Sherman Daily Register (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 237, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1887 Page: 3 of 4
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¡lBm
M
wmm
jC-
fflp^áwsg
¡^•■vtiÉ®ES&
«n tfiKt "firi
form# so firm, «o
an attachment for
the bullfinch
Msqailn
W**fnllOfbl
c*tUe ranche*
IwiPi
QIQIJI
thatae
city ef ♦& *uu
population «f 89,000.
íéhhHÉK
•oula iplrtuat
jUiyt ii ihfi clerical profesa loa ti lo Mexico^
" dtroí'S country «m,
«ach a proportion.
the weiring of a
■■ tt« pcr(oi#ipf;
dutie*. Tilla provision 1 laterpre
JjforeJI* iccloiUfitlca to suit
ipMM
men the cowboy are.
cashier
and if
to captivity than any
V he emph*tlc«hy^Mild,
«M Oxford
• the
appear In the Street! M UI
of heavy broadcloth, which
H|
¡L
SoKl'ah .well and
i ether and Mtlb«
ate (the nerVou* New York-
; Chicago man rolled In the
all hearty, rota* end «*•
ace at the ¡Masar parties.
¡ some of the home ranche*
(that would do credit to Pari*
gentlemen In the universal
II aftd whittle, an you Bad ia any
asSESssT-**"11
sey 1* profoundly convinced that the
and the government are all wroag In
otloni about the' cattle heron*. |e
i cattle range* are tueleac for any etiMf
becau*e their aridity makes them
ia for agriculture, and conjMtjetatly It
rd to talk abbot holding tUa)an« for
atead entry. "If the «utlé Milne**,-
1, "iu the remote and arid regon,
i for any other purpose, wa* wiped oat
' existence, the poor and the rich alike In
• eaat would bare to pay doable wh at tbey
bow for meat More tban 1000,000,0001* ln-
1 In the piala* cattle biuiuer*, end 150,-
D worth a year et matured ^eef-cattle
fdUponed of and oome oat of that aéctlon
the eaat or go to Bttrope. The ever*e«
price to the ranchmen doe* not exceed ftf
, cent* per pound, and Ia*t year It waa l*e* than
that Take thi* ln\men*e production out of
market or make the productla$FlI®|f*n
to In Any way mot* expenalTl. thaa at
ont and the diarge* In price of beef would
1 la every Jtanuet In thelaid. But the
mi— * " —"clou* upatart* in
r erenr mean* In
i of thi* greatta-
«tending all thi* However,
I tl* only In it* Infancy. The
owth of the la*t Are or tlx
pace with tb* demand at
We bare now leu cattle
og to our population then
, and howerer rapidly the sur
VI will not keegpaee wlf
within a tew luche* of the «hoe*.
thrown a eape of the tame ma!
about the knee*. For a bead
Morella padre ha* a gloeay aUk
broad band. In going ai
meet acore* of prlerta,
i and never will a ruaty .
cloth and lta wearer Iiuvj lurarlal
cared-for look. The garb to distinctive
with the Morella prleátuood, and *o 1* the
comfortable personal appearatioir to *ome ex-
tent, for there are many Mexican priests, la,
day* of tbe reform tow*, who are
neither well drewed or too well fed. Ia
tain parte of Mexico there to a «aying that
"Morella to a terrible place for moocho*."
"The Word moocho*" mean* ex-
ee**iVely religlou* people, end it to
usually traudated fanatic*. There to
thi* to be Mid of tbe Morellan ,
that while tbey aro itrongMCatbollc* tbey b*re
tbe gro*te*t abhorrence for freeiblnking,
now obtain lug a strong hold among the young
men la the largest citle* of Mexico. ▲ pro tea-
tant la vastly moro acceptable to the arerege
' 3 *•' liter. One of tbe first
of iR
•try-
Tin w
füsáar:
it .
country and
IWfe
I
I
CAPTURING MONKEY8.
Nattwee of Central America
Catch Them.
! ▲ gentleman wbo returned recently from
jUpinwall tell* tb* following eurlou* (lory of
the manner in which the native* of the later-
• lor of the iathttut of Panama eeptore monk '
ey*i
"Almost *11 the pet mOokey* ia thi*
try," |ald be, "come from Gorgoaa, a
village half way on the line of the Panama
featlioad. The Inhabitant* are,mo*tly native
negroes, for no white mta oould llv la the
viUsge a month nnles* be drank irhttky and
took quinine constantly. Hie surrounding
country li swampy and-*ov*red with a dense
ppi^tltixurlant vegetation. At night-fall
A1 thick, miasma rls«*, from the ground and
hang* over tbe forest* Ilk* a cloud. Thi* place
to th« jnpqkey'aparadiMM Tbey travel through
the forest* id-tioop*, jgolng wherever the king
monkey lead*. ■ When the native* have been
apprised of tbe presence of a troop tbey go
^°°'0HM¡ut wearily to captuie them. Their plan I*
a «Imple one. A bole I* cut in the ehell of á
cocoanut huge enough to admit a monkey'*
paw. Tb* cocoanut I* «cooped out and aluop
of eugar placed ifi the hollow. A «tring I*
then attached to the novel trap andthe
' negroei conceal themkeiVo* until the monkey*
pern by. (Jurloilty to on* of tbe eb«lf charac-
teristics of these little creature*, and whan
„ SSpy cocoanut lying upon the ground
1 he lump, of *sk*£„
„ , heir notice, and one of
them thruit* a paw through the «pertnre to
Iflth the lump of eugar clasped In
iv come down from the tree* aud proceed
to inspccj lt Carefully. The lump of 'auga
doc* hot iong escape their notice!
them thrusts a paw through the
grab it With.tbe lump of eugs
bin band lie find* It iihp<t**ible to withdraw It,
nor will bis greedy nature allow him to aban-
don hi* prize. Tb* negroes havo no difficulty
la drawing him near to their ar
whole troop scampering madly about him.
chattering and gesticulating a* only inoakey*
can. When they hare arrived within ea*v
, reach « large net I* thrown out and the# are
made prisoner . Twenty or thirty. are fre-
& quently captured at one bauL The native*
•ell them to employe* of the Panama railroad,
who in turn dlapqse of them to tb* American
tmarket."—Jim York Jfail and E.cvrM*.
Believing in Science.
, Rev. William Gufclit, in an article In Tht
WMt'" 'Lond<m Christian, give* a remarkable and
|'',;V ' most encouraging review of the progress of
...Xtbrtotlan sentiment in the British Scientific
association, which recently mot at Brimlng-
|!„ I bam, in contract with Its last meeting there
•Jn.lSOS. Then skepticism prevailed, and many
member* took it for gr*nted that tbe teaching*
of revelation were exploded. Sneer* at
Christian belief were frequent and offensive;
rinlam was rampant "The claim **t up
Slence waa that of infallibility, and a^.
ra wa* *uppo*<id to have dawned wbtetj*
Wed (Jod and his coinmandmenta out
universe." At tbe last meeting Sir
D Dawson, the president, wa* a decided
and in hi* address took a Arm and
liable, stand aa a .believer.In the biblér
«cctlon of geology, which sclcncc
®3ne year* ago was thought dangerous
to faith, leading members were of pronounced
religious views, and It was evident tbe great-
er the progress Of geological resesrehes, the
lei* is the tone of unbelief. In tbe section of
Aáthropology, which was then permeated with
boastful skepticism, the president, Sir Oeorg*
:%C*a l>bell, declare* that the bible teeching a*
, to the origin'of man I the only firm ground.
- The president of'Ihe sccllon of hioiogy,
WilliamCarruthers, F. R. 8., 1* a well-known
. ' ^believer IB divine revelation. Ou tbe Bab-
bath a law number of the member* met for
devotional «ervlce. When Sir William Dawson
unred scientific men to apply the same in-
tefngeocc and earnestness to tlie study of
the Scriptures ns they do to that of nature.
Mr. Guest came to the hopeful conclusion
i! . that, while In 186S scientific skoptlcUm wa* la
«parent ascendency, "this, year on the con-
rary, the aacendent sentiment ba* been the
Ke*enee of CbristUn thought and couvlc-
The Streets of New York. \
Here I* a specimen of street management In
How Tork elty. ,l.a t week a «mall gang of
■treet repairer* rpept * h*lf day piecing a
patch on Broadway": In front of tbe A*tcr
boa**. The patch ^i* about tbe *l*« of a
•mall UbW clotb. A cart-load of dirt wa*
dump«d upon the new work to bide ike ghast-
ly interstice* between the bowlder*. Thi* dirt
hae been ground into an ImpalpabU powder,
It now eover* tbe *tr**t for a
the eyi foe domes
i'II
A «tor bottle baa been
Boeb *n outrage a* tb
What a
SSHw
a newcomer in the elty
Morelian tban a
luqulrie* m*du
Is ii to bit religion.
■'Ton don't go to ma**l" a cltixon remarked
to an American wbo had come to Morella.
"No," lias the rertf.
"Aren't you a Catholic!" tbe Morellac
"No," wa* the reply again.
"A Froteaantt" coutluueil the eltixen.
"No," again.
•'What are you, then ft "•
"A freethinker."
Tbe Morelian itarted a* if aome reptile h*4
*tung him, and atked no more queition*.
THE BATTLE OF HARLEM.
An Incident of tb* Revolution Re-
called by tbe Finding of m Soldier*I
Body,
On tbe morning of the ISth of September,
i 17TB, OÓL Knowlfon and/MW. Leiteh wen
•ent oat from Fort Washlnjtton. at th*ipp«
end of Manbattaá island, by Gen. Washing
toil, t¿ capture a email detachment of Brltlst
soldiers etatloned on the high ground at
Mornlngddc park. The enemy discovered th«
attempt, however, end cxaiped down the hill
Be tag reinforced by tbe 4M Highlander*
miw'CMb. Leslie, tbey attacked the Aikwni
•ana at about One Hundred end Twenty
fourth street, between Eighth and Nlntl
avenue*, but were driven back to a fence" Iwi
hundred yards to tiur south and eeat of thi
point of attack. The Americans being rein
mfee$by Col*. Richardson ^and Griffith*, thi
emeny were dl*(odged from "tbe fence, leavlo|
Ave deed on the- field, and retreated beck U
thi high ground* at One Hundred and Tweo
tleth (treet, where tbey wore further rein
forced by a battalion of Hcaalan*, a company
of chaiMur*, and two field piece*. The figh
luted two hour* longer, tbe Britlth again re
trtated, "leaVlng tbe field to tbe American*
and the battle of Harlem plain* w** fough'
and won. Col. Knowlton and aixteen private*
were killed, and Maji Leiteh and forty otben
tfw wounded on tbe American tide. Tht
Britiib loa* wa* fourteeu killed aud aevent]
wounded. ;•«
Mel Leiteh died, and together with Cql
Kdowlton wa* burled in the trenches at for
Washington. It I* supposed, by msuy tha*
their gravee are within the present limit* oi
Trinity ehnrch cemetery. But a few weelo
•Ince, workmen who were engaged In cutting
' new (treet through In that vlclnltv came up
I several graves in what waa tuppoeed U
Mr* been part of the old trencue*. Opt
Srav* contained a coffin, aud tbe remain* evl
ently of an officer of rank. A bullet-boli
pierced the lleeblea* skull, and the bullet laj
within the hollow chamber of the'brain. A)
Knowlton w*t (hot in tbe bead, the dcccrlp
tion and clrcum*t*ncc* tally *o cfowly,.it,It
believed by *ome authorities that tbe remalpi
were tUOM <n the dead officer who fell at ñu
lem more tban one hundred year* ago.—.Mfc
Turk Cummtrcial Advc tiser.
Decay Of The leather Prophet"
Tb* profewlonal weather prophet i* fut loe
ing hi* grip in this land of stubborn climate
change* and eccentric atmospheric probabili-
ties. Only a few years ago weather iharpt
were thlckcr than prince* in Italy. Almoil
every itate eoolil boast a 'Teal, genuine tier"
of the flr*t water, while New Jersey h*d some
thing Uke a half dozen; but to dar, with twe
exceptions, «11 have quit tlie busi'ne**, 'and
aré very likely monsuring tape or sawing wood
Tbe lone couple remaining—Wiirgini, of Cañ-
ada, and Foster, of Iowa—are prophets with-
out following, either at home or aboard, end
toe of slight Import Tbe forntdr he* remain#,
at hladesk In Montreal, with only an occaf
lonal earthquake prediction since his craij
prophecy, a trifia over four years ago, that thi
Atjsntic coast sections of thcU nlted Stater
anfl province* wore to be swept by a general
stdrhi which woull blow everything on lan<
awav and «Ink all craft'on the ocean. Th<
other i* out in low*, and prints a forecaat al
interval* in Thi Jlu, Ungto • Jhiwk-u*. It wai
t Foster predicted á $ok
too
enough to m
companion, to keep It on your atudy
taWa or in your .boudoir, toít to
to tt fund it with tldbii, an*
ken you iiava!won lta oonM^ao^,
ioh with gentío words o your part,
not take long, your cure aud your
bflon VlU be more tháh rewarded
by the empnuameni with which It will
Rraet your return from your bualneaa
or your plaaaurej it. Will hop down to
tha door of the eage as soon aa it M«a
you eater the róom^ and invite yon
with tha moat fascinating of bow* to
let It out and pereh upon vour linger,
wb^lt'wHl fa to?ou iniU JL
est tunea, .atad rah lta deai black relVet
poll against VOnr cheek or on your
hand, purring thewliilo with the pur-
est and moat unalloyed pleaaure. It
Will aren try to food ydu, and, instead
of feeling offended or annoyed-otie
lady who wrote to mo uaed tha word
'SUagnated''—k>y thla profoundeat-
niark of ^ affoctlon, feel óorreapond-
ingly grateful and bless your atar* that
you. have indééd á friend, one who
would die for you, and Who will, too,
if you are ornel enough or thoughtleaa
enough to ..alight it or forget, it.
■: I do not say that there are no other"
birds .papable of beoom'ng devotedly
attached to their, .iqiknars, B^t^I'do'
. affirm iháit not oné óf them equal* the
bnliflnCh In this respoot. True; I have
known parrot* that dUplAyod quite a
romantic aflbótíon for the'r mfcutelr or
mistress, and yet when parted from
íthém sulked perhaps for a fajar ¿lays,
but in the end aeoeptod accomplished
facts, and noting upon the advice of the
poet, if hen they could not b« near tbe
ones thoy loved, made lovo to thpse
that were neáry which under ihg^ clr-
. cumstances was doubtless the most sen-
sible thing they could do. But "Bul-
ly" is composed of fur other olay, and
I aga!n entreat my readers not to buy
him unless thoy mean to love him, for
to neglect him is to torturo him, and
most cruolly kill him too.
What a pretty bird ho 1st Aud yet
soms writers have described; him is
olumsily made. Fie upon them! Can
anything be more symmetrical that*.
his form or more quietly beautiful than
tbe varied tints of his many colored
coat, or, I should say, coatuinoP Vel-
vety black and roay red and delicate
lavender gray form a. charming combi-
nation Of colprs, not one of which Is
obstrasive or "kills" another, a* tljif
ladies say, but it is rather enhanced by.
the reat, the three different shades
forming a tout ensemble that is simply
perfect —Harper* Magazine.
Symmetry and Achievement.
A smalt, well-made englhe, with: all
parts adjusted, will do m6re Work than
a larger one witk parts loosoly con-
structed ahd (Teat disproportion b«^
tween the important mémbors. Bo a
snjall man, ( mpa¿tly built, With sym-
roetricai proportions and a 4"
only* week *go tb*t i
ráve wlthlh
vav* put in i
the next' forty eight boar*., il.
i put In sppnnranee ou time, but. ln*tea<
or coining from tlie frigid gone It wa* a* heft it
the hinge* of a Pittsburgh furnace, and th<.
temperature throughout tlie upper Mlttlulpp!
valley ro*e In th* «hade to the 100 degrei
point Advice* *a to whether Prophet Foste
took to an Ice-bousc or the woods are auxtsQI
ly awaited.—jVew Tork Onruh'e.
' Taking His Own Medicine.
It I* certainly true that a physician will on-
hi* own medicine with tbe greateil
te. Tbl* is a common accusation mad)
Inst tbe profession, bilt it I* true and hail
e**y explanation. When a man |a hi* ow*
physician he docs not look, at symptom ft
that calm, dispassionate way that the phy
■léien matt bav* In diagnosing a patlent'i
ca*e. lie l*^a prejudiced witness, and, Ilk*
auy other mortal, be exaggerate* hi* 111 Mar
an!d .Imagine* himself having all sorts o
ugs. He is apt tiien to diagnose hfe 'caS"
overdo** blina.-lf. You know a patlfn'
ay* belleVee himself more 111 thatTbe realli
is. A phy*lclaa tt aware of this, aud be li
tbl flrat to call lu uiwllcal «Id when be 1* *lck
know a very promlnenf *poct*ll*t her
,ose advice en certain dl*ea*«* I* almo
atj ilute, yet he (* tbe victim Of a woaderfu
ilucinatton when lie bccome* 111. and aeta
al(y treated blmaelf for * chronlo dlseaae fot
d* time before he could be persuaded
•Imply needed a rest Hence there
* reason for one doctor calling
for treatment It I* th*
ad of the author did, who wM
there with his family, make di
§|emoiXd*.%'i?wliloh' he
loverad an error of aooonai
In fntme,M g«||I> ha t tha book-
"I wlU pay the waiter for each
i liwyll.
tis impiialMa laisare
sof I observe people do It
"jur—yes. beg y oar pardon, bat thoet
:¡hán to have a system-spur, enormous
business, donoher
'"Enormous business! What
call an. enormous business
now Irate Amérlóán.
"Why, immense dinner trade;
' MiíéíSIPSÍH
■ . * ,f^r|to-ypunfe, nfca;
ik as if half espeotlng the .
uld reel under tbe announcement
"How manyP" laid the Is^iv? 4
"Two hundred and JMtya dayT
'Now. look here, young maO, tfótfi
«ailing It á big business. Why, I ait)
from a seoond-rato oity, where, M ont
of onr regular hotels, from fiva ioatx
hundred ore dined dally, while thre«
ont parts' of thi house at the sam«
¡t'mé." . 1 ■■
"Roally—most extwordlnary."^v|
"Extraordinary I No, sir} I hate sát
down in a dining-room at Saratoga
fl^rtngs- where over a thousand ware
dined at onoe, with not half the tronbli
of getting served that there is fa this
oountry."—Jíoífo Commercial Butt*
:tW
nallei
total
anced orgántsm, oan accomplish m
than a larger mah leu solidly made,
with all parti wafiting in symmetry
and shapelineM. This law of ^doption
and harmonious adjustment of parts
prorails throughout this greater por-
tion of the animal>klngdom.
Among the civilix^d portions of the
human race It|s controverted by spe-
cial laws that tend to foster inharmon-
ions development The division of
labor, for initanoe, has ma<ie it positi-
hla fo^i ■^tftv.'earn a livellhOoMM
to mamtiiii a foot hold in the world M
tlie use of very few hi usóles and facui-
ties.—iVo/. D. A. Sargent, in Sor ib-
ner't Magazine.
t ■ WlAai; «"I. !■ • j**ft
Tla the Lady Wtóp That dtittgs.
The «Me wasp neyer . stingi. But
tolon^afiui'fcqd htk 'ilsttr ai'8 twldff
ánd dress exactly alike this bit of
knowledge avnileth nothing to the car '
less «pan who does not know it is tbe
lady who h approaohlng him, until it
be that she smlteth him with her bus?
tie. What humanity demands Of sci-
ence in ihe case of the Wasp is the In-
vention Of some prompter method of'
distinguishing between monsieur and
madamwazzle at forty yards.—Science
Gossip.
The Frontiersman.
The frontiersman is a pretty tough
specimen of the American citizen. He
has a cast iron constitution and the
physical courage of a lion ' A walking
arsenal, he can draw his pistol or nse
his lohg bowie wltli the rapidity of
lightning. He never crawls on the eu*
emy, but faces him boldly, aud literal-
ly fills th* air with bullets before. '
ata¿ éan wink twice —Mto.For* Her-
ald.
■ *MaaaaaaaMsaaaas|«a|4SPM9w*«*«a*ll*M<tMS*
Muoleos bf a Nary.
as a Means and as an
At no time in the hbitory of oui
ntry has moro attention been given
the subject of physical training than
Is given to it at tho present day. ,
BohoOls, Colleges and Christian as-
sociations are building ooatly gytnS||tt
while athletic organisations, ball elSbi,
l>oat elubs, tennis olubs, etc., are
iofming lh many of our towns, and
oitiea
fifteen thousand dollars is
annaally to bring the Yale an^ Harir*
and boat crews together at New Lou-
don, and it is estimated that 9Ü0.00C
does not meet the yearly expenses of th«
athletic organisations of 1
two nnlversarles. Add to this sui
cost of athletio sports to the si
colleges and city clubs and the
would foot up In the millions. ,
The objoot of this outlay is to van''
qulsh some rival olub^ to win a eham-
plpnshlp. to heal the. reóord, or to
furnish recreation and amosemant te
those who are willing to pay for #
With the representative! of oar/lfMty.
tutlons of learning, and with a portion
of the intelligent puplio, the object oi
tlie* encouragement giveii to athletic
is to counteract the enei-vatldg ten-
dency of the times, and to improve the
health, strength, and vigor of youth.
This belpg the fact, the questions at
once arise, how largo a proportion ol
young men in the land systematically
pract oe athletiosf
Probably less, than one per oent
How large a proportion of those who
are members of athletio organisations
take an active part in.the sports foster-
ed and patronised by' their respeotivs
clubsf M
Probably loss than toil per bent
In the opinion of the ' writer th<
cause for so'little active Interest ii
athletics is au ¡noreásing tendency wltl
us, as people, topursne sport as at
end in itself rather than es a means U
an end. - . ¡ • ¿ *•'
In making exéellenee in tho achieve-
ment the primary object of athletic ex-
ero'ses. we robtehm of half their valsa
—D. J. Sargent, M. JD., in BcribnerV
Magazine. '
A Crawflsh in His Knwe.
A remarkable surgieal operation ws
performed in Ogletbrope county tht
other day. Joshua Sims, a negro mita
has for some time been complaining
that he;felt something icrasVlliig ln hit
leg Just above his knee. He declare*
it yiu a crawfish, and said he oculd fee
ppiMting him all the time. PhysltiMÚ
aadft an examination and laughed a!
Joshua, telling him there was hothin|
wrong with him. He would not b
satisfied; however, and he consulted i
negro koodoo doctor. This doctor per
some kind of a*>
Ike cruiser Chicago has at last made firmed some kind of an operation, i
I* Wtáp^lgíivy now m tM, á^snougl, brought fottb a lhre er
vessel* that can l#.ciMlMlf. left out in 1«h from Joshua it fig. Thát Is the
tbe wet, and foreign powers wlU here- fo«« olaimhedld, and say that Jos
1
n m
Éipi
I (•wOWMIXt : i m
ÜÉ
I wf' i IP
H
'
OTTO
i nMW
SHHnppp
«PPIMÍN
jS IV;
ranging in tom from $900
any smoont
' ■ V -
■
|«P
•. 1 ü I i
SHERMAN, TEXAS.
This institution having been oleared
of its bonded dolit sow enters upon
tu coming aeaeiou with the brightest
(rf/proepecte ¿fad*
for atiuleuts. " fj
For itxftnrfitallon addree J. 0. Ed
mirada, Ohuiman of Faoolty.
ÜBBteoi rumiu
i ■■ mm m+M
1 1 1 .
Alluvial soil, covered with fruit
fruit .«11 1 rnnuiug Water
FOR
About a 5 cash or equivoieut.bal*
anee long time or other propertr here
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G. G. STEEVER, M. D.
Offioe oyer Tayman A Berry'b Drug-
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TAYLOR, M.
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Offloe Hours—9 to 13 a. ni. and 3 to 6 p. m.
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'' Sherman, .-VeSUflf
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Attorneys at .
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herman, - Texas.
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Sherman Daily Register (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 237, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1887, newspaper, August 27, 1887; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143313/m1/3/?q=sherman%20daily%20register: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .