Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 141, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 9, 1907 Page: 3 of 8
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GALVESTON TOIBUNE: THURSDAY,
MAY 9,
1907.
3
CLARK HAD
Reduced
To Chicago
POOR CONTROL
RATES
So Galveston Lost First
Fort
Tex.,
one
Game to Dallas
that is
CLEVER PLAYING
ANNOUNCEMENT
AUDITOR FOR
k
BY BOTH TEAMS
best in service and
THE TERMINAL
4
)
equipment.
Leaves
A
Union Station
L
and
m.
YELLOW STREAK
BY JACK O’BRIEN
8.20
a.
m.
Carries
5
car,
or
He was freight
J
failed
Southern
Railway
an-
l.
t
a
)
I
I?
TEXAS NEWS NOTES
l
made
T. & B. V. OFFICES.
were
and fight.
man
THE NEWS BRIEFED
METROPOLITAN HANDICAP.
I
SATISFIED
the
You will be if you buy your
I
1
♦
Like Pie?
f
V
go,
SCHEDULE OE THS
owners
•Try one of
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS
1
Totals
23
2
9
2
To and From the Galveston Station. Northwest Corner Strand and 25th St.
FISH INSPECTS LINES.
Grape-Nuts
Tastes much like Pumpkin Pie.
8:45 a. m.
Arrive.
27 1
Totals
2
24
14
0
In discussing his trip
8 9
UNCLE EPH will save you money.
0 0-2
Depart.
2:00 p. m
RECIPE:
4:10 a. m.
r
out—By
3,
by
eff
Arrive.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
4
Maag,
Stark,
I
Depart.
Arrive.
8:00 p. m.
11:50 a. m.
There’s a Reason”
4
*
■ <
Savory
Winning
Healthful
J. Van den Broeck of Galveston
Appointed Auditor for Terminal
Co>—Frisco Officers.
Outclassed EntirelybyTommy Burns
in Battle for Heavyweight Cham-
pionship of World.
San Francisco
Portland, Or.,
San Antonio Beats Waco and Tem-
ple and Fort Worth Also Win
Out—Other Scores.
This pie is digestible and wonderfully nourishing, for it is mostly
Grape-Nuts, the most scientifically made food in existence.
Read “The Road to Wellville” in pkgs.
He rosseeses nothing to whom his pos-
sessions cr® everything.
Depart.
7:00 p. m
8.35 a. m
13:10 p. m.
Arrive.
10:25 p. m.
0:23 p. rn.
8:20 p.m.
Arrive.
0:30 a. m.
Arrive.
7:45 a. m.
0:30 p. m.
$51.45
$66.45
By innings—
Galveston
Dallas
Clubs—
San Antonio
Dallas
Waco
Temple
Houston
Galveston ...
Austin
Fort Worth..
2
0
0
3
0
0
4
0
2
5
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
6
6
6
7
7
8
7
11
10
4
2
0
2
3
1
2
4
1
0
1
O'
2
0
0
0
0
has
the
7
6
5:40 p. m.
7:30 p. m.
10:05 p. m. ,
6. & I. R. R.
THE SHORT and DI-
RECT ROUTE TO
THE EAST.
SAN ANTONIO 3, WACO 2.
Special to The Tribune.
Waco* Tex.* May 8.—yher -Bronchos
10
9
7 '
7
7
7
6
5
0
0
1
2
1
0
1
7
0
0
GALVESTON—
Haidt, 2b
Farrell, rf
Kane, ss
Weikart, lb
Cavanuagh, If. ..,
Baird, 3b
Preston, cf. ......
Hess, c
Clark, p
♦Block
DALLAS—
Miller, lb
Maag, 2b
O’Brien, rf. ...
Riley, If
Stark, ss
Maloney, cf. ..
Kerns, c
Tullos, 3b
Biersdorfer, p.
po-
As Billy
8:30 p. m.
10:40 a. m.
10:20 p. m.
3:05 p. m.
F. M. Gilbough
Is a Candidate for
$56.50
On sale May 1 to
Nov. 30
$40.25
On sale May 1 to
Nov. 30
.625
.600
.533
.500
.500
.467
.462
.313
City Commissioner
And Solicits Your Vote and Support.
Election May 14, 1907.
G. L. Cobb, S. W. P. A. -
907 Main Street
Kansas City, Mo.
Sam Bennison
Is a Candidate for
City Commissioner
And Solicits Your Vote and Support,
Election May 14, 1907.
On your next trip to Chicago there is
< but one train to consider—the
your
travelers who want the
made errors.
By innings—
San Antonio.
Waco
Chicago,
Milwaukee & St. Paul
Depart. GALVESTON, HOUSTON & HENDERSON.
4:10 a. m. .Southern Pacific eastbound and II. &T. C. connection
8:30 a. m.H. & T. C. and Southern Pacific westbound connection
4:40 p. m Southern Pacific New Orleans connection
10:10 p. m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)
• ••••..Galveston Sea Wall Special (Sunday only)..,..
with a
stantly
thrown
slammed one against the score board in
left field that was good for two bases.
Maloney’s long fly to left enabled Riley
to score, and Kerns brought Stark in
with a single.
The score:
WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY.
Galveston at Dallas.
San Antonio at Waco.
Austin at Fort Worth.
Houston at Temple.
0
0
0
0
0
0 0
0
1
8
0 0
City of Galveston to Mrs. R. M. Davis,
40 by 130 feet in the northwest quarter
of the northeast quarter of outlot 134;
quit claim.
Chas. H. Lee to John C. Wenman, same;
$675.
J, .C, .Wenman J,o A. .George McKee,
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R. H. E.
.0 00000000—0 7 0
,1 0000001 *— 2 7 0
Depart.
7:05 a. m.,
7:30 a. m.
1:30 p. m
4.25 p. m..Southern Pacific (east bound) and H. & T. C.
3
3
3
3
3
3 -0
3
3
2
1
0
0
0
°<
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0 0
MISSOURI, KANSAS AND TEXAS,
Katy Flyer
Depart. SUNSET ROUTE.
7:25a. m..H. & T. C., G., H. & S. A., T. & N. O. (Beaumont)
1
0
1 2
8
3
4
0 2
0
0
0
Stolz & Koehler, Inc.
Phone No. 064. 24th and Ave. A.
V
M. F. Smith, C. A.
249 Main Street,
Dallas, Texas.
%
4 k i
J
/ r
INTERNATIONAL AND GREAT NORTHERN.
.......Galveston-St Louis Fast Mall
■ St. Louis and Main Line Local
Main Line Local *
Through Passenger and Fort Worth Division.
siauation, confident of the present
hopeful as to the future.”
At the Earnest Request
Of several hundred poll t-.x payers I
hereby announce my candidacy for
Mayor-President, of the City Commis-
sion, election May 14, 1907, and respect-
fully solicit the vote and support of all
citizens who believe in a liberal gov-
ernment with reasonable regulations.
A. W. FLY.
Galveston, Tex., Feb. 13, 1907.
(Advertisement.)
We Are Authorized to Announce
J. M. O. Menard
As a Candidate for
CITY COMMISSIONER
Election May 14, 1907.
Your vote and support is respectfully
Solicited.
GULF & INTERSTATE.
(Via Ferry to and from Foot of 18th Street.)
Galveston-Beaumont
Pour boiling water over one-half cup of Grape-Nuts, let stand ten min-
utes, add two eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, two cups sweet milk, one-
third teaspoonful ginger, one teaspoonful mixed spices, stir over slow fire
until thoroughly boiled. Bake pie dough in deep p&n; when done, put in
prepared Grape-Nuts and return to oven to brown. Cut this out.
GULF, COLORADO & SANTA FE.
.. .Houston-Galveston Special (Sunday only).
• .........-Kansas City-Chicago Express. .... .Dally
Houston-Galveston Express Daily
——Z', “ L T. Z. con-
nection. P.. H, & T. C., S. A. & A. P., H. B. & W. T. con-
nection o Dally
Main Line Local Dally io :35 a. m
.Galveston-St. Louis Limited, via Houston.Daily fliioa, m.
. .Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only) lOiiK a. m
C Air Line
—TO—
iSii Beaumont
Beautiful 28 Mlle Ride Along
the Gulf Shore.
Ctty Ttoket Office, 211 Tremont SC*
and Ferry at Pier 18.
FEED
from us. We always carry a com-
plete stock at lowest market prices.
If you are not buying from us
now, give us your next order.
vilion.
favor.
hour of commencement was down to 10 to
6i/2 on O’Brien. But few large bets were
made. Burns bet $3000 in his favor,
mostly at odds of 10 to 7. Burns weighed
in at 175 pounds, and O’Brien was eight
pounds lighter.
Before the beginning of th© fight Ref-
eree Eyler declared al! bets off, under in-
structions from Manager Carey of the
Pacific Athletic club. Eyler said he was
unabl© to give the reason for this action.
000 prize, will be run at the opening of
Belmont Park, New York, today.
One life was lost and many persona
were injured in a fire at Kansas City,
Mo., which destroyed a five-story build-
ing.
Wf OIL BURNINC jfll
I LOCOMOTIVES I
DOUBT ABOUT SIZE OF PURSE.
By Associated Press.
Los Angeles, Cali., May 9.—After the
Burns-O’Brien fight last night no expla-
nation could be secured for the calling
off of bets on the fight. The fight was
advertised to be for a $30,000 purse, but
this was disputed in some quarters. It
is rumored that there was a wrangle
over the size of the purse, which did not
come up to expectations, and the dispute
arising from this resulted in the bets
being declared off.
ShoweryAVeather Threatens to Spoil Sport
at Belmont Park today.
By Associated Press.
New . York, May 9.—Showery weather
threatens in a measure to spoil the rac-
ing of Belmont Park where the rich
Metropolitan handicap is to be decided
today. Rain fell early today and the
overcast sky indicates that the weather
man was right when he foreshadowed
showery day. However, a goodly sized
any
will
will
thus
mile
CityClubTicket
For Re-election
FOR MAYOR-PRESIDENT
H. A. LANDES
FOR CITY COMMISSIONERS
H. C. LANGE
V. E. AUSTIN
A. P. NORMAN
I/H. KEMPNER
Election May 14th, 1907
Their record is a guarantee for the
future. They stand as a unit for the
upbuilding of our city. Under the most
adverse conditions they have given
Galveston its best city government.
Every citizen who has the welfare of
Galveston at heart should vote for
their re-election.
(Advertisement.)
connection
5:00 p. m New Orleans Express
7:05 p. m. .Southern Pacific (west bound) connection. G., H. &
S. A., H. & T. C., N. Y., T. & M. connection 9:20 p.m
9:30 p. .Island City Flyer (Sunday only) 2:55p.m.
AB.R.BH.PO.A.E.
2
3
3
4
3
2
3
2
1
123456789 R. H.E.
.1 0100000 0— 2 5 2
.0 0301100 *— 5 7 4
One hundred conversions
during a revival at Bryan.
The Woman’s Press association is ta
meet in Fort Worth next year.
Details of the killing of Bean at Del
Rio show that he was the aggressor.
The South Texas Fruit and Truck
Growers’ association adjourned its meet-
ing at Algoa.
Another heavy rain, accompanied by
wind that did some damage, fell over
South Texas.
Texas lumber men say they can easily,
supply the demands of the government on
the last specifications.
None but the Saratoga oil workers voted
for a general strike, and many of the
strikers are returning to work.
On account of the need of work on the
farms just now, the session of the county
court at Hempstead was cut short.
The sheriff of Travis county was ad-
vised that H. Clay Pierce had been ar-
rested in St. Louis on a charge of per-
jury found in Texas.
The ire of the governor has been raised,
and he sent a special message to tha
legislature that if the bills taxing corpor-
ations should not be passed, he would
veto the other tax bills.
The latter two rates good going via
New York one way.
“SANTA FE,” the Scenic Route to
California and only one change of cars,
in St. Louis, going to the Exposition.
M. NAUMANN, Gen. Agent.
$70.95 —On sale May 1 to Nov. 30.
Limit Dec. 18.
$59.1 5—On sale May 1 to Nov. 30.
Limit 63 days.
MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS.
National—St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 4;
Chicago 12, Brooklyn 4; New York 4,
Pittsburg 0; Boston 6, Cincinnati 0.
American—Cleveland 7, Chicago 5. Rain
elsewhere.
over
southwest, the first
*Batted for Clark in the ninth.
1
.....1
.....0
SUMMARY.
Earned runs—Dallas 2.
Two-base hits—O’Brien and Stark.
Struck out—By Biersdorfer
Clark 4.
Bases on balls—Off Biersdorfer 1,
Clark 4.
Wild pitch—Biersdorfer.
Batter hit—By Clark.
Sacrifice hits—Miller,
Biersdorfer and Farrell.
Time of game—1.20.
Umpire—Quigg.
Game. Won. Lost. Per ct.
.... 16
.... 15
.... 13
.... 14
.... 14
.... 15
.... 13
.... 16
RESULTS YESTERDAY.
Dallas 2, Galveston 1.
San Antonio 3, Waca 2.
Fort Worth 2, Austin 0,
Temple 5, Houston 2.
block 128 in Todor’s addition to Nichol-
stone; $195.
Mary H. Willis and husband to Phoebe
S. Griffin, lots 11 and 12 in block 314, and
improvements; $5600.
Mary A. Farrell et al. to C. J. Heiman,
east half of lot 11 and west 16' 6" of lot 10
in the northwest block of outlot 70; $5.
C. J. Heiman to R. J. F. S. Dreyfus,
same; $1000.
R. J. S. F. Dreyfus to E. W. Owens,
same; $1338.60.
EXCURSION RATES
Quickest, Shortest, Best. Oil Burning Locomo-
tives. No Smoke, Dust or Cinders.
RATES—Jamestown Exposition
NORFOLK, VA.
$50.90
On s He May 1 to
Nov. 30
bunched their hits when the Navigators
Score:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 89 R. H. E.
0 12000000—3 7 3
0 1000100 0— 2 6 2
Batteries—San Antonio, Colgrove and
McMurray; Waco, Guyn and Fisher.
TEMPLE 5, HOUSTON 2.
Special to The Tribune.
Temple, Tex., May 8.—The Houston
team, in trying to kill Jarvis’ curves,
went out 14 times on fly drives, hence
their defeat. Score:
By innings—
Houston 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0— 2 5
Temple 0 0301100 *— 5 7
Batteries—Temple, Jarvis and Ragsdale;
Houston, Vance and Moore.
AND
Return
AND
Return
On Sale April 25 to May IS.
Limit July 31.
Stopovers and Choice of Routes.
Jamestown Exposition-Round Trips
$56,50—On sale May 1 to Nov. 30.
Limit Dec. 18.
$50.90 —On sale May 1 to Nov. 30.
Limit Dec. 17.
$40.25 —On sale May 1 to Nov. 20.
Limit 17 diys.
ftF~ BAGGAGE HAULED
/hp tO ANY PART
L JU o the CITY for £00
OUR CARRIAGES ARE NEW AND
ALL RUBBER TIRED.
BOLTON’S TRANSFER
PHONE 227
DALLAS 2, GALVESTON 1.
Special to The Tribune.
Dallas, Tex., May 8.—Biersdorfer was
the goods today. He had about every-
thing that a baseball pitcher ought to
have, and the result was that, although
when he started the second inning of to-
day’s game with Galveston he was handi-
capped by one run, he and his teammates
had no difficulty in defeating the Sand-
crabs. “
It was an excellent exhibition, replete
with sharp fielding. One criticism to be
offered was the dumb base running by
the Giants. Time and again they were
caught napping, even Capt. Maloney be-
ing among the number. Had it not been
for this the score Would have been great-
er in favor of Dallas.
Clark did not have good control, and he
was hit when hits meant runs. His passes
to first proved costly. Th® Giants played
the hit-and-run game to perfection. In
the first inning Haidt hit the first ball
pitched, driving it safely over second
base for a single. Farrell sacrificed him
along to second. A moment later Kerris
tried to throw him out. The ball flew
wild, and Haidt trotted in with the only-
score the Sandcrabs made during the
game. »
The two runs credited to the Giants
were made in the fourth. O'Brien led off
two-bagger, but was almost in-
caught napping at second and
out. Riley singled and Stark
a
crowd will journey to the track in
event, even though disappointment
be felt at the. fact that the race
probably have to be run in the mud,
spoiling the chances to break the
record, which, it was expected, was likely
to occur because of the many high class
horses in the Metropolitan and their splen-
did condition.
Roseben, no matter what the conditions
of the track may be, is almost certain to
be the favorite. The big horse is in grand
shape, has worked well, and his owner
has made no secret of the fact that he
expects to win. Sewell, Tanya, Tokalon,
winner of last year’s Brooklyn handicap;
Superman, Dandelion, Glorifier and other
fast horses are, however, carded to
and shrewd horsemen say it will not be
the easy race that Roseben’s
seem to expect.
Quarters Leased in the Shaw Building
for Yoakum Lines.
The Trinity and Brazos Valley will es-
tablish offices in Galveston on June 1.
In fact, the new quarters have been
leased in the Shaw building on the west
side of Tremont, the second door north
of Market street, in the building now oc-
cupied by the Majestic moving picture
theater, which will vacate the latter part
of this month.
The uptown offices of the Trinity and
Brazos Valley, representing the Frisco-
Rock Island interests, will be elegantly
fitted up and furnished and will compare
favorably with the finest city offices of
any road in Texas. Mr. J. E. W. Fields,
whose appointment as assistant general
freight agent of the Trinity and Brazos
Valley was announced in the Tribune
three days ago, will have his office in
this building, as will also Mr. T. A. Helm,
soliciting freight agent, and the passen-
ger and ticket agent, whose appointment
has not yet been announced.
The new offices are conveniently lo-
cated in the heart of the city and center
of ‘‘ticket row,” and the Trinity and
Brazos Valley representatives will be wel.
corned as a valuable acquisition to the
Galveston corps of freight and passenger
representatives.
Mr. J. Van den Broeck, a well known
citizen of Galveston, has been appointed
auditor of the Galveston Terminal Rail-
way company. The circular announcing
the appointment was sent out yesterday
and is signed by President W. E. Green.
In the selection of Mr. Van den Broeck
the Terminal company engaged a man
thoroughly familiar with this work and
one whose thirty years’ railroad experi-
ence as auditor, accountant and in the
traffic department eminently fits him for
this responsible office. He served as as-
sistant auditor for the Gould system in
New York during the construction of the
Gould lines in Texas.
clerk and agent for the International and
Great Northern at two prominent points
in Texas; was chief rate clerk for the
Texas and Interstate Traffic association
under the late J. Waldo; was chief clerk
of the traffic department of the Southern
Pacific at Houston and also of the Union
Pacific at San Francisco and Denver; was
auditor of the Galveston city railway dur-
ing its reconstruction as an electric line
under the late Col. Sinclair.
Mr. Van den Broeck has entered upon
the duties of his new office, with head-
quarters in the Trust building, and is re-
ceiving the congratulations of his many
friends, who appreciate the fact that the
Terminal company Las made a wise se-
lection.
$70.95 / Diverse Routes via New
$59.15 f York, Steamer or Rail
$31.80 — Mexico City and Return
On sale April 25 to May 18. limited tj July 31.
For further information and sleeper reservation, call at 403 Tremont St. Phone 87.
J. H. MILLER, D. P. A. C. H. COMPTON. City Ticket Agent.
YOUR '‘WANT” is not important to
anyone but yourseii until it has been
♦‘put into type.” Tribune want ads pay
the best.
ELITES WON GAME.
The Elite Magazine baseball team de-
feated the Ball School Second Year by
the score of 12 to 6. Batteries—Elites,
Gordon and Adams; Second Year, Betten-
court, Dreyfus and Niland. The Elites
will play a match game at the Ball
school picnic with the Rosenbergs
some picked-up team.
FORT WORTH 2, AUSTIN 0.
Special to The Tribune.
Worth, Tex., May 8.—Dupree
proved too much for the Senators, mak-
ing them scatter their hits, and won by
perfect fielding, though neither side made
an error. Score:
By innings—
Austin 0 00000000—0 7
Fort Worth 1 0000001 *— 2 7
Batteries—Fort’Worth, Dupree and Mc-
Kay; Austin, Sutor and Alexander.
5-55 p.m. and
Grand Avenue 6.0
p.m.daily. Arrives Union^^^
Station, Chicago,
compartment - observation
and standard sleepers with “longer,
wider, and higher berths,” chair
dining car and coaches.
preferred by most of
friends and other
By Associated Press.
Los Angeles, Cali., May 9.—Tommy
Burns of Los Anegles won the heavy-
weight championship of the world from
Philadelphia Jack O’Brien before the Pa-
cific Athletic club here last night after
20 rounds of fighting that was for the
most part a foot race. O’Brien ran
away from Burns from the first round to
the finish, and only occasionally was the
latter able to overtake him. Then O’Brien
invariably clinched with Burns and held
on until the referee pried them apart.
The crowd hooted and jeered O'Brien and
hurled all sorts of raillery at him as he
raced about the ring. But very few
blows of any vigor were landed by either
man and neither suffered any apparent
damage.
Both O’Brien’s eyes were damaged and
his lips were cut open, but Burns had
scarcely a scratch. Burns showed his
disgust with the tactics of his opponent
iand called to him repeatedly to come on
Burns would chase his
around the ring, O’Brien running as if in
terror of his antagonist. Now and then
Burns would overtake him and beat him
on the back, O’Brien attempting wildly
to duck and dodge away until Burns,
weary of th© foot race, would stand in
the center of the ring with his hands to
his sides and wait for O’Brien to come to
a halt. O’Brien landed many light blows
at long range on Burns’ head and face
during his Papers about the floor. But
they were absolutely without effect.
Clinches were frequent. The referee had
the greatest difficulty in prying the men
apart, or rather, prying O’Brien loose
from Burns. The referee cautioned
O’Brien about his holding on tactics and
finally told him he must stop It.
Probably 3000 persons were in the pa-
The betting was all in O’Brien’s
It started at 10 to 8, and at the
6 27
AB.R.BH.PO.A.E.
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The Argentine congress has convened.
A six-story building in Omaha col-
lapsed.
Foraker declares he will support Taft
for president.
A disastrous wreck occurred off
coast of Uruguay.
A young lady was killed in an auto ac-
cident near Asbury Park, N. J.
It was officially announced that Mexico
will not go to war with Guatemala.
It is stated that a revolution will break
out in Guatemala within thirty days.
The strikes at the Southern Pacific and
Mallory lines in New York have been set-
tled.
Clyde St. Clair was shot and killed by
Van Toppan at Independence, Mo., over
a love affair.
Attorney General Bonaparte replied to
newspaper articles charging inefficiency
in his department.
The Metropolitan handicap, with a $10,-
Famous Railroader Says Country is Pros-
perous—Predicts Bright Future.
By Associated Press.
New York, May 9.—Stuyvesan Fish
returned from a 7000-mile trip
Gould lines in the
inspection trip that he has made since
his recent election to the directorate of
the Missouri Pacific. Mr. Fish said that
his trip had convinced him that the coun-
try is all right.
Mr. Fish said:
‘‘In Chicago, St. Louis, Memphis, Little
Rock, Fort Smith, Wichita, Kansas City,
St. Joseph-, Pueblo, Denver and other
places we visited, bankers, merchants and
manufacturers, who, while appreciating
that some damage has been done to
crops and that the season is late, ex-
pressed themselves well satisfied with the
and
TONY SMITH COMING BACK.
Shortstop Tony Smith has apparently
to make good in the
league, for the local club owners
nounce that the clever and popular in-
fielder is to rejoin the Sandcrabs when
they return home. That will mean
shift for Jerry Kane to some other
sition—probably the outfield.
Disch is to join the Sandcrabs at Austin
on the 15th there will be a. move also for
either Cavanaugh or Baird.
Pitcher Torrey, the Shreveport south-
paw, who was so effective against the
locals in the Sunday game the Louisi-
anians played here, joins the Sandcrabs
today at Dallas. Weikart has been sadly
In need of a lefthanded pitcher and Tor-
rey is the man he has long been after.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 141, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 9, 1907, newspaper, May 9, 1907; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1345712/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.