San Antonio Daily Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 276, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 28, 1906 Page: 29 of 30
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: San Antonio Light and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
Extracted Text
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Ii the very essence of malt and hops' goodness—rich sad •
delicious In flavor—strong In food properties—full of health- J
fulness. "Alamo” Is without a peer.
Brewed and bottled by—LONE STAR BREWING CO. •
Practical people are fast becoming convinced that the •
moderate use of beer is solving the temperance question.
*»•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••*
“FORBID A FOOL A THING AND THAT HE
WILL DO.” DON’T USE
SAPOLIO
TAMMANY IS LOYAL.
Will Support Whole Democratic Tick-
et—State and Local.
New York Oct. 27—The executive
:ommittee of Tammany hall decided
It a meeting to support the whole
iemocratic ticket state and local.
Charles F- Murphy the leader of
Tammany hall delivered a speech to
the members in which he said that
le expected them to do their utmost
io that on election day the results
when compared with the best vote of
previous years would preclude any
possibility of any charge of treachery
or knifing. „ „
• The ticket must be supported
said Mr. Murphy "to the fullest ex-
tent in every district. We are almost
on the eve of election day and the
time remaining should be devoted to
using the best energies that each of
your leaders can command. Now Is
the time to put your shoulder to the
wheel and aid in lolling up the big-
gest democratic vote in the history
of the organisation. The ticket* I am
confident will win. and the victory
will be all the greater with Tammany
working In every district.”
Cool mornings call for hot waffles
made fresh under your own eyes and
served quick at Magendie’s Bon Ton
JIS East Houston street
MALTHOID
ROOFING
Waterproof
Weather proof
Durable and
Easily Laid
Wholesale and Retail
Hillyer-Deutsch-
Jarratt Company
HOTELS
The Menger
San Antonio Tex.
Located opposite the beautiful
Alamo Plaza.
American Plan $3.00 and up.
None better for comfort and
service.
McLEAN 4 MUDGE Managers
BexarHotel
All Modern Conveniences.
American and European Plan.
First-class a la Carte Service.
ALFRED SANNER Prop.
ELITE HOTEL
Cor. Soledad and Main Plaza.
W. 8. TOBIK Proorietor
Completely refurnished. Everything
now. Sample rooms in annex.
THE CAFE IS SECOND TO NONE.
Your patronage cordially solicited.
MAHNCKE HOTEL
Cor. Houston and St. Mary's Streets.
(Center of City.)
SAN ANTONIO TEXAS.
Rates $2.00 per day. Modern con-
veniences. Special apartment (en
suite.) Large Sample Rooms. Cuisine
• specialty. L. MAHNCKE Prop.
Hotel Sterling
South and Alamo Streets.
EUROPEAN PLAN.
All Modern Conveniences.
FIRST-CLASS CAFE CONNECTED.
ELDER U8EO PHONE.
Rev. Stafford Presided Over Meeting
40 Miles Away By Phone.
Gainesville Tex. Oct 27.—Rev. J.
A. Stafford presiding elder of the
Gainesville district of the Southern
Methodist church held a quarterly
Greenwood Wise county
♦0 milerfrom here over the telephone
from this city. The presiding elder said
the roads were in such a condition
that he could not drive 40 miles so he
used the telephone to do the work
at the quarterly conference.
We have the most charming and
daintiest designs in Imported Wall Pa-
per. Exclusive patterns and
204-206 West Commerce.
FRED HUM MERT.
Queen Quality
Footwear
Sole Agency
JOSKE BROS CO.
SPEND YOUR MONEY WISELY
HOLLAND
TheRenowned Tea Man
Will supply you with Tea or Cof-
fee to your satisfaction. Call and
see.
227 W. Commerce Street.
Phones 311.
FOR RE.NT
A big crowd is coming for the
Fair. Visitors will want the proper
accommodations. You can rent any
and everything you need for the
occasion.
FURNITURE. CARPETS. RUGS
BEDS. MATTRESSES SPRINGS
CURTAINS COTS STOVES RAN-
GES. UTENSILS; in fact we can
furnish your house from kitchen to
parlor.
Call or phone the old reliable
MAX KAROTKIN.
119-123 Main Avenue.
New 614 —PHONES— Old 449
KflHHNT Improve W
your
‘WR looks
Jr " But l^at ' s not
MR e^ C 't' a8 ' cs I
ought to da I
Eye-sight is ■
' more important ■
I Shur-0n glasses t
I help both sight and looks. ■
I They hold firmly —do not £•
S droopor shake. Have no ugly ■
B high arch. Do not pinch the ■
W aose*
ffl Have a pair fitted n
S by I
| H.C. Rees Opt. Go. |
242 W. Commerce St
Opp. St. Mary's Street. E
To Eastern and Northern
Summer Resorts.
The Louisville & Nashville Railroad
affords the Fastest Train and Finest
Service from New OrLans and Mem
phis to all the noted Summer Resorts
In the East and North. Tlcltets will
be on sale after June 1st at very low
rates to Niagara Falls Mammoth
Cave Put-in Bay Old Point Comfort
Waukesha St. Pau! and Minneapolis
French Lick. Petoskey Occnomwcc
Mountain Park and to the Mountain
Resorts in Tennessee and Kentucky
tickets being limited for return until
October 31 1906. The Louisville ft
Nashville operates Double Daflv
Trains out of New Orleans and Mem-
phis for all resorts mentioned Trains
are wide-vestibulcd and carry modern
Pullman Sleepers. Electric Lighted
Dining Cars and Coaches and Free
Reclining Chair Cars. For rates
time tables and further information
address below named representatives
of the
Louisville & hashvilla R R.
p. W. MORROW T. P. A. HOUS
ton Texas.
T. H. KINGSLEY. T. P. A. Dal-
las Tsxas.
J. K RIDGELY D. P. A. Now Or
leans. La.
•AN ANTONIO DAILY LIGHT. SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS. SATURDAY OCTOBER 27. 1»«
j A BOOKS AND MAGAZINES A
Ob good K-ganlie untie o' the brown
old earth.
This autuinu luurtung! Iios be seta
his bones
To ba.k I' the »un and thrusts out
knees and feet
For the ripple to run over in its mirth;
Listening the while where on the heap
of stone.
The white breast of the sea-lark twit-
ters sweet.
That is the doctrine simple ancient
true;
Buch Is life's trial as old earth smiles
and knows.
If you loved only what were worth
your love
Love were clear gain and wholly well
for you;
Make the low nature better by your
throe.!
Give earth yourself go up for gain
above!
• • •
North American Review.
Enough of the autobiography of
Mark Twain has already appeared to
justify his opinion that its Interest
and its unlikeness to any other would
make it outlast any that had been pre-
viously written in thia number he
tells us tenderly and with many touch-
ing comments something of his wile
and daughter Susy both of whom are
dead. Those who have read their
Mark Twain with loving care will not
need to read what he says of bls
wife here to know what was the part
she took in his life. One little phrase
In ••Adam's Diary” tells It as fully M
volumes could.
You remember in that be says (I
quote from memory»: "For wherever
Eve was there was paradise.”
This reminiscence of Susy's girlhood
an-1 her little childish bits of reason-
ing. related with directness whlcn
would be the finest of art were it not
seemingly so unconscious of any ar”
at all.
“Apparently Susy was born with
humane feelings for the animals and
compassion for their troubles. This
enabled her to see a new point in an
old story once when she was only six
years old—a fiofnt which had been
overlooked by older and perhaps
duller people for many years. Her
mother told her the moving story of
the sale of Joseph by his brethren
the staining of his coat with the blood
of the slaughtered kid. and the rest of
it. She dwelt upon the inhumanity of
the brothers; their cruelty toward
their helpless young brother; and the
unbrotherly treacherv which they prac-
ticed upon him; for she hoped to
teach the child a lesson In gentle pity
and mercifulness which she would re-
member. Apparently her desire was
accomplished for the tears came into
Susy's eyes and she was very deeply-
moved. Then she said 'Poor little
kid!'”
The child's tender heart and keener
sympathies went out to the nameless
and forgotten little animal which gave
its harmless life to mark a point in
the world's history and got neither
thanks nor recognition.
"Oxford” by William Dean Howells
tells with apt phrasing Just what one
whose Imagination has lingered about
the English university would like to
be told. Covered with memories green
as the Ivy which clings to her walls
Oxford occupies a unique place in the
mind of all English reading countries.
The men who made England great and
built the far-flung glory of the English
language were many of them either
Oxford men or largely Influenced by
her traditions.
"Education-.! Reciprocity” Is by
Charles F. Beach Jr. professor of
American Law and Institutions In
Paris. This deals with the reciprocal
relations in the higher education
which have been entered into by the
schools of learning in our country and
the great European universities.
"It is to do not with Europeans and
Americans going out into the outer
darkness as educational pioneers to
teach civilization to those who have it
not. but with their goings and com-
ings on equal terms among them-
selves. to get acquainted educationally
each with the other to explain and to
expound themselves to each other;
each carrying to all the rest whatever
is choicest and most distinctive and
distinguishing in his own Intellectual
kit; each country giving as much as it
gets and getting a thousand times
mere than it gives.”
"The Awakening of China” is by K
K. Kawakami a native of Japan. He
was a member of the imperial Japan-
ese commission to the St. Louis
World's Fair and prepared the official
retort on that exposition.
He speaks for the condition In
China in the tone of one who knows
and emphasizes the great importance
to China of her dependence' on Japan
and Japanese methods to hold her own
in the world’s progress.
"There are nine thousand Chinese
students In Japan.”
"In America's Greatest Prison” is
by Thomas Speed Mosby pardon at-
torney to the governor of Missouri. I
will only quote one fact from this well
written article every Jine of which
should be read by thinking men and
women: "Of the 1794 convicts 627 or
more than cne-thlrd were of the ages
of 20 to 25 years both inclusive.”
Century Magazine.
“Khiva From the Inside" Is by
Langdon Warner whose “Getting Into
Khiva" In the September Century was
ven- good reading He certainly had
the great and in these restless days
verv rare privilege of writing up a
land almost unknown to even the
newspaper men and has made good
use of hU privilege.
"The Dog Police of European Cities”
Is by William Fitz-Gerald and Is the
well-told story of how the police of
Belgium have found still another use
for the most Intelligent animal in the
world save man. Six years ago in the
old town of Ghent which is mostly
known to us of English traditions '»
the birthplace of old John of Gaunt
father of Henry V.. it war found that
the police force was Insufficient and
funds were not to be had to Increase
ts number. Then it was that M. Van
Wesemael. police commissioner sug-
gested trained dogs as auxiliary police.
Thia suggestion has been followed
with such success that Antwerp
Mona Bruges and Ostend also utilised
the intelligent animals. The article la
well Illustrated and one gets the idea
that the dogs as police have a much
tester UR- lLail do those that draw
the little wagons all over the cities of
Belgium an u tor whom travelers have
so much sympathy. To do satisfac-
tory work the police dog needs good
food and shelter and he seems to
get It.
"The Human Bide of the Czar" by
Amalia Kussner Coudert. gives one a
far different and much more interest-
ing idea of the czar and czarina of
Russia than Is gained by reading thu
"yellow journals." it seems to be one
of the penalties of royalty to be mis-
represented not only by enemies but
often by those who can have no per-
sonal grievance or cause for misrep-
resentation. Doubtless the ruler of all
the Russulas would average very- well
Indeed compared with other rulers
some of whom have had the worldly
wisdom or luck to gain the good will
of those who mould public opinion.
' The Doll Lady" is a clever story by
Edna Kenton.
"A Perverse Generation” is one of
the bright well bulk short stories we
have grown to expect from Grace El-
lery Channing. Mrs. Talbot was one
of the few surviving examples of that
extreme domestic capacity which tor
generations has made the New Eng-
land housewife a name of pride to the
native of terror to the alien. Her
idea of good management was to make
each member of the family concentrate
her energies on doing the thing she
was least fitted to do. Fortunately
she was finally Incapacitated for a
while and the younger generation had
a chance to show that their way of
ca<h doing what she was fitted for
was the best. The story is well told
and the finale not disappointing.
"An Appeal to the Past" is one of
Harvey J. O'HtKgfns' stories of Cap-
tain Keighley and his fireman. It is
probably a pretty good tale but did
not appeal particularly to me not even
Captain Keighley and his friend Nor-
man “the ward leader the sort of
man to whom politics is a benevolent
affair of ‘getting jobs' for his friends
and loyally keeping them from his
enemies.”
—Browning.
“Justlna’s Playmate" is one of these
well written futile Utile stories that
make one wonder why the writer who
docs so well does not do better. One
feels sorrier for the two misplaced lit-
tle girls than for Justina.
The October number of the Tech-
nical World makes its appearance with
the picture of a self-i>ossesscd young
woman on the outside cover.
The contents of the number are very
largely the achievements of worn Su In
the technical world.
“Women in Technical Work" is by
William Ward aud is illustrated by
pictures of women who have deuon-
st rated their fitness for teennieal
! work and have for the most part at-
। taiued to ;>osittons where the apprect-
t at Inn of that fitness is shown In a sno-
sts-ntfal way—that is—by the money
which the work done Is entitled to
irrespective of her sex.
On the sixth of last March. Miss
Nora Stanton Blatch was elected to
membership In the "American Society
of Civil Engineers."
“At the time of her election Mist
Blatch was doing the engineering
work for the American Bridge com-
pany. Today she is an official of the
board of water supply of New York.
The analysis of drinking water has
long been her technical specialty."
Among the women mentioned —and
pictured—-is Miss Alice Law of Chi-
cago. who Is on the staff of an engi-
neering journal. She started her tech-
nical education by studying the cata-
logues of the manufacturing firms.
There Is a very pretty picture of
Mrs. Anney M. Brett of El aso. Texas.
(I suppose "Anney” is the technical
way to spell "Annie") who Is the
president and general manager of thu
Southern Independent Telephone com-
pany of EI Paso. Some of the women
pictured are engaged In work which
it seems to my Ignorance Is not nearly
as technical as some of the work done
by women who do not "invade" any
territory but try to cover their own
ground as best they may.
"The Coming Sex" by Walter Hope
should be written the sex which has
arrived. He tells us that "out of 'he
305 gainful occupations enumerated
by the United States census there are
only eight in which women are not en-
gaged. These are soldiers sailors ma-
rines. firemen (municipal) apprentices
and helpers to roofers and slaters
helpers to brass workers helpers to
steam boiler makers and street car
conductors." As he tells us there are
women roofers women brass work-
ers and women steam boiler makers
so in time we' may find them wHUng
io be helpers in those callings. In
1900 there were two women motor-
women; then there seems no reason
why there should not be women con-
ductors; at least in the east and west
where women and children have been
trained to get on and off the car wltn-
out assistance.
"Only four occupations therefore
are today beyond the reach of women
in the United Stales. They cannot be
federal soldiers federal marines feder-
al sailors or municipal firemen. Every-
where else they have knocked and
they have been admitted.
"Women of the Wild" are primitive
types caught by the camera and con-
sists of pictures of “Navaja Squaw
Shearing Sheep” “Hopi Malden" “A
Madonna of the Wild" and "A Pottery
Maker of Laguna. New Mexico.” The
photo of the "Taklma Papoose” from
the Taklma reservation in Washing-
ton. ts the prettiest thing in the book.
"Ladies Unafraid" are another lot ot
bread-earners written up by William
Ward. Mrs. Frackleton the maker of
exquisite pottery whose picture ap-
pears on page 161 is well known In
San Antonio where she has lectured
and exhibited her lovely china.
"Sisters of the Arts and Crafts." by
by Della Austrian ghes the names of
many other women who are engaged
in the occupations which go to make
up the sum of the world's industries.
Thore is shown the picture of an ex-
• • •
The Technical World.
A Gas Range |
0^1In the winter they are just as 5
fine as > n the good old summer- J
rWf hme. Nothing like it. Strike a «
match and turn a valve and '
your fire is kindled.
Were you ever in a hurry and i
had to wait about an hour before J
getting breakfast in the morning? Well there ;
is no such waiting where the gas range is in- <
stalled. It means breakfast on time with a few ■
minutes longer sleep. Don't that sound good ? ;
When you are ready to buy one t
SEE THE GAS COMPANY r ;
Salesroom* 3' *5—7-9 East Houston St. Both Phones 315.
qulsite specimen of book-binding
which Is the work of Miss Gertrude
Stiles. Ii. fact the October is em-
phatically a woman's number. It con-
tains "The Neeedle in the Navy." by
Lillian E. Lem; "Women and Astron-
omy." by Dewey Sheldon Beebe; "Fit
Girls for Work" by Uvlngston Wrfcht
and "Women M Motorists” by David
Beecroft. One ItUlc remark I'll men-
tion which 1 saw Ip the magazine and
it was that the number of women
dressmakers and seamstressses had
decreased. If that be the caae and
men take up the dressmaking where
women leave off one may hope to
have a dress that fits and delivered on
tbs day promised!
The Advance.
This is a small weekly puolished In
Birmingham. Ala.
“The Ironmasters of the South" by
Ethel Arnies gives the Indian story
and romance of the Red Mountain re-
gion old land marks and mounds and
even Spanish topographical signs and
marks have been found. Two Span-
iards who had been of De Soto's com-
pany she tells us were the first white
men U> set foot on Red Mountain's
soil. Their names were Villabos nnd
Silvera and their expedition was made
in 1540. Lured by tales of gold told
them by tha Cherokees they went far
into the mountains but returned sul-
len and disappointed—“red rocks—no
gold.”
"The industrial Schools of Georgia.
On January 1 1907. the new anti-child
labor law of Georgia goes into effect
and tens of thoesands of children un-
der 14 will be unable to go to work in
the factories of Georgia. The schools
are already crowded «nd so to partly
meet the needs of the children the
■'Secondary Industrial Schoool” has
been founded by the manufacturers of
Columbus. It will educate and pro-
vide skilled laborers for which there is
a big demand.
"The Sins of Fanciful Fla Fye" is I
believe a story. The author is Ellis
Parker Butler.
"Some Information on Reform
Spelling" by Prof. J. B. Cunningham
gives us examples of spelling dating
back to the fourteenth century and ex-
tending to the twentieth and ahows
that many of the words as spelt by
the reformers are as the old writers
wrote them.
This number of the “Advance" gives
in brief the “New Rules in Football."
in parallel with the rules as they weie
In 1905 At a glance the differences do
not seem great but a careful re-read-
ing show them to be both fundamental
and far reaching. One hopes that the
new rules will work for good and save
the game for It can be played so that
its entire Influence will be for manli-
ness as shown by endurance and self-
control.
Ethel Armes talks interestingly of
Miss Dorothy Richardson the author
of “The Long Day.”
Miss Richardson is a newspaper wo-
man. and is assistant Sunday editor
of the New York Herald.
G. G. 3.
A GREAT MARINE PAGEANT.
Naval Display at the Jamestown Ex-
position to be th. Best Ever.
Special to The Light.
Norfolk Va. Oct. 27 — The greatest
event in the naval history of the world
will take place on the waters of Hamp-
ton Roads during the continuance ot
tho Jamestown Ter-Centennlal exposi-
tion. which will be opened by the presi-
dent of the United States at noon on
the 26th day of April and which will
close on the 30th day of November
at midnight of the coming year 1907.
The maratime powers of the world
will be there represented by the craft
that Is making and has made them
famous. Every European Asiatic and
American country which boasts of a
naw will send a representation and
this will be maintained throughout
the six months of the exposition. Thus
there will be had a constant and a
paoor.vmlc view of the great seafight-
ers. as the ships will be changed from
time to time tn order that the best may
be shown and seen.
This great display will be in the na-
ture Of n homecoming for the iron-
clads floating fortresses of the pres-
ent day for the site of their anchor-
age in Hampton Roads is the scene of
UNION MEAT COMPANY
Beef and Pork Packers. Whslssals Prsslslsss snd llrsmd lest
(S. I. ImmoM.) . »“ tu$ '
the first battle that ever took place
between ships of that construction.
On April 8-9 1862 the Monitor un-
der the command of Captain Wins-
low of the United States navy and
the Merrimac under the command of
Captain Buchanan ot the Confederate
State navy met in deadly conflict in
Hampton Roads. It was the first clash
between Ironclads. The navies ot the
world are now made up of Ironclads
and hence the appropriateness of a re-
union on the site of their initial test.
This display will mark an epoch in
history. These huge monsters ot de-
struction and death will meet togeth-
er in amicable salute. The end ot
international peace will be largely
subserved and strengthened by that
assembmge and Its Instructive value
to the millions of exposition visitors
will be paramount
The romance of the sea its fury
its horror as well as its calm and
attraction will be exhibited to the
mind and impressed on the heart. The
ever present element of danger will
be seen through an environment of
stately and formidable impressiveness.
It will be a metaphor of the ocean
vast cxpan9ivc.*ovcrwhelming. yet
cheering ennobling and uplifting. It
will be a sight worth seeing. It will
hardly ever again occur in ths world's
history.
CHARGES FELL THROUGH.
Grand Jury at New York Denies Mur-
phy's Contentions.
New York. Oct. 27. —At the conclu-
sion of an investigation by the grand
Jury of charges made by Charles F.
Murphy the Tammany hall leader
that Tammanv ball candidates had
been “held up for cash considera-
tions” by the managers of the Inde-
pendence league it was announced
that the charges had fallen through
completely.
The official announcement to this
effect declared that the charges were
merely campaign gossip and the grand
jury would not dignify the proceed-
ings by making a presentment as a
result of its Inquiry The grand Jury
In its opinion says there was nothing
wrong In an offer made by Congress-
man Gouldin to pay the expenses In
curred In getting signatures to the
Independence league petition in his
behslf.
Oscar Puppe Orchestra. Phone 786.
“PATRICIAN”
SHOES FOR WOMEN.
AN Stylsa—All Leather*
Price $3.50
WOLFF A. MARX CO.
VELVET ICE CREAM
Made By
Creamery dairy Co.
Corner Austin and
Eighth Sts.
We handle only pure unadulterated
goods. Butter cream and pasturlzed
milk. Visitor? to our Sanitary plant
always welcome.
For best wort ta photography
I awarded the Fell Trophy
or Loring Cup. Tia. therefore
*0 youf advantage to have your
vhotoa made by the max who
511VJ E. Houston Street. knows how.
CHAS. ZOLLER. PAUL INGENHUTH H. R. SCHMELTZER.
President A Gen. Mgr. Vice President and Truax
MERCHANTS’ TRANSFER COMPANY
(INCORPORATED)
Receiving. Forwarding. Storage. Etc. Hauling and Placing Safes and
Machinery a Specialty. Both Phones 359.
Office and Warehouse: 610 to 614 Dolorosa Street
MAN TORN TO SHREDS.
Assistant Engineer at Sawmill Cauqht
by the Shafting.
Wallisvtile Tex.. Oct. 27.—Chai lee
Parker a young man employed ar a
helper to the engineer at the Cnm»
mings export sawmill located here
met with a horrible death. He had
gone under the band saw to oil the
shafting that the saw revolves on. and
his lumper caught on the shafting
drawing his arm around it and then
his body was whirled with such lores
that his legs coming in contact with
the other machineiy were virtually
beaten to shreds and one arm cut off.
The body* was badly mangled an t
his flesh scattered all over the mill.
His erm that was torn from his bodv
remained twisted to the shafting and
had to be cut off. The unfortun.i' ’
young man survived only about tno
minutes after the mill was stopped.
The engineer caught Parker |
tried to hold him off the shafting but
was himself thrown with great fores
over the shafting Into the conveyor b<“
yond and sustained painful injuries.
COTTON POORLY PACKED.
Wsshington. D. C. Oct. 27. —Consul
Sharp at Kobe reports that American
cotton reaches Japan In bad condition.
Photographs show the bales are
broken. Bombay sends the beet pack-
ed cotton.
J. T. Burnett 4 Co..
„ Don't let the grass grow
under your feet”
Power Grinder for
Lawn Mowers-also
Philadelphia
. “Keen Kutters”
Pierce Cycle Co.
309 Navarro. J. S. 00DDS
IF YOU HAVE
Any Papering Painting or decorating*
to be done. If you need Mantels.
Grates or have any repairing tn that
line ring us up. We are fuTty equip-
ped. as we carry a complete assort
ment of all goods In our line and
employ only expert workmen.
ERB-SPRINGALL GO.
Both Phones. 501 E. Commerce.
Thos. Goggan & Bro.
PIANOS-ORQANS
.. M Mus leal Merchandiseeta
29
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San Antonio Daily Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 276, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 28, 1906, newspaper, October 28, 1906; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1691216/m1/29/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .