San Antonio Light and Gazette (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 286, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 5, 1910 Page: 4 of 12
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4
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT AND GAZETTE
_ Founded January 30. 1881.
Evening Daily. Members A undated Pre<s. Sunday Morning.
O. D. ROBBINS Publiabar
TELEPHONE CALLS
Boalnen Office and Circulation Department both phones 175
Editorial Department both phones 1859
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Daily and Sunday carrier 1 month.... ••••••»••••* 50
Daily and Sunday carrier 1 year s*oo
Daily and Sunday mail 1 month 50
Daily and Sunday mail 1 year (in adranee). 500
Sunday cat ri er 1 year 2.00
Sunday mail. 1 year • 2 00
Single copy Daily or Sunday 05
Entered at the Postoffice at San Antonio Texas as
Second-class Matter.
The 8. C. Beckwith Special Agency
New York Tribune Bldg. Chicago Tribune Bldg.
TO SUBSCRIBERS.
It is Important when desiring the address of your paper changed to
give both old and new addresses. Should delivery be irregular please
notify the office. Either telephone 176.
rhe Light and Gazette is on sale at hotels and news-stands through-
out the United Stales.
LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER 111 SM ANTONIO
The Tariff and
You and Your Wife.
Eewing and mending to be done.
From the little wicker stand which your wife thinks
is so tasty am' upon which you have paid a tariff of
45 per cent she takes the little spool case—one of those
straw and silk affairs —tariff-taxed 50 per cent and
chooses th • thread very carefully.
Maybe cotton thread will do. That is taxed only one-
half penny on each small spool; if it is one of the larger
spools the tax is double.
If she thinks that linen thread is necessary she picks
but a small spool tariff-taxed three-quarters of a cent
an -unce. •
But sometimes she finds it best to use the silk thread
tariff-texed 9 7-8 cents an ounce.
Having decided upon the thread she will put on het
finger a thimble a hard rubber one. perhaps tariff-
taxed 35 per cent. Or if it is a metal thimble the tariff
Is 10 per cent higher.
Now si • takes up her scissors on which she has-paid
a straight tariff at the rate of 4 cents a pair and in addi-
tion to that 15 per cent on its wholesale price. Pins are
very necessary in sewing so she gathers some of them .
whicl. if of the ordinary kind are tariff-taxed 35 per I
cent. Those with glass heads are tariff-taxed 45 per cent; i
safety pins ever needed 35 per cent.
The beads to ornament little Lucy’s dress are tariff- j
taxed 35 per cent; the common buttons. 3-4 cent a line j
and 15 per cent; the pearl or shell buttons 1 1-2 cents
and 15 per cent added.
Then she has to sew Lucy’s dress on the machine
tariff-taxed 30 per cent with needles taxed 25 per cent.
And late in the evening after all of Willie’s buttons are
in their light places and the rents in Lucy’s school dress
mended your wife may find time to crochet a dainty
scarf with crochet needles taxed 25 per cent using
woolen yarn tariff-taxed 2 1-3 cents and ounce and 40
per cent of its wholesale value added.
Thus enters the high tariff tax law into the precincts
of every home in San Antonio.
Pierp. Morgan didn’t register he isn’t goir.' to vote;
he’? too almighty busy on a trust he plans t« float; he’s
satisfied that things will move about the way they
oughter so he devotes his votin’ time to leadin’ lambs to
slaughter. He knows he's got a lead-pipe inch on You
S. A. and Me. so votin’ is a waste of time for our great
mortgagee. He's set a fine example for us meek and low-
ly cusses he's shown us how we can avoid all these elec-
tion musses: for all we need to do that’s sure to keen
him on his throne it’s just forget to register and leave the
polls alone.
On the shores of Lake Ontario near Albion. N. Y.
there lives a farmer by name Mare W. Cole and he grows
peaches and apples for a living. Collier’s tells us that
one day Farmer Cole picked and packed 36 baskets of
fine peaches. He hitched up old Dobbin to the shay
and took them to the order and commission department
of the American Express company. A few days later he
got a formal statement of the transaction from the ex-
press company. It showed a credit item of $lO.BO for
the peaces and debit of $10.04 for express charges. To the
latter was added three cents for a money order. For his
36 baskets of peaches Jie received 73 cents or 2 cents a
basket. But as it had cost him 15 cents a basket to pick
and pack the fruit he was out $4.68 in real money on the
lot to say nothing of the peaches. Well!
It is hardly likely that any deputy tax collectors will
be sent out this year. In view of that fact it’s up to
every man under the law to go and pay his own poll tax
with his own money.
To secure a knowledge of the best most advanced and
most progressive municipal undertakings in the world to
be applied in w'orking out local problems the socialist
administration of Milwaukee has appointed a commis-
sioner to visit foreign lands and report on municipal en-
terprises undertaken elsewhere. Milwaukee will learn
ef the methods of financing sueh enterprises their man-
agement the causes of their success or failure their
progress and present trend their relations to city pro-
vincial and national industry and commerce their rela-
tions to politics their effects upon the condition of la-
bor and especially upon the great problem of private
monopoly.
That Sears girl has got into the press dispatches to
tell girls that walking is healthful and girls should take
to it. Rest is healthful too and Miss Sears should take it
Rockefeller’s income this year will be only $70000000.
If the poor old fellow had to pay an income tax of 50 per
cent he would have only $35000000 with which to pay
for his golf this year.
The J. Ogden Armours are again making quite a social
ptir in Chicago. J. Og has got a corner in lard and toots
the price to $13.25 per 100.
*
German war office has ordered a fleet of 40 airships
More millions to come out of the taxpavers that’s all
Don't get excited about those little riots in Paris When
the people of Paris really get after their chamber of
deputies the very first news will be that the chamber
of deputies is at the bottom of the Seine.
Don’t Force
Overstudy
the warning of a few doctors who have been thinking
about the child student.
American Medicine utters an appeal against overwork
of children In the schools and says that in many cities
the nervous child is moving parents and physicians to
cry for fewer hours of study and less pressure.
Eye strain is an evil that American Medicine bitterly
protests against. School children in spectacles are be-
coming alarmingly common. Mind strain may not show
Itself so plainly on the exterior but is there any reason
to doubt that it is any less common titan the other?
Certainly it is more serious tn its ultimate results.
Education is highly important but it is not as impor-
tant as mental and bodily health. Where the one is
gained at the cost of the other the snbstance is thrown
sway for the shadow.
In Sar. Antonio schools as elsewhere there is little
danger of unwilling pupils being forced to overstudy. It
ta the eager ones who are likely if nut restrained to go
SATURDAY
After you get settled
comfortable in your easy
chair in that cozy Tobin
Hill cottage
brings out her sewing-kit
for there is usually lots of
Now that the children
of San Antonio are in the
midst of their studies It
would be well that parents
ambitious for their chil-
dren’s success should heed
too far The child who complains of the work exacted
of it is generally far short of the danger line. But the
one who steals time for study and cares not for play
needs careftil restraint.
Parents cannot keep too constantly in mind the fact
that a healthy body is absolutely essential to a child’s
proper mental development. And parents should learn
to know too the difference between the child’s smile of
resignation and its hearty laugh of true enjoyment.
Physical fatigue is less dangerous to health than men-
tal fatigue. The boy of 15 who has done a day’s w’ork in
shop or field is measurably restored by a night's rest.
But the ambitious lad who tires his brain may involun-
tarily continue his work after he has closed his books.
When one lays down tools and quits physical work
recreation immediately sets in; but often there is no end
to mental work even in dreams.
How down east baseball fans must suffer with the
spiking season just getting warm in the Coast league.
Navies on water navies under water armies on land
armies in the air. Then armies under ground—and peace
perhaps.
It sounds as if they'd chloroformed Joe Cannon.
It is going to cost $174079335 to run New York city
the coming year a large part of which will be tribute to
party politics as usual.
Uncle Walt
The Poet Philosopher
O squash rich and mellow with insides of yellow just
list while I sing a few lines; a product that’s greater.
from beet to potater ne’er grew on a
husbandman's vines! A Hubbard
squash dinner is always a winner a
solace a balm and a boon; it cheers
THE HUBBARD
SQUASH.
and refreshes and breaks up the meshes of sorrow and
brightens the noon. You slap on some butter and then
yvu can’t utter the gladness pervading your breast; you
swallow with vigor till three sizes bigger and then you
unbutton your vest. Who was it invented the large
pleasant-scented and life-saving squash we adore? Let’s
crown him with laurel and bay-leaves and sorrel and
honor his name evermore! And let us inveigle the na-
tional eagle to come from his perch (he’s absurd!) and
put up the Hubbard where long he has rubbered and
make it the national bird!
Copyright 1510. by Genre* M«ttb*v Adama
As Others View It
JURY SYSTEM INADEQUATE.
In the current issue of Beetqh and Bar Henry M. Earle
denies the common assumption that an honest and well-
intentioned jury always does what it is expected to do or
acts in accordance with the established rules. Careful in-
quiries addressed by himself to jurors after they have de-
cided cases in which he was interested have revealed that
while they usually take a commendable pride in meeting
the responsibilities of their position to the best of their
knowledge and ability comparatively few of them realize
that their only concern is with the facts In the case as re-
vealed by the testimony. Frequently he says it was dis-
covered that the jurors infringed upon the province of the
judge rendering decisions based on supposed principles of
equity or even of charity and occasionally the court’s
charge as to the law was admittedly ignored on the theory
that it merely followed a meaningless formality.
Comparatively few jurors Mr. Earle thinks are able to
forget testimonj’ given and stricken from the record as
inadmissible. Evidently considering it useless to propose
any fundamental reform of the jury system such as that
of intrusting judgment of the facts to permanent bodies of
trained men he only suggests a more careful Instruction
of every jury as to the limitation of its powers and the ex-
act nature of its duties. He would have the men drawn for
this service supplied by the commissioner of jurors or
county clerk with printed instructions carefully pointing
out to them the difference between their task and that of
judges and explaining that bear upon their utilization of it.
That something could be thus accomplished is probable but
the jury system is in need of larger reforms than can possi-
bly be brought about by any study of printed instructions
which jurymen are likely to make.
Trial by jury is of course a ni/ble a venerable an al-
most sacred institution but Its beautiful adaptation to con-
ditions long since passed away never to return is the source
of all its present ineptitudes inadequacies and absurdities.
Bench are Bar itself suggests that real reform lies in pre-
senting to the jurors only definitely formulated questions
of fact to be as definitely answered and in making the
foreman a chairman with power to direct and control the
discussion of the evidence. That too might work Im-
provement in the system but it would still remain true that
the average juryman especially in civil cases is often con-
fronted with problems for the solution of which he has lit-
tle or no real competency.—New York Times.
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT AND GAZETTE
AU SORTS I
the-Morhiary Editor
A damsel residing in Leicester re-
marked to a man who addreiscester:
"I think that my belt was designed to
be felt.” And two seconds later he
preiscester.
The reason that Peary did not re-
port for duty on schedule tirfie may
have been because he had not paid his
pole-tax but we doubt it.
“I have no desire to press the point
any further” hastily observed the man
who had seated himself upon a tack.
Young Stanley—sometimes known as
Kid—
Became a Pug to win some fame.
A dusky fighter knocked him out
But to the last the Kid was game.
He left the ring and bought a ranch.
And went out west to run tho same.
A Bad Man shot him with a gun
So to thq last the Kid was game.
There is a barber shop sign in the
town of Cotulla ivhich reads: "Pony
Hair Cut 15c.” There is no real reason
for supposing that sueh a hair cut is
a horse on the man who gets it. any
more than there is fot supposing that
the persons who go to the ”Bee Hive
Printery” in Beeville are going to get
stung.
To the Editor of All Sorts:
Sir—l have been unable to find a
masseuse within easy walking distance
of my home. I think it would be real
nice of you if you would find out for
me the addresses of several good ones
in this section of the city. Lovingly
LUCIA.
I have never taken much stock in
them clairvoyants Lucia. Why don't
you try a good palmist?
Bill Jones in a strange fit of pique
Ate nothing but eggs for a wique.
Imagine his shame
When the wique-end had came
And he cackled before he could
spique.
‘‘My curiosity is getting the better
of me” groaned tho sideshow man as
the three-legged man handed hhn a
hard one in the solar plexus with his
odd leg.
The press man who worked on the
upper tier of the big press slipped on
the oily platform and fell upon the
man who worked on the lowest tier.
"You are a hard man to work un-
der” complained the under man. as
he separated himself from the floor.
Whereupon he washed the oil from
his hands and face and resigned from
the job.
To the Editor of All Sorts:
Sir—My name is Hester Tansey and
some people have called me the poet-
ess laureate of Laredo. I do not want
you to think that I am proud or stuck
on myself because I can write poetry
but I would like to have you read
some of the things that I write. I in-
close two. The first one I have called
"November.” It is considered my best.
If my health stays good I hope to
equal it many times. The second one
is "The Birds.” I wrote it in less than
a week.
NOVEMBER.
November’s always cold and drear;
It is the winter of the year.
But ain’t it grand when snow does
fall
Into a nice warm bed to crawl
And sleep till almost 7 o’clock.
THE BIRDS.
Oh the pretty birds!
How I love to hear them sing!
They flit from tree to tree.
And warble sweetly down „to me.
Like everything.*
Some are gray and some are blue
But the red ones are quite few.
And often on a wire they’ll light;
But they're afraid of boys with guns.
I hope vou will like them. Hastily
HESTER.
You have done very klppy work.
Hester. If you will buy pink paper and
white with lavender ink you will find
that you can turn out a poem like
"The Birds” in from three to six
hours.
The Billiard Course is very popular
at Baylor this fall. It consists of Eng-
lish and Drawing.
The country correspondent was
sending off his monthly fake story
about the man-eating panther which
। had eaten the blackberry pie out of
a berry-picker's lunch pail. “Alas” re-
■Rhymo the Monk.
(Copyrtlbt. 1910. by Xew Tort Erenics Jocrr.a PubliAltm Company.!
Even as You and I
Observant Citizen
। "I never saw any sense of people
asking for street car transfers un-
less they want to use ’em until the
other day” said the business man
to his street car companion . “I was
called to Houston on business re-
cently and when I landed back in
San Antonio I found that I did not
have a nickel in my pocket to get
home. I stood on a corner watch-
ing the cars pass hoping to see a
conductor whom I knew when a
friend stepped up shook hands talk-
ed a couple of minutes and then
handed me a transfer with the re-
mark ’I always get one when I come
down town although I have no use
for them myself.’ ”
SANANTONIOZIYEARSAfiO
(From The Light November 5 1889.)
Frank Benavides arrives in San An-
tonio from Roma Texas to enter St.
Mary’s college.
W. H. Buchanan opened his saloon
back of tho postoffice today.
One hundred new flat cars have
been received by the Sap Railroad
company.
Dr. Moorst and wife are in the city
from Waco and are stopping at the
Menger.
Large numbers of country people
were on the streets today despite the
weather.
The register at the Alamo shows a
large number of visitors during the
last few days.
The storm last night succeeded in
tearing down considerable of the rair
decorations and signs.
The opening of the San Antonio fair
has been postponed until tomorrow on
account of the bad storm last night.
The San Antonio drummers will
wear black silk hats and linen dusters
itj the parade on Drummers' Day.
■Editor Ferguion of the Times is ill
at his home today.
St. Mary's Catholic church fair
opened today in Turner hall.
Bids for the bjiildihg of a large
furnace on Government Hill for the
use of the United States military will
be opened today.
General Stanley is having a fine
gallery added to the rear of his resi-
dence in the officers’ quarters. Gov-
ernment Hill.
The San Antonio & Aransas Pass
stole a march on the city last night
and extended their track almost to the
plaza.
Conductor A. C. Finch of the South-
ern Pacific has been brought to the
city for care while recovering from
his recent injuries.
marked the postage stamp which he
was placing upon his letter “I fear
that I am not sticking to facts.”
“I wonder why it is" pondered the
religious editor "that these bird-men
come down so quickly ivhen anything
breaks.” The All-Sorts-For-Tuesday
looked at him in despair. "The rea-
son. George” said he "is that there
is nothing up there to sit on.” At this
the religious editor dodged a large
piece of type which the office boy
threw at him. and started for the
Mission burying ground to think it
over.
We are willing to bet money that
the husband of the woman who had
three Japanese spaniels for brides-
maids in New York murmured “dog
gone it" when he saw them coming up
the aisle.
It wasn't John D. Rockefeller who
was responsible for the statement that
crude oil makes the hair grow.
A Winchester man made a great hit
at a masquerade ball a short time ago.
He stuck a piece of black court plas-
ter on the top of his head and went
as the cue ball.
The reporter had just ordered a
dozen shirts and hail charged them.
"But we must have something as se-
curity" objected the shop owner.
“Just keep one of the shirts” replied
tho reporter. Since the shop owner
was unable to reply the reporter took
the eleven shirts and went home.
There is safety in numbers—unless
they are on the backend of your au-
tomobile and you are violating the
speed law.
Texas Talk
AMERICAN CROWNS.
King Manuel “that was” it is
said wants an American wife.
There are plenty of rich women
in America fools enough to buy
a title but the hard-headed papas
will no doubt be a little slow to
put up the funds for the pur-
chase of this manikin and his
tin crown. An enterprising
American girl can take the tin
foil that comes around tobacco
and chewing gum and make a
crown that would skin it a mile.
—Kerrville Mountain Sun.
Probably the best looking Ameri-
can crowns come with baking soda
lithographed on the wrappers.
DAMP IN THE HINGES.
The announcement from San
Antonio that the police are hav-
ing trouble with "joints” recalls
that a good many' people are hav-
ing trouble these days with rheu-
matic joints.—Austin Statesman.
Certainly it is not humidity that
makes so many folks damp in the
hinges for there is no humidity in
Texas.
OSCAR’S HOT HEAD.
Andrew Jackson Houston the
prohibition candidate for gover-
nor. refers to Oscar B. Colquitt as
"a hot headed democrat.” We are
not acquainted with the tempera-
ture of Oscar's head but it An-
drew Jackson hasn't cold feet
he’s a freak that most any circus
would pay a good price for.—
Laredo Times.
If Oscar's head is hot. and adverse
legislature ought to make some fun
in Austin this year.
WHAT MR. TAIT THINKS.
Some people think that the col-
onel has a copyright on the ten
commandments; while others
think that he will try and rob
President TaftX>f a renomination
for president What Mr. Taft
thinks can be Imagined.—Austin
Statesman.
Mr. Taft thinks it is about time for
dinner.
THAT BIG AD.
The largest single advertise-
ment ever published by a Texas
newspaper was that of Joske Bros.
Co. in Sunday's San Antonio Light
and Gazette. Fourteen seven-col-
umn pages were used. Advertising
is the life of any business.—
Guadalupe Gazette.
Joske Bros. Co. has learned to spend
money where it will do the most good.
OFFSET FOR T. C.
The cost of the Texas state
government for the fiscal year
just closed was $438004 3 not
including the wear and tear of
the Campbell administration. —
Galveston News.
In this case depreciation is fully off-
set by appreciation.
ONE FOR ENGLISH.
Crippen got his and quickly
too. We make fun of the English
sometimes for their slow and sto-
lid ways but their engine of law
is an irresistible contraption.—
Brownsville Herald.
Can’t Texas send a few “gun men"
to try a course of sprouts in the tight
little isle?
DANCING FOR ROADS.
The Texas Commercial Secre-
taries are advertising a new meth-
od for raising money for road-
building. At Mankato. Minn. the
proceeds of a dance to b» given
in connection with a good roads
convention are to be devoted to
the roads fund. In other words the
young folk will have a high time
and help to build highways.—
Galveston News.
Good idea let the young folks
dance a few highways across Texas.
O*tvU«M. IKd W tu X« Tort Jmn
roMtaklss O«>UJ'
jarw * it Al HER 5j 1910.
Little Stories
DOGS AND THE DUSTER.
What One Was Too Timid to Tackle
the Other Likes.
Lying out in the middle of the road-
way in an asphalt-paved residence
street was an old worn-out fyather
duster and it was worn out sura
"enough; in fact there was mighty lit-
tle left of it at all. The handle was
gone entirely right down to the round
stub into which the feathers were set
and the broken-off feathers remain-
ing were none of them more than five
or six inches long. Certainly that
feather duster had been used as 1 >ng
as there was any use in it; but impos-
sible as this might then have seemed
it was yet to undergo still further
dilapidation.
In this block there are two dogs
one mostly white the other brown
but both as to breed mongrels.
When the stubby old worn-out
feather duster first appeared the
white dog came out from the aide walk
and inspected it and didn't know
what to make of it. He eyed it care-
fully and ranged around it looking at
it from various points but he was shy
of it and at no time did he come
within a foot of it; he wasn't going
take any risk with it and finally he
left it turned away from it and went
back to the sidewalk. Then the
brown dog came out to look it over.
The brown dog reconnoitered just
as the white dog had done he scanned
it closely and moved around it and
looked at it from all sides but the old
duster kept perfectly still; it didn't
show any power or inclination to bite
and finally the more resolute brown
dog closed in on it and sniffed it. and
then he opened his jaws and picked
the old duster up and trotted away
with it calmly diagonally over tha
roadway to the sidewalk and on up
the steps of the house in which he
lives.
Now comfortably settled on hi 3 own
doorsteps and holding the old duster
firmly between his fore paws the
brown dog began to bite and tear the
few rugged feathers remaining in the
block and to pull and yank on them
to find for a brief passing time in
this characteristic and natural occupa-
tion a dog’s measure of enjoyment —
New York Sun.
SIXTH BABY “SUFFICIENT.”
“Sufficient” Crombie is the name
of a baby girl who arrived today at
the home of Frederick Crombie a
pressman. “Sufficient” is the sixth
child and fourth daughter and her
name was bestowed by the father
when the news was broken to him of
the arrival of the stork.
“I am not referring to the old saw
‘sufficient’ unto thte day is the evil
thereof” said Mr. Crombie "beeause
I am a good Roosevelt man but six
children for a man in my circum-
stances is rather piling it on. and—-
well sufficient and that is why wo
named the baby ’Sufficient.’ That
will be plenty thank you unless I
inherit a fortune or get a good raiso
in pay.”—Waukegan special to the
New York Herald.
ALMSHOUSE COW ON A JAG.
The inmates of the Clinton alms-
house have been deprived of their
usual supply of milk for the last day
or two on account of the inebriety of
the poor-farm cow. On Saturday
morning it was a difficult task for
John Ewart the warden of the poor
farm to get the cow into the barn.
The animal staggered and believing
that the cow was ill the warden tel-
ephoned to a veterinarian. When tha
later arrived he gave one look at tho
cow and said. "That cow is drunk.”
Investigation bore out the truth of'
his statement. The cow had found
her way to a pile of cider apples and
had eaten so much of the fruit that
she could neither see nor walk
straight.—Clinto (Mass.) special to
Cincinnati Enquirer.
IT WON’T WORK.
"Why does a player pick up two
bats before he goes to the plate?”
"It makes one bat seem lighter
don’t you see?” _
“I see. It’s a fine scheme. I think
I’ll try it on the biscuits at our board-
ing house.” —Kansas City Journal.
A direct steamship line between
New York and Lisbon is to be estab-
lished.
REFLECTIONS OP
A BACHELOR.
Modern improve-
ments mostly* eli-
minate old-fashlua*
ed comforts.
A man re" get a
swelled head just
by thinking how he
hasn’t one.
There is only one
long road to heaven;
there are lota of
short cuts to the
other place.
A man's sister has
to be fifty times ae
pretty as any other
girl for him to real-
ize it.
IM ay b e people
keep up going on
excursions because
I they think if they
I stick to it long
j enough some day
i they may have a
good time. — New
(York Pres?
POINTED PARA-
GRAPHS.
When a wise man
converses he says us
little as possible.
It's surprising how
well the average
man gets along
when you consider
how worthless he is.
It's easier for a
man to deceive him-
self than it is to fool
his neighbors.
One way to dem-
onstrate the uncer-
tainty of a sure
thing is to bet on it.
And sometimes
the wife of a self-
made man wishes lie
had used better raw
material.
Perhaps it is his
sense of humor that
prevents many a
man from taking
himself as seriously
as he wants other
people to.—Chicago
News.
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San Antonio Light and Gazette (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 286, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 5, 1910, newspaper, November 5, 1910; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1692743/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .