The Meridian Tribune (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, August 31, 1917 Page: 7 of 8
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THE MERIDIAN TRIBUNE
TROUBLE COST HER
$1000, SHE SAYS
Mrs. Andrews Was Confined to
Her Home for Four
Long Years.
ALMOST GAVE UP HOPE
Goes to Movies Now With Her Friends
and Enjoys Life Since
Tanlac Relieved.
Trouble.
“When my friends and neighbors see
me going- out to the movies with my
daughters and enjoying life once more
they tell me they can hardly believe
I am the same bed-ridden woman that
I was,” said Mrs. G. A. Andrews, of
6007 Missouri street, El Paso, Texas,
the other day.
“I was laid up for more than four
years with rheumatism so I was unable
to leave my house, and fully half the
time I lay flat of my back in bed un-
able to move. My body and limbs
were so swollen they seemed to be
twice their natural size and my face
was puffed up so l could hardly see.
My kidneys gave me no end of trouble,
my head ached all the time like it
would burst and my feet and finger
tips tingled like they were asleep. My
nerves were all on edge so I would go
all to pieces at any little noise. My
appetite failed and I got so I had to
force myself to eat enough to keep me
alive.
“I had spent all of a thousand dol-
lars trying to get well, but nothing did
me any good and I was about to give
up hope when I heard of Tanlac. I
was actually amazed to find I was get-
ing better from the first few doses.
I have taken three bottles so far and
the swelling has entirely disappeared.
My nerves are all right and I have so
much life and energy I want to keep
on the go all the time. I help with
the housework and the sewing and I
signed my name today for the first
time in four years. I could not have
believed it possible for anysimedicine
to do so much good in so short a time
as Tanlac has done for me.”
There is a Tanlac dealer in your
town.—Adv.
| Lemons Whiten and |
| Beautify the Skin! j
I Make Cheap Lotion I
.;.,..•.....•..•..•..•..•..•..•..•■■•■.•••••.•-■•••••■••.••.•■.•.■•■•••.«■•••.
The juice of two fresh lemons strain-
ed into a bottle containing three ounces
of orchard white makes a whole quar-
ter pint of the most remarkable lemon
skin beautifier at about the cost one
must pay for a small jar of the ordi-
nary cold creams. Care should be tak-
en to strain the lemon juice through a
fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in,
then this lotion will keep fresh for
months. Every woman knows that lem-
on juice is used to bleach and remove
such blemishes as freckles, sallowness
and tan and is the ideal skin softener,
smoothener and beautifier.
Just try it! Make up a quarter pint
of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion
and massage it daily into the face,
neck, arms and hands. It should- natur-
ally help to whiten, soften, freshen and
bring out the hidden roses and beauty
of any skin. It is wonderful for rough,
red hands.
Your druggist will sell three ounces
of orchard white at little cost, and any
grocer will supply the lemons. Adv.
A Treat for Dad.
On day someone sent me up a box
of cigars from the cigar store down-
stairs. Arthur, my office, boy, brought
them in and stood near my desk while
I unwrapped the package. As I opened
the box I said to him jokingly—as he
was too young to smoke—“Will you
have a cigar, Arthur?” And Arthur re-
plied: “I don’t smoke, but my father
does.” So I said: "All right, take
one for your father.”
He picked out a cigar and put it
away in his inside coat pocket. As he
started away I said to him, more out
of cuirosity than anything else: "What
does your father do, Arthur?”
Arthur remained silent and blushed
deeply. It made me more curious than
ever.
“Come, speak up,” I urged.
“He k-k-keeps a cigar store,” stam-
mered Arthur as he bolted off.—Puck.
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years younger if yon
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by
using "La Creole” Hair Dressing.—Adv.
COST OF GROWING A CALF TO ONE YEAR
SHORTHORN COWS ON OKLAHOMA FARM.
MEL MAKES YOU SICK UGH!
SALIVATE
Straighten Up! Don’t Lose a Day’s Work! Clean Your Sluggish
Liver and Bowels With “Dodson’s Liver Tone."
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take
& dose of the vile, dangerous drug to-
night and tomorrow you may lose a
day’s work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which: causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile crashes into it, break-
ing it up. This is when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping. If you
feel sluggish and “all knocked out,” if
your liver is torpid and bowels consti-
pated or you have headache, dizziness,
coated tongue, if breath is bad or
stomach sour, just try a spoonful of
harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone.
Here’s my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone. Take
a spoonful tonight and if it doesn’t
straighten you right up and make you /
feel fine and vigorous by morning I
want you to go back to the store and
get your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone
is destroying the sale of calomel be-1
cause it is real liver medicine; entire- .,
ly vegetable, therefore it cannot sall-
vate or make you sick. -:
I guarantee that one spoonful of :
Dodson’s Liver. Tone will put your slug- :
gish liver to work and clean your bow- v
els of that sour bile and constipated
waste which is clogging your system
and making you feel miserable: I guar-
antee that a bottle of Dodson’s Liver E
Tone will keep your entire family feel- .
ing fine for months. Give it to your
children.- It is harmless; doesn't gripe -
‘and they like its pleasant taste.—-Adv. <
Too Much to Expect.
We overheard, on a Collinwood car,
the best excuse for not working that
we could ever have imagined. File it
for reference.
One fellow said, “How do you like
your job down at the mill?”
“I ain’t workin’ there no more,” an-
swered the other.
“Got a better job?"
"Nope. Ain’t got no job.”
“What did you quit for?”
"Well, I couldn’t see no use in keep-
In’ on at it. I figger it that if I did
make good they’d expect me to keep
right on makin’ good. That’s too much
to expect.of anybody, this kinda weath-
er. So I quit.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
A Different' Implement.
Red-Nosed Tramp—Lady, kin I cut
your grass fer a meal? I’m a first-
class lawn mower.
Lady—Go away! You look more
like an old rake.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen-
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties of QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 60 cents.
DRUGGISTS PLEASED WITH
GOOD KIDNEY MEDICINE
I have sold your remedy for the past
fifteen years and have sufficient confidence
in it to give it my personal recommenda-
tion. I believe it is one of the best medi-
cines of its class on the market today and
I find pleasure in selling it at all times.
Very truly yours,
KAMINER’S DRUG STORE,
F. V. Kaminer, Prop.,
Nov. 4, 1916. Spartanburg, S. C.
His Long Stand.
Percy, being down to recite at the
temperance concert, stood up to do or
die. He got along all right until he
reached the words, “He stood beside
the bier!” Then his memory failed
him.
“He, stood beside the bier!” he re-
peated, trembling.
The evil spirits on the back benches
murmured one to another.
“He stood beside the bier!” groaned
Percy, and he drew a moist hand
across his dripping forehead.
“Go on!" yelled a voice from the
rear. “It’ll get flat while you’re wait
ing, you fool!”
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
- Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size
bottle. It will convince anyone. You
will also receive a booklet of valuable in-
formation, telling about the kidneys and
bladder. When writing,, be sure and men-
tion this paper. Large and medium size
bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Adv.
Fowl Rebellion.
First Hen—The government is go-
ing to make us lay more eggs. What
do you say?
Second Hen—For one, I am firmly
set against it.
Used to It.
Doctor—H’m, have you ever bevn
rejected before?
The Don Juan (undergoing re-exavy
ination)—Oh, yassir. Little affairs ee
the heart; y’know.
Not a Dependent.
“Have you anyone dependent on
you?” asked the exemption clerk.
“Well,” replied Mr. Meekton, “Hen-
rietta shows me what to do with my
money. But she is most independent
about it.”
HEADACHES
(By PROF. JAMES WILSON, South Da-
• kota Agricultural College.)
Breeders of Shorthorn cattle should
be interested in the cost of producing
a Shorthorn bull to the age of twelve
months. Of course this varies in dif-
ferent localities and with different
breeders, but having produced hun-
dreds of purebred calves, I appreciate
the fact that some do not care to have
their twelve months’ old calves as
large or as heavy as this one was, but
for early maturity the calves must be
fed. I know of no better place to crib
grain than in purebred Shorthorn
calves—even if it does cost two and
three cents a pound.
Interested in Cost.
A few years ago I was interested in
knowing how much it actually cost the
state to produce a bull at twelve
months of age at the pace we were go-
ing, so I selected a calf, that was ten
days old and weighed.him for the trial.
A daily record was kept of his feed,
also that of his mother, and he weighed
every 30 days. He received- just or-
dinary attention, no more than -hun-
dreds of bulls that I have fed of this
breed under similar conditions. This
calf was born December 7, 1912. He
received his mother’s milk (no nurse
cows; I would not give much for the
cow that cannot nurse her own calf),
and because of his age was not al-
lowed to run with her and the re-
mainder of the herd when she was
turned on grass, May 16, the following
year. The mother is a pure Scotch
cow of less than medium scale and
only an average milk producer. Bull
calves of this age do not do well when
turned with the herd in the spring to
fight flies and worry all summer.
Grazing in the evening would have
been all right for this calf, but not
having a suitable pasture he was kept
in the yard day, and night, and the
expense of growing is probably a few
dollars more than it would have been
had we had a good pasture and sev-
eral other bulls to have turned out
with him in the evening after he was
fed his grain ration.
Attracted Attention.
There was a “something” about this
bull that attracted the attention of
everyone who saw him. His type as
Shorthorn, his size for his age, his
character as a bull, his solid dark red
color, all had a bearing. When calves
of this age have great big thick horns
and the horns have been trimmed or a
wee bit sawed off the ends it is evi-
dence that the calf has been neglected.
Probably he has lost his milkfat and
an effort is being made to put it back
with grain.
The Shorthorn is the most popular
breed, of cattle in the United States to-
day. The popularity must be credited
to the fact that as a breed it comes
nearer filling the dual-purpose capacity
than any other. The cows are fairly
good milkers, and when put on the
market make good beef. Now I do not
claim this breed in its entirety is as
good for milk production as a breed
developed along strictly dairy lines or
as food for beef production as a breed
developed solely along beef lines, but
some excel in beef and some excel in
milk.
old. The next month he was fed al-
falfa hay in place of the wild hay, and
on the eighteenth of July his grain ra-
tion was changed to one-third oats,
two-thirds corn and one-tenth oil meal
by weight. On August 1 Bromus in-
ermis hay was substituted for alfalfa
hay (because of scarcity of alfalfa)
and the calf at this time was eating
12 pounds of grain daily and what hay
he wanted. . He was continued on this
ration until twelve months and ten
days old, when he was eating 16
pounds of the mixture daily. At this
time he weighed 1,098 pounds. I have
fed calves that were heavier than this
one for their ages, but they were from
better milkers than this cow.
The following is a statement of the
quantity of food actually consumed by
the cow and calf until he, was one year
old. This is figured at ordinary prices
for feed in the Northwest, and not
wartime prices: .
Oats,. 79.9 bu., at 23c.....
Corn, 31.8 bu., at 35c .....
Oilmeal, 509 lbs., at 1% c..
Bran, 23814 lbs., at 1e....
Wild hay, 2.11 tons, at $6.
.$18.37
. 11.13
. 9.16
. 2.38-
Alfalfa hay. .26 tons, at $15_____
Bromus inermus hay, .6 tons, at
■ $6 ...... . ..............
Pasture for cow 7 months, a.t $1.
12.66
3.90
3.60
7.00
Total......................$68.20
Gain of Calf by Months.
First month .....
Second month .....
Third month.......
Fourth month .....
Fifth month .
Sixth month ...______
Seventh month ....
Eighth month......
Ninth month ......
Tenth month .
Eleventh month ...
Twelfth month ....
Total gain
Southwestern University
GEORGETOWN, TEXAS
s Session 1917-1918
Opens September 25th, 1917
A splendid new $50,000.00 Science Building offers exceptional advantages for
the study of the sciences. Special courses offered for Pre-Medical and Pre-
Engineering students.
Department of Domestic Science just added. A special laboratory with mod-
ern equipment will be occupied by the department. Young women may combine
study of Fine Arts, Domestic Science, and Literary work.
The College Faculty is one of the strongest in the South. Courses of study
well planned. Dormitories modern and complete, expenses moderate, student
life democratic. For catalog address,.
REGISTRAR, SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, GEORGETOWN, TEXAS
SHOW CASES
Will give your business an air of distinction. Send us a trial order. We:
make all our Show Cases and Fixtures. "Buy it made in Texas.*”* Write
THE MAILANDER COMPANY, WACO sATLEAONIOE,
Spartan Women Suffered Untold Tortures
but who wants to be a Spartan? Take
“Femenina” for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
This distressing Ailment should %•
relieved at once and save strain on
Nervous System. CAPUDINE gives
quick relief. It’s a liquid—Pleasant to
take.—Adv.
Changed.
"There’s safety in numbers.”
"There used to be, before the draft
numbers were printed.”
Opposing Results.
“What airs Mame does put on.”
“Well, her finishing school was the
beginning of it.”
Milk for Calf.
When this calf was ten days old he
weighed 122 pounds, not an extra large
weight for a calf of the breed. At this
time the mother weighed 1,160 pounds.
It was our intention to feed her a ra-
tion out of which she could make milk |
for the calf and maintain her own
weight, as she was not an extra fat
cow. We made a mixture of 200
Sore Eyes, Blood-Shot Eyes, Watery Eyes,
Sticky Eyes, all healed promptly with night-
ly applications of Roman Eye Balsam. Adv.
SAVE A DOCTOR’S BILL
by keeping Mississippi Diarrhea Cor
dial handy for all stomach complaints.
Price 25c and 50c.—Adv.
pounds of oats, 50 pounds of corn, 25 j
pounds of bran and one-tenth as much
of the total by weight of oilmeal. The !
idea of adding the bran was to compel
more thorough mastication of the grain
before swallowing and to furnish pro-
East Dallas, Tex., has renamed Ger-
mania street “America.”
Don’t think that because you get a
ham from a small hog that you can
get a hammer from a large one.
tein and mineral matter. In addition
to this ration she was fed ordinary i
wild hay. At this time the cow was on |
Pounds.
.... 80
..... 76
.... 78
.....100
.... 98
______116
______50
.....102
.....64
.976
Pounds,
Weight at beginning ........ 122
Total weight at close ........1,098
Average gain per month......81
Average gain daily...........2.67
Had I been fitting this calf for show
purposes I would have added a good
nurse cow and probably two, which
would have increased the cost materi-
ally, but new milk is the best feed and
I would have had a much heavier and
fatter calf. Many will wonder whether
it pays to even feed calves this way.
At the close of the record keeping we
were offered $300 by several different
parties for him and today he would
have brought $700 to $1,000 and prob-
ably more, at auction. '
INCREASED VALUE OF MANURE
Field Tests Conducted at University
of Missouri in Different Soils
and Seasons. .
Just what the farmer can pay for
a ton of manure or for hauling and
taking care of it varies with differ-
ent conditions. For ten years the Uni-
versity of Missouri College of Agricul-
ture has been investigating this ques-
tion. Field tests have been made in
13 different parts of the state. Differ-
ent soils, seasons, and kinds of ma-
nure have been included under ordi-
nary methods of farming.
In practically all cases eight tons of
manure to the acre was applied once
in four years and plowed under before
the corn crop. No manure was ap-
plied on the following crops of oats,
wheat and clover, but the yields were
all recorded. The increase in crop
yields caused by the use of eight tons
of manure per acre were as follows:
1012 bushels of corn, 5% bushels of
wheat, 4 bushels of oats, and about
7.000 pounds of hay. This is an
! average from 60 tests oh corn and
a somewhat less number on the
full feed, or 12 pounds of the mixture |
per day and all the hay she wanted. At |
the end of 30 days her grain ration was !
A Message to Mothers
OU know the real human doctors right around in your neighborhood:
j the doctors made of flesh and blood just like you: the doctors with
4 souls and hearts: those men who are responding to your call in the
dead of night as readily as in the broad daylight; they are ready
to tell you the good that Fletcher’s Castoria has done, is doing and
will do, from their experience and their love for children.
Fletcher’s Castoria is nothing new. We are not asking you to
try an experiment. We just want to impress upon you the importance
of buying Fletcher’s.
Your physician will tell you this, as he knows there are a num-
ber of imitations on the market, and he is particularly interested in
the welfare of your baby. )
increased to 14 pounds of the mixture,
and at the end of 60 days the two were
eating 16 pounds, as the calf at this
time had learned to eat grain with its
mother. When the calf was eighty
other crops. Figuring these increases
at normal prices they are worth about
$16, or about $2 a ton for the eight
tons of manure applied. With present
prices, which are almost double those
I of normal times, manure is worth cor-
respondingly more, or about $4 a ton.
days old he was fed in a separate box, BEST FOR IMPROVING SOILS
beginning with' four pounds of the
same mixture and gradually increas-
ing, giving him all he would eat after
he had sucked his mother.
Grain for Calf.
On May 16 the cow.was turned to
grass and was brought in morning and
Nature’s Plan Is to Use Cover Crop of
Weeds or Trees and Subsoil by
Deep Roots.
Nature’s plan of improving soils is
to use a cover crop of weeds, grass,
Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of C
evening to nursa the calf. Her grain shrubs or trees and to subsoil by send-
rations was gradually reduced and ing the roots down 1, 2, 3 or 4 feet, as
that of the calf increased. At this time ! the case may be, thus airing and en-
the mother weighed 1,134 and the calf | riching the subsoil without bringing it
554. The calf was now five months to the surface.
. An Elegant Translation.
A Boston girl who had been taking
her first lesson in bicycle riding ex-
pressed her satisfaction at home at the
result of the experiment.
“The man said,” she repeated, "that
I had made most satisfactory progress
for a novice.".
“Why, did he really say that?” was
the surprised query.
“Well, no,” answered the Boston
young woman, after a moment’s reflec-
tion. “What he did says was, ‘You’ll
do fust rate for a new beginner!’ ”—
Christian Register.
jong-doge
YES! MAGICALLY! I
CORNS LIFT OUT !
WITH FINGERS |
You say to the drug store man,
“Give me a small bottle of freezone."
This will cost very little but will
positively remove every hard or soft
corn or callus from one’s feet.
A few drops of this new ether com-
pound applied directly upon a tender,
aching corn relieves the soreness in-
stantly, and soon the entire corn or
callus, root and all, dries up and can
be lifted off with the fingers.
This new way to rid one’s feet of
corns was introduced by a Cincinnati
man, who says that freezone dries in
a moment, and simply shrivels up the
corn or callus without irritating the
surrounding skin.
If your druggist hasn’t any freezone
tell him to order a small bottle from
his wholesale drug house for you.—adv.
Certainly Does.
“Did you see where the first pris-
oner taken by an American in the
trenches weighed 220 pounds?”
"That certainly lent weight to the
Incident.”
CUTICURA IS SO SOOTHING
To Itching, Burning Skins—It Not Only
Soothes, but Heals—Trial Free.
Treatment: Bathe the affected sur-
face with Cuticura Soap and hot wa-
ter, dry gently and apply Cuticura
Ointment Repent morning and night.
This method auxrds immediate relief,
and points to seedy healment. They
are ideal for every-day toilet uses.
Free sample etch by mail with Book.
Address postcar Cuticura, Dept L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Nine out of ten men whose names
are signed to a petition couldn’t tell
what it is for.
Constipation generally Indicates disordered
stomach, liver and bowels. Wright’s Indian
Vegetable Pills restore regularity without
griping. Adv.
Seaweed is made into a composition
to take the place of bone for handles
of cutlery.
DON’T GAMBLE
that your heart’s all right. Make
sure. Take “Renovine”—a heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
World speaks 2,424 langauges and
lialects.
A77U/RINE Granulated Eyelids,
001 Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by
AW= Sun, Dust and Wind quickly
FOR.M.relieved by Murine. Try it in
E C your Eyes andin Baby’s Eyes.
BUUR LILNo Smarting, Just Eye Comfort
7.72-5=3 rrmo - At Your Druggist’s or by
murine Eye ssemedy mail, 50c per bottle. Murine
Eye Salve, in Tubes 25c. For Book of the Eye — Free.
Ask Murine Eve Remedy Co.. Chicago 4
Modest Request.
One young man who was highly sen-t
sitive about an impediment which he
had in his speech went to a stammer-
ers’ institute and asked for a course
of treatments. The professor asked
him if he wanted a full or a partial
course. '
“A p-p-partial c-c-course.”
. "To what extent would you like a*
partial course?” '
“Enoughm s-so that wh-when I go to
a f-f-florist's and ask for a c-c-e-chr-,
chrys-s-anth (whistle.) e-m-mum, the *
th-thing won’t w-wilt b-before I g-get.,
it!” . '
Both Ways.
“Do you think Russia will come
back?” “Yes, and she’ll come back by I
going to the front.”
University of Notre Dame
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA
Offers Complete Course In Agriculture
Full courses also in Letters, Journalism,
Library Science, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Medi-
cine, Architecture, Commerce aud Law.
If You Are All In, Down and Out
Need Vim, Vigor and Vitality, use
EAST INDIA
fe. BLOOD MEDICINE
Sent postpaid on receipt of price,,
forarsind $1.00 a Bottle. Address
EAST INDIA MEDICINE CO., Fort Worth, Texan
PILE SUFFERERS
■ Send for a tube of MOTHER’S SHUR-SHOP
PILE REMEDY and quit worrying, losing time
sleep and your health. “Acts quickly. Works
efficiently." First time offered to the public.
Easy and convenient; no work, discomfort or
pain in using. Large sanitary tube with Pile
Pipe and directions $2.50 postpaid. Satisfac-
tion assured.
SHUR-SHOT REMEDY COMPANY : 1
Box 191.
Fort Worth, Texas
A GUARANTEED REMEDY FOR
MAY FEVER-ASTHMA
Your MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED by your druggist
without any question if this remedy does not beneffs
every case of Asthma, Bronchial Asthma and the
Asthmatic symptoms accompanying Hay Fever. Noi
matter how violent the attacks or obstinate the case
m DR. R. SCHIFFMANN’S
ASTHMADON
AND ASTHMADOR CIGARETTES
positively gives INSTANT RELIEF in every case
and has permanently cured thousands who had been
considered incurable, after having tried every other
means of relief in vain, Asthmatics should avail,
themselves of this guarantee offer through theirown
druggist. Buy a 50-cent package and present this
announcement to your druggist. You will be the
sole judge as to whether you are benefitted and the
druggist will give you back your money if you are
not. We do not know of any fairer proposition,
which we could make. (5)
R. Schiffmann Co., Proprietors, St. Paal, Minn.
CHILLIFUGE
FOR MALARIA
IT GETS THE GERM
Every Woman Wants
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dissolved in water for douches stops
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam-
mation. Recommended by Lydia E.
Pinkham Med. Co. for ten years.
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,
sore throat and sore eyes. Economical.
Has extraordinary cleansing and germicidal power.
Sample Free. 50c. all druggists, or postpaid by
i mail. The Paxton Toilet Company, Boston, Mass. ,
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 35--1917.
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Dunlap, Levi A. The Meridian Tribune (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, August 31, 1917, newspaper, August 31, 1917; Meridian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1630296/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Meridian Public Library.