El Paso Herald (El Paso, Tex.), Ed. 1, Wednesday, April 23, 1919 Page: 6 of 16
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EL PASO HERALD EDITORIAL and MAGAZINE PAGE
6 Wednesday. April Si. 1919.
LIFTING OF BLOCKADE ESSENTIAL
AND THE SOONER DONE THE BETTER
THE day approaches when Germany mast begin to pay fori bringing pressure on the French and British governments
the misery and rain the German raters and the German to get them to assent to a lifting of the blockade. They
reople brought upon the world insofar as money can pay. were strong in opposition and the president seems te haw
to- a time Germany may try to bluff the world with a I backed down. At any rate little has been heard of the
rttusal to pay but she can be made to pay. It only re-'matter recently. Yet there is nothing that is of more im-
iniins for the allies and the United States to make sure ! mediate concern to the business and industrial interests at
ha Germany is not left with bound bands nnable to pay. I the United States than the status of the blockade.
in 1871 Germany imposed an indemnity of SfiOOfiOOfiOO j ? wet : J? tZJft
trancs approximately $700000000. on FranTttwas mm' percepUble were the Woade
ten IJLc that k Ccle had been give Z' i' It
.V h!eToarke tTd Slf T preS wonld add seWnc to
Ticsea to save tt. Therefore. France surprised the world I W- " sc"Uwet by pre"B for
:nth the facility with which the debt was liquidated al-jacJ0n m ms matter-
-nougn tne paying 01 it was as gaii ana wormwooa to
ThV indemnity of 100000000008 marks which some' Some More Bad NeWS
reports say is 10 ne imposed on vrermany 15 iduul uum uu . nf
lie indemnity or FraucT Yet it includes merely actual not COJffi more hght was thrown on government operation of
Punitive damages. Moreover Germany is larger in popu- railroads Tuesday when B. F. Bnsh regional director of
. . ' ft nilnu arimimetratian iniviTnl before the Texas
iat'ic ana ncner in resources tnan rxance is now ana mncn . - " . - . 7 rT. . . . . .
larger and much richer than France was at the end of the railroad commission at Austin and testified that not a sin-
Franco-Prussian war. Moreover the Germans have not railroad in Texas will earn the federal compensation
resisted' invasion nor suffered min. In that respect the That is to say their revenues wiU not be as the gnaran-
ituation of Germany is wholly different from that of teed return to the stockholders. The guaranteed rrtura
France either now or in 1871. the average of the returns to stockholders for the three
The terms of payment are just and reasonable and if years preceding the taking over of the roads by the goj-
he Germans aftert not to view them in that right it will eminent. Thus it n evident that the earnings of the roads j
bo because thev them--Ives are unreasonable or that they are less than under pnvate control in spite of the enor-;
are trying to bluff the allies to still more favorable terms. muus - 1""""" -
One payment of 2000000000 francs is to be made two luDS w"c l."
rears from the beginning of 1921 and a commission is to de-
termine when and how the remainder shall be paid. It is
expected that the first payment will be the most burden-
some; that it will exhanst the German gold reserves and a
WltenAFellerNeedsAFriendToFinishJob
Br nniGns
-;- More Truth Than Poetry
m JtT JAMBS J. MO. VTA GUC
The hearing at Austin was held for the purpose of de
termining whether permission for discontinuance of cer
tain passenger trains should be revoked thus causing them
to be placed in operation again. The regional director's
T'Tt ? h m.rVAM. -nTiH w it -rill harfiv statement was intended as a wet blanket. The inference
be more difficult for the Germans to meet this obligation was that if the train now in operation were running at
han it was for the French to meet their first payment a loss the deficit wonld be only increased by potting en;
as rrr more trains. ;
Incidentally the 20000000 marks' first payment Bush said he expected a deficit of $31 0100 I in
is equivalent to 54760000000 which is just about the the operation of the ratooads of the United States thts
amount of the Victory loan which the American people year ana ne aaoea awmeuung inar oagn w F
are funding in the course of a few weeks. m05t lethargic ateeu. He said that this deficit must be
But in order for the German government to pay either overcome either by increased rates or by taxation. Heap-
3 full or in Dart it is evident that the blockade must be '?E P e aeady atotudinous rates is very bad. Taxa-
lifted as soon .is possible and the German people put to tion is almost equally bad. Boosting therates again means
work. The more work the less bolshevism too. German;0 tncrease in the price of almost everything that every -industries
must have raw materials. German manuf ac-! "0y eats wears or uses. Taxation mis everybody who
tsrers must have access to foreign markets. It is distaste-! tfes- A Pe a n0' pay taxes
ful to think cf uadmg with Germans but somebody must i Mr. Bush's sUternents are authoritative of course. The
trade with them or they cant pay their debt. They can't ?nbUc "B exPect the ultimate news to be as bad as the
raise the money from each other. ! forecast.
To retard ne economic rehabilitation of Germany will! "
be to deprive the tens of thousands of victims of German Luis Cabrera says Mexico is going to wait awhile longer
military destruction of the compensation to which they f before resuming payment of the national debt and then
are entitled and without which they will remain impover- j will decide how much she can pay. That sounds like a
.shed for life. This is not a matter of justice to the) bankruptcy proceeding 20 cents on the dollar and it does
Germans. Nobody is bothering very much about the Ger- not come well from the Mexican minister of finance.. Na-1
mans except to see that they make an the restitution pos- j tions are like individuals. They can retain credit only by
s:ble but the means to do that have to be put within their ' meeting their ebttgatMas in full.
reacn. 1 on can t put a convict to creaking stone unless you
It is said that in the absence of the president his pri-
vate secretary Joseph Tumulty is the big boss straight
ening out all white house complications as they arise i
Thus Tumulty settles tumults with Tumurtimatums.
One effect of the warm weather is to thaw out those
tertained 30 friends from El Paso who dropped in for the '
day. Farming certainly must be one way to beat the high
cost or Irving.
furnish him with a hammer.
Hot only does Germany need raw materials but the al-
lied countries and the United States have raw materials
of which they need to get rid. Germany is stripped of
copper while the United States has so much that it is a
glut on the world market. That copper ought to be going
into Germany now. The Germans onght to be working it
ap for commercial use so they can pay for the damage
they have done. The blockade keeps it out. Cotton is an-
other commodity that onght to be going into Germany.
There are many others.
It may be argued that now is too early: that Gennanv
has not yet signed the peace treaty and that there are
cnances ior a sup. none whatever now with Germany be-
reft of army and navy and stripped of fighting equipment.
Compared to now the Germans were in npknilid condi-
tion for opposition when they signed the armistice yet they
felt compelled to sign. More than erer new they win be
compelled to sign. In a military sense Germany is dis
organized ana netpiess. ; c
Reports from Paris some months ago were that Mr. j H Pasoans are anxious to bear something
Wilson and his coDeagneg of the American delegation were about the lowering of the water rate.
Both Villa and the Carrancista home guards escaped
from the Mormon missionaries they had taken prisoner.
but not until both had been bombarded with rehgievs
precepts.
o
One effect of the warm weather is to tkraw sat those
who have grown thin blooded through striae hi tab barmy
climate for a quarter century or so.
jam.
Little inierdieuts
HCTuI ABOUT
THAT pvE
SPOT -KJU
OOP fg
mm
I CAN'T
PAY YIH
CtO TOP
The Badge Of Poverty.
WHEN aatforfese hrU lie herp of the aeries
Of bis poverty yea always can be rare
Though bu ck thing may be snappy and bk vitage sot snhappy
Tbeere's a nerer faUfaij way to know be's poor.
For to some remote and loneiy fittJe y3kge
In bk bkier desperation be repairs
Where be sits cast down and lonely k a little room with oeIt
Half a dozes badly battered kitchen chairs.
TT appears that v&ea a here's specsktioBS
(Thresgb thii viffian's macbisatioBs) go astray
Or when folks who owe him money set tie notion that it's fans?
To reEeg on aB their prouiues to pay.
He goes rnsbiag to the nearest second band store
And while thoughts of brooding sadness fiS bk dome
He fhtfii oat the little left him of the fortune fast bereft his
Buys a set of kitchen chairs and takes em borne.
' THPRP tlim vatt rn nnM van vnSl frnA Yum.
And attesting to bk utter state of gloom
Is the lack of books and pictures phonographs or Egbtiag fixtures
Just a bunch of kitchen chairs around the room.
And while gazing on bk drooping haggard features
Knowing aH his goods and chattels are is soak
Yon regard At chairs and matter: "Ah! Hk poverty k fitter.
Heroes never bay those chairs nnt3 they're broke!"
AXTW.VT THEY'RE TOO BIG.
ThtM "fraetfon of cents" wblefc the neat paekerm nj comprise tkelr
proffla lo1c Wee Improper tractions to the consumer.
WRITE VOIR OWV TICKET.
It befffns to I00U like an even bet that the peace treatr will He signed ' B
time for the first transatlantic flrer to bring: over tae news oC H.
THE LONG .VXD BKAlTIKri. 1VORO.
CampaloTn expenses eoTer a mnHltnde of Wines.
WHY THIS PERSISTENCE.
Tie dat Mkr to Vc captions bat this pieketins nsiaess the offmsist
looks a jretl deal 8ke rannlns for a street ear after 7"aH hare canght It.
Little Chris
LITTLE CHRIS las -her
til. Kppareatij
TcmtcrtbrTi
lit mw tite tank on
Pioaecr pi u4 aaketl
wBVthtr irbt ft wm sad -tke
aid H mi a tank he sM
iatrr:
-OaUr. take mmt to
o- that Mrt anrk la Ac
pl.va.?
aW n
I
When a Fellow Falls in Love With
A Cafeteria Girl-The Way to Act
Br K. C K.a
I You CanGelEvenWithl
I Everybody Bui Yourself I
Br A BLESEITlffi.
SELF inflected embajraaaments are
the most cruel of alL
Haven't you been in a theater or is
a cafe some time and tried to talk
al aut the music and just as you were
alkmc your loudest in the effort
to TTialce yourself he a rd. the ni u sic
- :iden!y stopped. Before yon could
top the word on the end of yonr
ti gue the whole audience reara
Then follows the painful silence.
Haven't yon gtme to a program
t:en by local people and sail some
terribly uncomplimentary things
-Hoist one of tbe performers and
f jnd out liter that the fond parents
sat directly ahead of yon? It's then
oj pray for the lignts to co out.
Haven't you been at a dance for in-
y ar.ee and just for the sake of con
vernation and a little adventure yon
prart tellinz a lot of "stuff" to your
nartr.er. whom you have Just met.
and a little later you find out. nacn
o your confusion that the partner
''ad just as much imagination as yon
ad. It's then yon make up your
ind you never could like that per-
- ii-
Em bar raiments are bad enough
v 'ion inflicted by somebody else but
that case w e always bavu the
v ".eetness of reienge When we are
"goat" at our own expense it's
rrible. becune it is so hard to t
- y satisfaction out of quarreling; or
"ine to get rprenge ircni our-
Ive
EAR K. C. B. You being; a man of long experience. I want to a&k yen
through your column just how to let a pirl know you are stuck on her
v ithout making; a monkey out of yourself.
This girl la wrestling; dishes In a cafeteria and seems to be just my style
m every way. She smiles at all the old buck but not at me. Z have Just
.-en her abowt three times and don't like the idea of starting a conversation
like: "Isn't the weather plentiful this year?" or some ether foolishness. So
I am asking- yon for a few pointers because you know there is no more
pitiable f?Bi than a big; stiff tot lore.
U K
ICore power to yon.
MY B&AR la. EL
WHEN I was a young; man.
A' US! to be in love.
EVERY IalTTT.E while.
WITH A different glrL
Z MIGHT have been able
TO ADVISE you correctly.
BUT nS such a long; time.
Sixes I have been free.
RCX around loose.
THAT I car. ttlnk of nothing.
THAT MIGHT help you.
TO COP the dame.
OCT Of the chow ehR-niie-
AM) BES1E5.
IX THK old days.
THKRK WAS "no such thing.
a
AS A cafeteria.
AMI EVES if it happened.
THAT MY memory was good.
MY LACK of experience.
WITH CAFKTKRIA girls.
m
WOULD PREfLUDE the possibility.
OP MY steering; you right.
BtT IF I were ou.
I WOULD confine myself
Rippling Rhymes
By VraXT MASOX
Our Government
OL'K old goernment's respected bj all people who are sane; here the worker
is protected in whatever he may sain ; and the fellow who is thrifty may
1 eck deep in comfort wade have possessions rich and nifty and enjoy them
undismayed. There's no country short of heaven with a government so slick
that it has not fifty-seren kinds of flaws for fools to pick. And there'll never
be a nation v.-ith a noieranent so great that it gets no condemnation from tbe
reftEimistic ?kste. Here the chap who's law ahidiog has no fetters on his shank;
m his jitney he goes riding taking bandies to the bank. While he pays his
i.iarly taxc V- .-i-tiro m all he owns and he needs no battle axes to protect
'us stack 0' hour-. o 1 think the noisy rotters who don't like our kind of
ule should -i'p.'! ai-rn-- tie waters till their feiered epirlts cool fn
vp oldea timt- . r. 1 .mt. 1 . '.ml. I laugh at their troth; la the olden time.
y ranted but tbey eouMn't cat a tath. Xow Be know there's deadly dan-
. .p th rotter's iicrcy hannjiie: therefore let us mat the strangi r who
r. t-(asi"'ii to iH' ?-'V.z.
TO HATfG my meals.
...
IA THE cafeteria.
...
WHKRB T1IK girt works.
AXD fd Juat oat the thines.
...
THAT ARB at her counter.
AND AT every meal.
...
I'D PIM. my tray fulL
...
WD KIVD of linrer arooa.
...
SO SHK could look tt ovar.
...
tTO roc never can tell.
bct THAT altar a while. "
'
SHK might sine yea an.
. . .
AAO SAY to hlllf.
-Mi ME sresiHtRi
SKK 1VR.VT he ecta."
VXD AFTJBR that.
m
SHE'D START lssslaii Or Ms.
mm
WD THKX yonr kaWe kar.
BEt mk ji st rate snoaeow.
THEV START ImlsiBa; Saw yoa
.
Yol VK GOT 'em sesac.
.
AXD AKTmt that.
IP TOU work fast enooa-n.
. . .
LSHR MIGHT learn to love yt.v
AXD AXTWAY.
...
THE FIRST thins; to do.
IS ATTR ICT her attentior
I REMEMBER one time.
I PBLL out af a hack.
AXD A c-lrl helped me up.
AXD FOR months after that.
WB WERE crazy about each oth
I . . .
' AXD TD' never have met her
1 c
! ir I'D stayed in the hack.
I THAXK you.
Tourist Carries Goats on His Auto lor Fresh Milk En Route
Oil Makes Mr. Doheny an Unlucky Miner a Millionaire
mine did not turn out vrr well but
not long; after they fell in on the oil
game in Los Angeles made a bis.
thing; in the Fullerton. Calif. fieli.
and from that time since oil h&
been 'liquid gold to Ed Doheny and
Johnny Can field the two old timol
Kingston boys and we old timers who-have-stayed
with the old camp glory j
in their g-reat success."
I
"The book buying; department ofj
th American Library association at
Washlnjrtoa does the nnrchaslns; o'
all books for the organisation." said
Miss Lucia Stockett. -Special re-
quests can be sent la by the men and
tbe book pure ssed and pat In their
hands in a short time we are pushing-
vocational books for the men
soon to be out of the service and bae
large supplier of them coming all
of th tim. The army has been most
appreciative of the work and the as-
sociation. which has been well re-
ceived everywhere. It la. not yet
known what will be done with the
organisation when there is no longer
a use for it. The Fcsdick coir rr
sion was taken oer by tte go.t
ment the first of th year and
now Inspecting the various tti r ir
activities. It will announce lftr
disposition t be made of thfm L
the present. whre -ir soldir .
'nnr.d. the n-c-k of re r -
Library associatior. vill a -o
fouad."
"It was a pity that Tera I -had
to have hts arm amputated
parts of body u: a-1. as a -
of the gun snot wound. he re.-
while trying to rob a h.i hou?" '
Iver B. Lawton. " But the
taught by the in-ide-t strikmc
doobt chicken thieves or othe-
of thieves will be a bit re'ui
about entering r. ibir oppr--mission
after they have - j 1
Leiva's fate. If I were not
ChrieUan like I wonld n-h li-
fe w more of t hem rr. v t i
fate -so that the thieve v. - -i
frifrhtened into lawfulness 1 h
esty."
CCTT IS a customary prciH.e in Cali-
1 fornia where groats are used a
great deal as milk producers tor peo-
ple to carry one along; when making;
automobile trips. There is then no
question about securing- sufficient
milk for any use one might have for
fj on such a trip. The mother goat
and the two kids which I have In
the crate on the running board of my
car have made the Journey from Long;
Beach Calif. They are of the Tog
genberg breed and the mother cost
me 910. When we left California
five days ago sne was aivingT a gat-
Ion of milk and now supplies us with
sufficient to use for coffee and to
drink besides what it takes for the
kids. We are en route to Miami.
Okbu where I am jroing to look after
load and zinc mining; interests. The
goats will make the entire trip on
the running board and return with us
at Phoenix
when us go to our home
Arixv this fall "
"This oil boom reminds me of when
E. L. Doheny. now oil kins; of Cali-
fornia and Mexico was a poor man!
up in Kingston. Sierra comity. New!
Mexico and was Uwhas; his luck with
the rest of us in mining; back in tbe
'" said Johnny Moffitt veteran
miner of that New Mexico camp. Ed 1
an we all called him came there poor
and he was the most indomitable;
worker In the camp. He played in
hard luck the mines he got into
showed well on the surface but not
well enough at greater depth to pay
In those days. But nothing daunted
him. He was well educated would
teach school waa a good miner could
sharpen tools paint a bouse hang
paper: if he could not do one thins
he would another. He was a partner
with me la one property in the King-
ston district. I stayed at the mine:
and Doheny would go down to the
town to be with his wife and child.
He was a rattling cook and say he
sure could make bis-uits. He never
would take a drink. His quiet i-eaaos
waa: 'I can't see where It would do
me any good; if 1 did I would take
it Two of his old partners were Tom
Grady and Jim Dulauey and tney
owned the Mountain Chief and the
Miner's Dream mines which were too
low arrade for operation In th'-p
days. Tom said Doheny was never
Idle. At night with no better light
to read by than the camp fire be
would be reading something useful by
the light of that Are.
"I think it was about $9 Doheny
left Kingston and went to Silver Ot
and there amomc other things ne
studied law with the law firm of
Pickett fc Elliott. I think he left for
California in 189L. He was on his way
to Ban Francisco when at some Cali
fornia station he stepped off
stretch- his legs and rau Into one
of his old Kingston friends Johnny
csjtnem. The latter persuaded him
to get eff and so In on a mine. That
14 Years Ago Today
Fram The Herakl of Tkla Date. ISS.
A
Buy Bonds AndBring The Boys Back Home
Copyright by Geoie MuttsetV A -Jama
WALT MASON.
DIPTHKRJA AMO.XG TROOPS.
Boston. Mass. April 33. The bat-
tleship New Jersey due here today
I with the last big detachment of the
i th division reported by wireless
this morntng that there n ere seven
leases of diphtheria aboard. Army of-
fials immediately cancelled all passes
to "oninionwtaUh pier ivhre the
p i'"-k c-w et tf.o"e for
1 w o'f.i re ora"in Vai lo.is.
iWi-Vi .......fV l
v
DISPATCH from Toklo says that
the Japanese newspapers con
tinue their unfrfentflT comment on
1 the French g-overnment ovr the Kam-
raab bay tncidenu Tne navr aepan-
' ..li.Kl.. .i ....... ihn.in. tK. nnm-'
ber of Russian warsnlpa and their!
cUss. actually sen Inside Kamra-ih!
bjr to prove tne talk ot neutrality
violation is not idle oaaiP-
Johu H. Stephens member of con-!
?;reas for the 11th district or Texas.;
ormely of the El Paso district is ;n
the city. .1
Walter B. Drysadle an employe of
the local office ol H. (i Dunn and
company committed suicide last I
nla-hr-
A heaw hail storm visitod El Pasoj
thia afternoon. It is the heaviest hfcil
K! Paso has ever known at this timei
of the year. Crops in the valley are
damaged. j
Clay Belden. yard elern for the T !
P waa killed m the switch yard'
about S:zo this morn ins;. j
The Western Tradinar company is a
nw Mnrnl rpentlv omnised for1
tbe purpose of buying; and selllns
m.rehandise. cattle real estate or
anything else that offers as inviting'
field for inveecment.
A picnic was aiven at the Smelter.
Saturday by judge G. W. Belt. He er-
tertained bia Sunday school class. No. '
9. Trinity M. E. church south.
The Social club will give its la-t
dance of this season on Friday een-
Ing at Sheldon noiei.
11 m AT. Hjymgc. .WJUMM
! jtlL Oik
1 A Line O' Cheer i
Each Day O' The Year
I BY JOHN i E.N P HICK BANG?.
BBn-S-WwaM''"''""'"' f
CARRYING OX. j
To contemplate sure''1- is very sweet.
So. re when success considers self com-
plete. 1
And holds no further urging to the
soul
Te carry on up to !m hiaher goal.
Our prises won. however rich thev be.
Soon lose their charm and lustrous
brilliancy.
Unless beyond the courses we have
run
Lie worthier rewards yet to be won.
JX don't make much difference ho"
much you read if you hasn't got secre
enough t know what t believe Ther'
sanKhvddy at ever dinner party that
eats all th' celery.
Tigr- V I -n
YUK HIS -CIIHMKO lOK."
r-nn Van. XV t : -vere
those n the r. - r ai ar - "
France ho wem-d to t.-: c' i--- 1
lives. In that r-t rjnbr - -
included Pvt Krho i.-.z MiMai- K .
lOSth infantr. of i e '"h -'- - rr
Pvt Lutz ma- th . I - ii. 1 --rapany
to e-T f u - u -hv
hi enpmandf- 1 - !' r.
I.uts is sid : .
' thiclc of eierj thine . t ict "
rai?e raked by macni'f jrin I -e i -
al:i05t constant'v x. r M'fli f'
faw his rompftr.iuns p al. d
him. but he cam out mna.n'-
Ihe above cartoon is drawn by Frank Cant-vell an 1 Paso grammar school bcj.
EL PASO HERALD
DBDICATKU TO TH1. SERVICE OF T11K PEOI'LE. THAT 0 GOOD C It St
SHALL. LACK A CHAMPIOS. AND TH AT EVIL SHIL.L
SOT TllKllK tXOPPOSBP.
U. D. Slater editor and eentrolllns; owner baa iHreeted Tbe Herald for SO
Tout J. c. WHmartb U Maaascer aad C A. Martin I. Kdltor.
MRMBBR ASSOCIATED PRBSS AMKRICAN XKWSPAPER PIBUSHTRS
ASSOCIATION. tD AVD1T Bl'REll' OP 11RCI I. TIO..
THB ASSOCIATED PRESS U eadolTly fnt.tled to Ihp use f. r v icatioo r a
news iHapal rb i - credited to it sot others! credits la ihu taper anj aisu
taa laeal aowa aaMuihed herein.
AH INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER The El I'i.o Herald is"e.-t
Ilabed tn March. 1881 The El Paso Herald includes. alo. ' y abj-rtio-and
sncceaston. The Daily News The Telegraph. The Telegram. T-e
Tribune. The Graphic The 8un The Advertiser. The InJ'pen.'enr. Tie
JopraaL The Republican. The Bnlletin.
TERMS OF 80B8CRIPTION Daily Herald per month. 7c yeur : i.
VFedneaday and Week-End Issues will be mailed ' r . .id . - ye.i.
Week -End edition only per year. ?2 t'O.
THIRTY-EIGHTH YEAK PUBLICATION Super. ur e lu-.T f. Jr
and complete news report by Associated Press Lease i w llC ;.-ec a-
Correspondents covering: Arizona. New Mexico Wet T? a? niticc-
Washinetoa. D C and New York Entered at the u l'l 1 i-
TeTsa. a. Second Class Matter
"WHATEVER VOC WANT TO KNOW "
Tb El Paa. B.raM Infornutlon Bsreau ac Rj-v-o; f.j. reader. - -ctoarsa.
wtth accurate aai aitthorltatw. aaawar to uuiatloa on aoj ar s ..
concrnlas wmcb tnrormatton can be bad from th unparalleled rour
rloua federal aov-rnment departm.r.t the ereai Libraiy of rors'es 4
experts and uleniuta in the soversment imc at WaiHnjiop Th-. t-
as. fcr reply moat accompany .acta Ibquiit State clearly the inform.- - - - -a
and addrM. Th. El Faao Herald Information Bureau. Frederic J. Haek: 1 i-. .
WaahiDSton. D. C.
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Slater, H. D. El Paso Herald (El Paso, Tex.), Ed. 1, Wednesday, April 23, 1919, newspaper, April 23, 1919; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth138866/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .