The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, May 28, 1915 Page: 2 of 8
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r
THE
28, 1915.
WHY NOT?
Professional Cards
T/
Upstairs over P. & M. Bank.
COUNTRY SCHOOL IS FACTOR
I
South Side Square.
Daughter is Safe.
»*cinc .
Rooms 3 and 4, Perkins Building.
WITH LIBERAL RETURN LIMIT
1
Herald.
UV-VER-LAX.
»Recom
O.E.S. Election.
All
Fifth Monday Meeting.
Ef
L
Office: Perkins Building.
I
A.
,c
Customers.
E. G. Me
Office 44
Which Are You?
of
104,000 Prisoners.
tore©
RESULTS WILL BE INDIRECT
T
Whole Family Dependent.
Want American Horses.
is an Optimist.
iwn t
sew-
Had Pleasant Time.
Whooping Cough.
William Sherrill entertained
Baseball.
he abruptly
FEDERAL MONEY FOR ROADS
Mrs. G. G. Lindsey, at Naples.
and
Sick Headache.
For a Torpid Liver.
face him and as they
She
I
I
Our own
Why buettasu a.
Of Dr. J.
s.
nave both t
GuZ
. I
L
J t
dOWB.
preae*
f5
1
ing distanc
States. Le
SAGE AND SULPHUR
DARKENS GRAY HAIR
rymple, Crooksville, Ohio,
by The New Drug Store.
Effectiveness, Not the
feet of Calomel.
So Can You
EXCURSION RATES DAILY.
■he quailed,
plclously, but asked
the
The
chine,
fice.
reports customers
ac-
second
came
J. O’NEAL LAND CO.
REAL ESTATE
AND FARM LOANS
1LL1AM E. SAYLE
ATTOUN EY AT LA W
ti'ulb
.nr.lv-.'
T\R. J. A. ELLARD
•J DENTIST
A *
The original Dr. Takes His Own Medicine
is an Optimist.
He has absolute faith in his medi-
he knows when he takes it for
Peo-
ther, “that I used to like to go to par-
- - —------ I can t under
Mrs. Cameron Brecheen and little
daughter left Fri. to spend the week
end with her grandparents, Capt. and
J. D. Allen, R. L. Ervant, Miss
Reid.
Hymn.
Prayer.—Mrs. W. A. Rolle.
J. A. Stephens
greatly pleased with the QUICK
tion of simple buckhorn bark glycer-
An optimist is one who takes 1
home paper, thereby helping along
good cause.
|p began taking would shoot three strikes
says, ‘I the bench the boys would o_.
~-----"J sides played good ball and *the shop-
------aal
former good they go into and in short <
: scalp the “little boys” from
finish.
(XX) to this state from the federal
propriation of *500.000 to assist
building post roads In
We;i
every game
expect to
i start to
He's likely to say be won't
And be ■ so big that I suppose he
Ok
Neal Building.
w
etc., J
to Be
Thirty-Eight
Beginning.
dtH* Sulph ir is that,
darkening The hair ;
■
IuMtm and rivet it
OU OF THE ABSOLUTELY SURE THINGS IN 1EDICBE B
The Pennington
Cure for ^iles
ft
'LW IEJ 1rfco “a stantatoUWkm
. • 1 I 4, 11 9 wtash .lUnlnwtaT ths •fsil
VI /“"A I I to* knife. iigataru, eaaMry —U X"-
Vk '""W*. holle sold tn J.Ct lose and •TTmSu a ease
|\. ^ ' *" Ak MUout lorn of time tr<uu Pae’s
* —c er mmu saroftaf bSSm
21.—The Italian
thousand
States and
great quantities of other suplies.
home of his ]----
W. W. Sherrill, on
Various games were played,
ments were served,
birthday anniversary.
Entrance 1«M Eart *"*’
ine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka. This
simple remedy drains the old foul mat-
ter from the bowels so THOROUGH
--------relieves al-
ANY CASE of constipation, sour
or gassy stomach. It is so powerful
that it is used successfully in appen-
Adler-i-ka never gripes and
the INSTANT action is surprising.
I --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GOOD
ROADS
Uric a<
V-conie ov
fike lumps
the bladdr
to seek rel
When the
off the l><»
sick JMTSO
misery in
backache,
sour, ton?
twinges wl
• Eat les
from any
‘iku a tab
Brush this through faded. lifeless
locks and they become dark,
glossy, youthful.
N. Y., was a ’
and despondency, caused by a l_”,
weakened and debilitated condition of
her stomach, when sh< ‘
Chamberlain’s Tablets. She say.,, I
found them pleasant to t-^e, also mild
and effective.
I was restore-*
' Spend a few days at
MINERAL WELLS
THE HUMAN REPAIR SHOP.
Thousand.- have been benefited by
the Health Restoring Waters of this
Wonderful Resort.
NOTHING STANDS AS HIGH, as a remedy
tor every womanly ailment.
*•'* Hr. Fierce'« Favorite
Proscription. 1 t’» the on/}/
X medicine for women certain
I Id it* effect*.
• •Favorite Prescription" is
j an invigorating, restorative
tonic, a soothing and
strengthening nervine. and
i a < L,r the
1' ,"1- (1* F'ihtff rncntx
Iia 'T1'1■i <l:<order«. and
84 x-
For young girls Just
entering womanhood ; fbr
women at the critical time;
mining mothers; and every woman who
is ’ run-down," tired or overworked —it
Is a special, safe, and certain help.
Mra. Bsmt* CarrN Of No. BU Grant Avenue.
Fort Worth, Texas, myi ;
"I have used Dr. item , Favorite FroA-p.
I tion and ran ear It ie eurely e fine medftiM
and will do all It it claimed to do."
fJl0|n £°a,th an<1 ^”7 H
told in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense- Med-
ical Adviser It Is /res, Send Doctor
Pierce, Buffalo, N, Y., 31 one-vent stamps
to cover wrapping and mailing only.
ties when I was fifteen,
stand him.'"
"If I didn't stand over him,” said
Jimmy's mother, “every single minute,
he d get in his old clothes, with ten-
nis shoes and a negligee shirt, and
wouldn’t care! It's just awful! I'm
sure I don’t know what my friends
A new ribbon on your typewriter
will make it write like a new ma-
Get one at the Journal of-
tf
* -<•
i i boys are the umit i
Reduce Llv.n , Cost.
Qood roads help to . educe the
M AM*
The information conveyed through
the American’s Washington reports
concerning the apportionment of *10.-
ap-
ia
the various
states Is important when the full slg-
The appro-
be divided
very
New York, May
government wants fifty
horses from the United
The chief results of the holiday of
roadmaking recently promoted by ths
governor of Missouri are likely to be
Indirect. After having toiled and
sweated in the sun those who took
part will doubtless have a stronger in-
terest In supporting good roads legis-
lation. whether or not they are as
keen to take part in the actual labor
another year But, while the Missouri
roads may have received large tem-
porary repairs and improvements,
such a holiday, no matter how many
participate in it, can hardly accom-
plish much in the way of permanent
road making, eave the Springfield Re-
publican. And it is permanent road
making of which the country stands in
need Without depreciating the Mis-
souri performance it may be recalled
that the Romans, the greatest road
makers the world has known, did not
do their work in spasmodic festivals,
the roads that they built to last for
centuries were built slowly and la-
boriously
I Prof. C. W. Fowler will succeed
himself as principal teacher at Hor-
ton this year. Miss Berta Cowan of
Lone Oak will be the assistant teach-
er.
Office at Palace Drug Store
, Res. Phone 23.
I ---------
For Surveying and Mapping see'
T1 W. SMITH,
* • Civil Engineer
Office: Room 3, Perkins Bldg.
. ----» Texas.
his that ONE SPOONFUL
J a most
A pessimist is one who
refuses to take, or stops his home pa-
per because it does not measure up to dicitis.
some great city daily or weekly.
T. W. Thompson J. W. Manning
THOMPSON & MANNING
1 ATTOKNEYS-AT-LlWr
Practice in all the courts. North-
east corner square. Greenville, Texas.
Following is the program for the
Fifth Monday meeting to be held at
the Presbyterian church, Monday,
May 30, 1915.
Subject.—Social service.
Devotional.—Mrs. H. D. Wynn.
Prayer.—Mrs. Claude Fuller.
Hymn.
Reading.—Christine Hewitt.
Vocal.—Mildred McCarter.
Paper.—Mrs. Magee.
Music.—Mrs. Thurman Harris.
Paper.—Mrs. C. J. Debenport.
Vocal.—Myrtle Knight.
Round Table.—Mesdames T.
Dillingham, leader; W. H. Fincher, • —__
• i Commerce Druggist Pleases
L. B. Thornton accompanied by Jiis
neice.Miss Agnes Thorntonjeft Siyiir-
day for her home at San Angelo, she
having sufficiently recovered from
year ago my three boys her appendicitis operation to make the
found trip. Mr. Thornton will remain in
the west for two of three weeks.
C"'
, Commerce,
Berlin, May 21.—The official state- I
ment today says that since May 1st '
Genera] McKen$en has captured 104,- '
000 Russian soldiers, 72 cannon, 243 I
machine guns.
The Russians captured yesterday
near Jaroslau were not equipped with j
rifles but with iron clubs.
The British attack near Neuve
Chappelle broke down under the heavy
German fire.
Near Arras the Germans shot do’
all the enemy’s flying machines.
An attack of the French in the for- '
est of Ailley was repulsed with con- ,
siderable loss.
WHY YOU ARE NERVOUS
The nervous system is the alarm system
of the human body.
In perfect health we hardly realize that
we have a network of nerves, but when
health is ebbing, when strength is declin-1
ing, the same nervous system gives the
alarm iu headaches, tiredness, dreamful
sleep, irritaMRity and unless corrected,
leads straight to a breakdown.
To correct nervousness, Scott's Emul-
sion is exactly what you should take; its
nch nutriment gets into the blood and
rich blood feeds the tiny nerve-cells while
the whole system responds to its refresh- ,
ing tome force. It is free from alcohol.
Scott & 3»wue. Woomfield. N. J.
Free Literature on Request.
For particulars as to rates,
ask the agent or write
A. D. BELL, G. D. HUNTER,
Asst. G. P. A. G. P. A.
DALLAS.
In a game of baseball on the round-
house lot Friday afternoon the sec-
ond team defeated the shopmen by a
score of 6 to 5. The game was excit-
ing from start to finish. Fields pitch-
ed a fine game for the second team
and Lawrence was on the receiving
.. Mar-
the 4th
C. MULKEY
V-r. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
w. * t t i • w-. — uh me ret
Mrs. A. I.. Luckie, East Rochester, end and was there at all times.
. .. was a • ictim of sick headache tin pitched good ball and in t..^ ,
badly and 5th innings he had six batters"
came up he
i over and to
•J go. Both
cim
trates the linings of the throat* and c"tain a’Jrnents he gets relief.
Her son i-----—-■ _ —
Uevlngly. The Mlkleion party!” __
"Me going to the Mlkta-
Wish’t I had the
put in that dress suit i
don’t get any use out of it!
buy two or tnree dandy
suits!”
Jimmy did not ask for a
piece of chocolate pie when it__
on for dessert that night, which in it.
self was a serious symptom of some-
thing wrong. He scorned griddle cakes
the next morning and he said be did
not want any lunch.
His mother felt bls pulse, and
slated on looking at his tongue.
"I hope." said Jimmy’s mother to
Jimmy's father, 'that he won't do any-
thing rash when I tell him about the
Mikleson party. He's in such a
dreadful humor theee days that I
don't know In the least how to han-
dle him.
go. _______
won't—he just won't, that's all!
dear. I wish be was a girl!”
When Jimmy caught bls mother ___
lag a loose button on bls dress coat
He eyed the work sus-
questions
Rev. J. H. Taylor has received a j
letter from his daughter, Miss Ida
Taylor, who is in Northern China, as i
a missionary, stating that she is well
and allright. This will be good news
to the many friends of Miss Taylor’s,
who are anxious at all times for her
safety in the foreign fields.—Green-
ville
“I have used Chamberlain’s Tablets
off and on for the past six years
whenever my liver shows signs of be-
ing in a disordered condition. They
have always acted quickly and given
me the desired relief,” writes Mrs.
F. H. Trubus, Springville, N. Y. For
sale by The New Drug Store.
could not interrupt.
to hear the worst
was staring at her disbw
’ he
Liv-Ver-Lax is one of the most im-
portant medical discoveries of recent I —
years. For a long time medical ex-
perts, realizing the harmful effects of
calomel, have been striving to find a
liver cleanser that would be just as ef-
fective as calomel, and yet be abso-
lutely harmless in its action. Recent-
ly this remedy was actually put forth
FIRE AND TORNADO
r INSURANCE
Nothing But Old Line Compaaie*
DR. J. S. SMITH
Office at Commerce Bottling Works.
Appropriation of *500.000.
CMvtaeO Among
States la Small
W4ATTINGLY & CO.
1V1 PLUMBERS AND TINNER#
Guttering and cisterns a specialty.
Tanks of all descriptions. Let ua
figure with you. Southeast corner
square. Phone 163.
Good Roads Mean Higher Moral and
Educational Standard—Should Ba
Regarded as Investment.
Maintaining Good Roads.
The making of good roads Is
of the most important duties of tl>r
Azneriean people and their prompt
repair and careful maintenance is
eeaentlal There is probably no sub-
ject in which the progressive farmer
1s more deeply Interested than that of
h-rtng roads connecting him with his
a... k -ts over which he may be able to
haul lii< rreater possible load Good
roads, like . other good things, are
too expm.lv. t. fi '1<J .nd Of too much
setae to be nag I. if.
- ----g—ftvrwvs Iran a
weeks’ time men show up better in
my f_______
I | foef' a'th. gikg p.ale by The New Drug
<:‘;7 -----------------
WATER
•- *eal health drink for spring—always cool, fresh
Wj ’ trkhng. Order it by the case or buy it by the
■ • ’’____3 ^ie re*a'ler’
---
7 '\j
—------—
0R. D. T. PRATT
News of th
Whorter at I
Saturday eve
eral sadness i
home. Earne
possessed man
ties, one of th<
courteous beai
sons under ail
young men w
ed—yea loved-
ing account o
is taken from
“Earnest M<
afternoon at 5
O'Neal street
followed by an
“Earnest G.
near Commero
1884, and had
practically all 1
fetf years has
the Spurlock-H
tigs city.
H. was man
tus of Sulphur
1912. He leav<
er, Mrs. Molli<
ther, Claude, a
ter, Mrs. Owen
many other rel
death.
"Earnest Me
earnest convict
devout membe
church, and a M
those with whe
and ever dilige
employer. To
best he was a r
tongue, and ev<
who needed as:
times to speak i
that he trusted
“Only a few
his mother in n
h<* bel ieved he
r J5uld he not,
heaven. His la
in the Master's
stricken down hi
ber of the choil
ing just ended,
away, the comm
man, the church
member, the wi
and the mother
could be proud.
“He wssj^ake
acute attar
nlficance is considered.
priaUon of *500.000, to
among forty eight states. Is a r-~
small beginning in the way of building
government post roads, but it is a be-
. ginning, says the Baltimore American
------- It is of great significance that the
I government has made a start In the
I direction of federal aid In road build-
ing The *10.000 apportioned to Mary-
land goes to pay for one third the cost
of a short section of road in Mont-
gomery county.
Missouri Roads Received but Tem-
porary Improvementa—Romana
Built Slowly and Laboriously.
“About a i-----j-
had whooping cough and I f ;
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy the only
one that would relieve their coughing
and whooping spells. I continued this
treatment and was surprised to find
that it cured the disease in a very
short time,” writes Mrs. Archie Dal-
For sale
think of me. They must have the idea
that I don't care anything about Jim-
my’s social progress and it's just as
important t j a boy's future as it is to
a girl's! The friends that he is mak-
ing now—”
Make him go to this.” advised Jim-
tay'a father "The Mlklesons will be
offended if you don't, and it's the right
sort of a crowd for him. It's what he
needs."
"I won't say anything about it to
him," decided Jimmy's mother, diplo-
matically, "until the day before. Then
he won't have so long a time to ob-
ject and make life miserable for
me!”
Jimmy s mother had occasion many
times In the ten days that followed to
be thankful for this decision, for Jim-
my proved suddenly very difficult to
deal with, In spite of bis ignorance
of the fate that was Impending
The boy stared gloomily out of the
window and he poured as gloomily
over the contents of his desk.
Once, to her great alarm, his moth-
er found his sorting out his neckUe
drawer.
"Aw, nothin'!” he growled, when she
demanded to know the reason tor
this unheard-of U'erest In his attire.
"Can't a fellow do anything without
the whole family buzzing about his
ears? Wish t I had the money dad
mine! I
1 could
football
The Eastern Star met Fri. night in
a regular meeting and elected officers.
On account of the rain there was not
as many out as would have been oth-
jSrwise. Officers were elected as fol-
‘ lows:
Miss Gussie Hall, W. M.
W. W. Goldsworthy, W. P.
Mrs. Forest Sheely, A. M.
Miss Lemmy Gibson, Con.
Miss Elsie Goldsworthy, Asst. Con.
Mrs. Minnie Horton, Sec.
Mrs. Etta W. Ringgold, Treas.
Hair that !<**» its n»\or lustre, or
w!m9» it turn* gray, dull and life-
ji caused by a lack of sulphur m the
h .ir. <Mir grandrw»*her made up a miy
, ture of lea an*l Sulphur to keep
t . ,
van<la of w<«men and na-n who value that
» i«-n color, that beautiful dark shade of
r.air which is »o attractive, use only this
. old-time recipe.
I Xow.MiayM we thia famous mixture
-
cent t*<tle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul-
p'.ur Hair Remed;,” which darken* the
wo naturally, so evenly, tha*. nobody
n f- -v-. . t-*.. it has been applied. Be-
h-rt. it ti.es off ■ and ruff, etoj-i ecalp
.T4?L-'4? and failing hair. Y i juat
n.l*n a sponge or soft brush ’.nth it
iLd druv. this t;.rough your hair, taking
: ‘■maJ strand at a time, j y morn
n" the gr-v Kiir disappears: I *d
!« .ichtM the .adies with Wvet..’s
t, l«e*tidog he;
after a few ,v
kick the cio
t an appea* <»
<By HOWARD H GROSS)
There is another factor that has an
Important bearing upon the highways,
and that is the country school. Good
roads mean better schools and a high-
er moral and educational atcadard;
they bring the best instead of the
worst out of people. Bad roads make
one feel as though he did not care how
he dressed or how be appeared
Wherever good roads are built the
people begin to buy paint; the house
and the barns are treated; the picket
fence displaces the tumble-down one
In front; rose bushes are planted and
the lawn has attention; all these
things come along apace. Hence
good road building should not be re-
garded as an expense but as an in-
vestment. They will pay a larger and
surer return than money invested in
almost any other direction. A high
authority has said that with good
roads the farmer can take advantage
of the market; with bad roads the
market nearly always takes advan-
tage of the farmer. How many times
the situation arises when prices are
good and the farmer would like to get
his corn or oats off or his hogs, that
the roads are nearly Impassable? If
he attempts to reach market he does
so seriously handicapped. There Is
little doubt that with good roads and
watching the market, the farmer can
get a belter price for what he has u>
Mil.
Here Is a significant fact that we
should not forget: That no state or
community ever began the building of
good roads—we mean roads good 365
days In the year—and had the ex-
perience of using and paying for
them, that they did not keep on build-
ing more and more good roads every
year. The writer Is not a prophet,
but he makes this prediction: That
before the gray hairs appear on the
temples of the children who open their
eyes first to the light of 1912, we will
have a network of good roads that
shall practically cover the whole
country from Plymouth Rock to Puget
sound, and along with that we will
have a scinetific agriculture that will
double the farmers profit, by show-
ing how to produce his grain at prac-
tically one-half the prent cost, and
that this country will be the happiest,
most progressive and enlightened of
all the world.
no questions.
Rather, he retired to a chair in * cor-
ner and moped.
Finally, the night before the party,
Jimmy's mother mustered up her cour-
age and told him. very fast, so ba
Then she waited
Mr. and Mrs. Monta Nevils and
daughter, Virginia, have returned
from visiting at Terrell, Forney
other points.
