 12.05 the senate resumed business in
legislative session. Several minor bills |.
were passed. The bill providing for the
retirement of certain officers of the army
—relating to Commissary General Egan—
was passed.
The conference reports on the military
academy .and the -extradition bills were
agreed to. These bills now go to the pres-
ident.
Mr. Tillman called up the bill to provide
for a settlement of accounts between the
United States and the state of South Caro-
lina, and it was passed.
Mr. Hale presented a disagreement of
the naval appropriation bill. The report
was accepted a’n<L.a further conference
was agreed to.
: In executive session the senate con-
firmed all the nominations sent in yester-
day except that of one Pennsylvania post-
master.
get?”
The reporter didn’t know of anything.
“I think I .might get on the city railroad
if I could get somebody to speak for me,”
said Dodds. “Do you know Maj. Baer?”
The reporter said he knew the major
and would see him.
“Where can I get hold of you if any-
thing turns up?” asked the reporter.
Dodds said he was living at J7th and
Strand, but if the reporter left -word at
Dodds’ old store it would reach him.
Within 10 minutes of leaving Dodds the
reporter has seen Maf. Baer and
plained Dodds’ position to him. The ma-
jor, kind -hearted -as usual, said he would
do what he could for the unfortunate man.
“I. make it a rule never to hire a .man
over the head of a chief of department,”
said the major, “but you know Travis.
Give Dodds a note to Travis -and I will, in
the meantime, speak to Travis myself.
We have four extr;
Up to March 31 $116,250,000 was the cost
of the English war against the Boers.
Hereafter, according to an order just
issued by Gen. Gallifet, minister of war,
all strong, spirituous liquors and absinthe,
vermouth and other “cordials,” will be
banished from French army barrae'ks,
and the soldiers’ beverages will be
stricted to wine, beer and cider.
A statistical table issued April 23, 1900,
by the adjust'ant general shows the casu-
alties in the 5th corps in the operations
against Santiago-, June 22 to July 17, 1898.
There were 869 officers and 17,349 men pres-
ent for duty on June 30, 1898. The aggre-
gate loss in all the operations was 1688,
made up of 21*officers and 222 men killed;
101 officers and 1844 men wounded. The
agg-reg'ate losses, killed and wounded, for
the different engagements were as fol-
lows: Las Guas-aimas, June 24, 65; El Ca-
ney, July 1, 441; San Juan, July 1-3, 1156;
Aguadores, July 1-2, 12; around Santiago,
July 10-12, 14. Of the aggregate loss, 271 :
was among the six volunteer^ organiza-1
tions, which had a total of 4941 present for
du'ty, leaving a loss of 1417 in the regular
organizations, which had 13,277 present.
Arm's and Explosives, speaking of the;
cost o-f war, says that at the beginning of;
the 18th century, when the British were \
figffiting with their much respected next 1
door neighbor in the war of Spanish;
succession, the duke of Marlborough man-:
aged to effect a successful issue at a cost;
of $910,000,000, and 70 years later the Eng-
lish spent $605,000,000 in the American-,
war of independence. A few years after,
early in the 19th century, Napoleon spent j
$1,275,000,000 in quarreling with the whole;
of Europe, whereas, in generous assist-'
ance with large sums of money and actual ■
participation in thwarting France, Eng--
land paid out $4,155,000,000. In 1854, when
England was fighting side by side with
her old enemy in the Crimea, she spent
$345,000,000; France, $465,000,000, and Russia
lost $710,000,000. The highest war expendi-:
ture, however, of modern times was un-
doubtedly that of the American civil war,:
when the enormous sum of $3,700,000,004
was expended. The Franco-German war
cost France $1,580,000,000.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 170, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 6, 1900, newspaper, June 6, 1900; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1279228/m1/2/?q=112+cavalry: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.