Tuesday, Junelst, will be public in-
i’ stallation to which the public is invit-
tfa
by L. K. Grigsby, in his Liv-Ver-Lax. j
Liv-Ver-Lax is a harmless vegetable i
compound, designed solely for
treatment of liver complaints,
immediate favor it has met with in
thousands of homes is proof positive
of its real value.
If you feel worn out, tongue coated, ’
and skin sallow, don't delay until it I
becomes dangerous, nip the trouble in I
the bud with Liv-Ver-Lax. Insist on I
the genuine, bearing the signature and 1
likeness of L. K. Grigsby, which is ;
guaranteed to give satisfaction or
money refunded. For sale by Palace
Drug Store.
FIRE INSURANCE
L /WO/-‘,SUranfP fleP»rtmont is in charge
11 Ji ireful Attention to al] business.
F nmerce Bottling Works
C. J. Debenport, Prop.
3 ----_
'> By CLARA STACY.
<
1 actually hate to tell Jimmy about
it!” declared Jimmy's mother, shir-
ertngly, staring at the fashionable in-
vitation card with despairing eyen
Yes." said Jimmy's father, with
understanding. "Then he -■'su
"Boys certainly are the limit!"
"Jimmy s nearly fifteen." pursued
Jimmy's mother "I don't see wtor
he isn't old enough not to act like a
yeung savage. Whenever I make him
<o to a party you would think I wm
easting him Into a den of man eating
tigers, to hear him protest. He says
girls are ninnies and he d rather play
football!”
"Seems to me," said Jimmy's tn
A wm Nsratah rws HQ ti
to Und><ar M r** M *** 1
STATE J^ECTAL SPECIA1 TST3
repeated.
sons'”
That was all before L_ _L.
bolted from the room. She heard him
presently whistling la his bedroom
and held her bead wildly. Jimmy was
young to go Insane, but she had hue rd
of cases—
"Mother!" Jimmy called
“Don't my dress trousers need
tagr
' He’s going to be ill!” declared hla
mother to his tat her Inter,
know he's coming down with some-
thing awful!"
AU the next day Jimmy whistled sag
sang and beamed and shed sunshine.
He went like a lamb to get dressed
for the party, and he threw away four
ties before he got one to suit him
He asked his moth ep s advice as tn
the part in his hair, and surreptitious-
ly used.her manicure set. By that time
Jimmy's father, too, was Impressed
and worried. His family followed
Jimmy's glittering progress to the
front door at exactly eight o'clock with
breathless anxiety.
Never had seen anything like it
"Gee!” said Jimmy, as he folded hla
neck scarf with painful precision and
carefully got Into his overcoat "I Was
awfully sore all week! I thought I
wasn't asked to the Mlkleson's party,
and everyone else was talking about
going' I'm going to take Ethel," bn
added hastily and somewhat defiantly.
"Sam was going to, but when I found
I could go, too. she ditched him. She'd
rather go with me!’
He dashed oat of the door trtnmata
aatly.
"Ah!” said Jimmy's father, looking]
meaningly at Jimmy’s motber.
"O-o-oochJ” breathed J!
mother, gasing vide eynd nt JI
ttether.
“1 believe your troublea are
Mid Jimmy's father. "Jlmsuy ta
Mr. E. Williams, Hamilton, Ohio,
writes: “Our whole family depend on
Pine-Tar-Honey.” Maybe someone in
your family has a severe cold—per- I
haps it is the baby. ' _________
Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey is an ever
ready household remedy—it gives im-
mediate relief. Pine-Tar-Honey pene-
lungs, destroys the germs, and allows ple W*’° talte *?r' KinK’s New Discov-
nature to act. At your druggists, 25c. Cr.y ^or an *rritat*r,K cold are opti-
mists they know this cough remedy
will penetrate the linings of the
throat, kill the germs, and open the
I way for nature to act. You can’t
destroy a cold by superficial treat-
ment—you must go to the cause of
ber of his friends Friday night’at “the ^.7°“?'); a" °Ptimist' Get a
parents, Mr. and Mrs. X °f K’ng S New T,i—ery
...... ■' Washington street.
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Hart, Sterling. The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, May 28, 1915, newspaper, May 28, 1915; Commerce, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1359321/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .