The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 248, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1911 Page: 4 of 12
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4
THURSDAY
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT
>ou«4Ml January M. IML
CompnaiM
TRE BAN ANTONIO LIGHT
TUN BAN ANTONIO GAKETT■
Ewaina Dally aa4 gunday Morning.
■irlualva Lea»»d Wire Dar Report of
IM AaaoclaOA l'r«M.
THE 1 I OUT I I Ht.IBHINO CO.. Pub*
CHA RD M A DIEHL
HAH HI BON L BkIACM
TELEPHONE CALL*.
Budnwa altlea and cnculaUon da-
pai imam both phon** 17* ___■
Editorial dapanmaat noth pboaaa
1U».
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
Dally and Bunday carrier. 1 month | .W
lauly and Bunday carrier. I year. MJ
Dally and Bunday mall. 1 month..
Ihlly and Sunday mall. 1 yoar tin .
advance
Sunday carrier. 1 year Ml
Sunday mail. 1 year ••■••••• ai
Single copy daily or Bunday....* •—
Entered at the poetoffloe at
alo. Texa*. aa aaoond-claaa matter.
The *C. Beckwith Bnodal AgetW.
repreoen tat tree. New » or *- J “bun
building Chicago Tribune building.
TO SUBSCRIBERS.
It ie important when dealring the a«- ■
dreaa of your paper changed to W*
both old and new addreaaea. bhould de-
livery be irregular pleaae notify the of
flee. Either telephone lie-
The Ban Antonio Light la °n aaJo at
botale and newa-etanda throughout the
United Btatea
CIRCULATION STATEMENT
The circulation of The San Antonio
Light during the month of Auguet.
MIL «aa aa follows:
August August
i ilim i«
I M.MI 1J ‘His
i ...... J?o*?
4 14.403 } 7 ’“l
I 16.438
I 1t941 .
T 14.247 32
( .........M.IU «•»!
• 14.354 }•*!*!
It I
U 188 IS
113.171
Average daily circulation.. H.l7*
Exchanges free* copies papers .
spoiled returns and all unsold
copies dally •'• •• • 710
Net paid daily circulation H. 116
I Harvey L. Steele circulation.mana-
ger of The San Antonio Light hereby
certify and swear that the above totals
of circulation have been verified by me
and are correct. HARVEY L. STEELE-
Sworn to before me. John J. nahi.
notary public for San Antonio. Sept. L
1411. JOHN J. WAHL.
(Seal) Notary Public Bexar Co.. Tex.
LARGEST CIRCULATION OF
ANY PAPERIN SAN ANTONIO
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28 1911.
’ WHAT AILED CANADA?
As the copies of the Canadian
newspapers issued just prior to
the recent election in Canada are
received it becomes painfully evi-
dent that the rejection of the reci-
procity agreement with the United
States was based more upon per-
sonal dislike of the United States
as a nation than upon the commer-
cial aspects of the proposed treaty.
The papers that were opposed to
reciprocity made the most of the
unfortunate statement of Champ
Clark that this country proposed
to annex Canada and of the as-
sertion of President Taft that
that “Canada is at the parting of
the ways.”
Some of these papers printed
side by side large the
British and American flags and
under them in large black type
asked the question “Under Which
Flag Will You Live?” The ap-
peal evidently had its effect as
the Canadian people spoke in no
uncertain manner regarding the
issue. '
There is- moreover a note run-
ning all through every one of
these papers to the effect that
Canada is a nation by herself and
able to stand alone. The
States has done much to foster
this feeling in Canada. At fre-
quent intervals through a long
term of years representatives of
the Canadian people have ap-
peared at Washington trying to
effect some sort of commercial
agreement with the United States.
Every time they received a cold
welcome and were compelled ’ td
return with empty hands.
ada was made to see that her sal-
vation lay in herself and she has
found as many an individual has
found that she is able to do the
thing she must do. The United
States threw her back on her own
resources and Canada has found
that these resources are suffi-
cient.
Some of the papers print masses
of twaddle about their “inde-
emdence” and assert that the
nited States is trying to take it
from them. They went into
hysterics over the Rattle of
Queenstown Heights and the sur-
render of Detroit. The Queens-
town Heights affair as may
be was a skirmish
that was lost to the Americans
because a large detachment of
militia stood upon their state
rights and refused to cross the
border to aid the regular forces
’which were'heavily overmatched.
Detroit wag surrendered by a
coward who was afraid to fight.
Just what relation those two oc-
currences of a century ago could
have on a commercial agreement
of the present day is difficult to
say. However the Canadian press
utilized them as cantpaign issues.
The United States conducted
its reciprocity campaign along
much saner lines than did the
Canadians. They looked only at
the commercial side of it wtych
was the only aspect of the matter
entitled to consideration. The
Canadians would have been wild
with indignation had any repre-
sentative or senator in a speech
in Congress made allusion to the
American victories at the Battles
of Chippewa. Lundy's Lane
Plattsburg Lake Champlain or
Lake Erie. If we had injected
such nonsensical froth into our
consideration of reciprocity the
-Canadians would have held them-
Iselves highly insulted. They did
not. however hesitate to do the
same thing themselves.
POLITICIANS
It is unfortunate says Champ
Clark that the dignified and no-
ble words "politics” and “politi-
cians” sho u Id have degraded
meanings in the popular under-
standing.
Dignified and noble? Since
when ? /Ever y schoolboy for
generations has known when to
draw the distinction between the
breed of politicians and that of’
statesmen and it has never been
difficult for him to differentiate.
If the perversion had been recent
the lament would have been per-
tinent. As it is the original mean-
ing of the maligned words run
back practically to antiquity. The
.most terrible arraignment to
which they have ever been sub-
jected came'from the pen of
Shakespeare nimself who is cred-
ited with some insight into fallen
'human nature. When the clown
| tossed a skull from the grave it is
Hamlet who moralizes:
“That skull had a tongue in it
and could sing once. How the
knaye jowls it to the ground as
jif it were Cain's jawbone that did
the first murder. It might be the
pate of a politician which this
ass now o’erreaches ; on e that
would circumvent God might it
not ?”
So true is this definition to the
fact that it has stood the test of
three centuries and bids fair to
endure for some time to come. A
change in the spirit of the term
depends upon one man and one
only the politician himself and
it is not on record that he is lying
awake nights devising methods to
bring about the consummation.
A DECLINING PROSPERITY
'Die census just taken in the
Union of'South Africa** for the
purpose of putting parliamentary
representation on a sound basis
reveals a condition in that coun-
try which its people • will view
with misgivings. In seven years
the white population has in-
creased only 14.44 per cent while
the Bantu or negroid element has
gained 16.19 per cent. When it
is taken into consideration that
the latter number 4061082 and
the white only 1278025 the im-
port of these figures will be well
understood. The Union of South
Africa has a race problem on its
hands such as this country never
knew.
The returns also demonstrate
that the period .of economic un-
rest which followed the late war
is not yet ove r. This is* best
shown by the fact that most cities
lost in population. Johannesburg
the metropolis of the new state
and some of its suburbs are the
only centers of population that
show a marked increase. Taking
cities having a population of over
10000 in 1904 or at present the
case stands as follows:
WHITE POPULATION*ONLY.
Cltlea. | 1904 | 1911
Johannesburg: \ 833631 120411
Durban 313021 33.8 9 6
Cape Town 44203 25.933
Pretoria 211141 29680
Port Elizabeth ........ 21937 18216
Woodstock 21530; 18037
Germiston .. ......... 9123 15689
Bloemfontein 15501 14 780
Moritzburg 15086
Kimberley 13.558 13856
Krugeredorp .. ... 8946 13.187
East London | 14686 12552
Boksburg I 4176| 11596
From the above table it will be
seen that six of the principal
cities lost materially in popula-
tion. Capetown which before the
war was a prosperous city of over
60000 whites has lost 50 per cent
and more. Durban and Kimber-
ley have remained stationary
while Johannesburg Germiston
Krugersdorp and Boksburg all
located in the Transvaal gold
field known as the Witwaters-
rand alone show a healthy in-
crease in population. A distress-
ing feature of thia is that auch
small cities of the Cape province
as King William’s Town Clare-
mont Uitenhague Mowbray
Wynberg and many others have
also lost in population. The cities
named prior to the war were all
close to the 10.000 mark; today
they have fallen to five and six
thousand.
Though the British press gen-
erally denies this there is no
doubt that economic conditions in
South Africa today are not aa well
balanced aa they were before the
two Boer republic* were annihi-
lated. Even the small towns in
the Transvaal not located on the
Reef have lost in population.
Potchefatrom the old capital of
the republic has in seven years
dropped from 8681 to 8107. Be-
fore the war it had a population
of over 9000.
That times are bad in the Union
is shown by a comparison of the
city statistics with (he general in-
crease of 14.44 per cent. Not that
the urbanite has moved into the
country. In South Africa he
does. The city population is non-
Afrikander mostly hailing from
the British Isles and continental
Europe while the rural element
is almost entirely Dutch. While
the latter have clung to the soil
the former have betaken them-
selves to other parts. For this
reason the increase in population
which has taken place is entirely
Boer.
Destiny seems to have odd ways
in bringing people into their own.
ASSAILING THE STAGE
The dramatic critic of the Chi-
cago Tribune has been straying
into forbidden pastures. Com-
menting upon the decision of a
bellow critic that Pauline Chase
should not be allowed to play
Anne in Robert Lorraine’s revival
of “Man and Superman” on the
ground that she is not of suffi-
cient artistic heft to accomplish
the impersonation the Tribune
man boldly asserts that there is
a lot of twaddle written about the
art of acting by impressionable
commentators wlio assume to be-
lieve that acting as we have it
in most instances is a serious art.
Following are a few ‘samples of
the embittered thought called
forth by contemplation of stage
antics and aspirations:
“The fact of the matter is that
acting is for the most part a
mere exploitation o’f personality
or a facility for imitation both of
which areSrts but not arts that
call for solemn consideration any
more than does the art of jug-
gling. An evening with nearly
any one of our eminent stars is
nothing more than an evening
with nearly any one of our emi-
nent stars. His suavity and his
grace or his ruggedness and in-
elegance indicate preparation and
a considerable natural gift but
they express simplv his own or his
stage personality—some of them
more skillfully than others. * * *
A New York critic makes the dis-
covery that acting is not an art
but a knack. He says that the
most intelligent woman on the
American stage is the worst ac-
tress and that the dullest woman
is the best actress. * * * A
politer analogy for that paradox
is that the best actor. I have ever
I seen is by long odds the dullest
inian with but a remote concep-
jtion of the characters he repre-
sents.”
Delightful Max Nordau in his
"Degeneration” grades genius af-
ter the following . fashion : the
highest manifestation of that qual-
ity is exhibited in the man in
whom will and judgment attain
their fullest expression as in
Caesar and Napoleon. The sec-
ond class of which Shakespeare
is jin exemplification shpws an
extraordinary development of will
with but moderate judgment. In
the third rank to which men of
science such as Agassiz an<J
Humboldt belong the judgment
is perfect but the will compara-
tively weak. The fourth grade is
j given over to actors painters and
sculptors mere imitators and
।mimics as he classifies them in
whom neither will nor judgment!
is developed to any alarming de-
gree. . ' . .
By this the misguided critic can
see just how far he has gone. One
of three things has evidently hap-
pened to4wm. Either he is look-
ing for a crown of martyrdom or
he has fallen a victim to the Lom-
broso school of criminology or
something awful has happened to
his liver. Complete recovery is
only to be looked for in the lat-
ter contingency.
Kansas Art.
We have a number of painters here
In Kansas who can paint a picture
that will put "Mona Lisa" in the
a shade. and do it for half thq price.—
Hutchinson (Kan.) News.
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT
Marvels of Science
(By Garrett F. Bicvl— .) >
In Part* where the lma*tnatlon fre-f
quontly burha with a Llue flame In-
dicative like blue meteor* of Intenaa
comburtlon they are now talking of a
tour of th# world by aeroplane. It la
the Ideal way to go they aver and
evan inora protnlatng In tha mattar
or romaatlo advanturaa than Julaa
Verna'e elroumambiant night by held-
up tralna lumbering elephanta and
exploding ataamahlpa The aerial
route ha* no custom houwa no de-
lour* no WMhed-out brldgaa no da-
ta) ed connections and If some charm-
ing person had to ba reacuad en route
Il could he more eaally a* well tm tnora
theatrically affected by dropping
down out of tha sky a la Pemaua
"It will bo oaay.” eay.tha enthua-
laata "to maka 1108 k Home tree U 45
milA) a day Ay aeroplane within a
few year* and then we ahall go round
the world In lean than a month.”
Hut 748 miles a day la onlp about
>1 miles an hour. and. even allowing
for delays ons may expect that the
perfected aeroplane will do better
than that It ought to average 80
miles an hour or 1200 miles a day.
Then world-circling by aero might in-
deed be a moot fascinating sport. The
time required would of course de-
pend upon the latitude of the circle
followed. At the equator the circum-
ference of the earth 1* about J 5.000
ml lea The circumference of any cir-
cle Is found by multiplying Its dla-
metsr by 1.14. but on a globe like
the earth the diameter of the circle
represented by any parallel of latitude
varteo aa the cosine of the latitude. At
latitude 0 degrees (the equator) the
cosine I* 1 and the diameter. In
round numbers Is only 0.70 corre-
sponding to a diameter of 4.080 miles
which multlptisd by Ui Biveo about
10000 miles for the circumference.
For latitude 80 degrees (he cosiae W
OJ4. making the circumference only
10000 miles: while In latitude 00 de-
grees where the coslpe Is only 0.1
the circumference cannot exceed about
12.800 mllea _ '
The latitude of 80 degreee north
pissing eentrdlly over Europe. Asta
and North America would seem to
offer a good aerial route with a dis-
tance of only 18.000 mile* to traverse
and at 1700 mllea. a day the circuit
could be completed In 18 days and 8
hours. . .
At present this is only a dream but
Jules Verne’s romance was also *
dream and yet he lived to see his
Imaglnan eightr «l*y« c ut down one ’
half by actual count
STUNG!
- Alexander M. Dockery former gov-
ernor of Missouri wa* at one time
a member of the house of
Uvea and. while filling the job. made
the acquaintance of a needy young
man who formed the habit of borrow-
ing too much money. Mockery g
tired of being “touched" every few
days and decided tq but a stop to 1L
One day he was called out of the
house chamber by the borrowing
friend. ' _
“Say. Dockery.” came the UBU *' ( ***
quest "can you lend mi twenty.
Dockery looked grieved and cast
down felt in all of his pockets and
nearly succeeded in squeezing ou b
tear from his left eye.
“I haven't got a cent he said in
sepulchral tone.
At that moment he spied a page boy
coihing down the corridor—a boy
who. he knew was always hard up.
The legislator saw a way of making
an effective escape.
“I don’t even know where I coula
borrow the money for you Ben he
concluded. Turning quickly he called
the page. “Ray. my boy.” he said
kindly v have you twenty dollars with
you ? M
The boy put his hand Into a pocket.
Dockery took a few steps toward the
door the would-be borrower began to
n * ourn - . . ....
“Yes sir.’* said the lad. Here it
U” The Twlce-a-month Popular
Magazine.
the cost of destruction.
When the automobile habit first be-
came fashionable Elbert H. Gary of
the Steel Trust went on a tour In
New York state. Something hap-
pened to the machine and It stopped
dead In the middle of the road. A
farmer was pressed Into service and
given the job of "fixing" the engine.
He said he was a good mechanic.
After an hour's hard work he had
the machine separated Into all its
cojpponent parts and the road looked
like a blacksmith shop struck by
lightning. At the end of another hour
the farmer-mechanic announced that
he was sorry but he could not put the
parts togethe z r. Gary and his com-
panions decided to walk to the nearest
village. .
“Hold on!” protested the workman.
“You owe me eight dollars."
"But you've ruined the machine."
»aid Gary. “You can’t charge for
that.”
"Well I did the work of taking it to
pieces and I want the money” -argued
the farmer.
And he got It.—The Twice-a-month
Popular Magazine.
— — * «»- —
SUTER ON A SEARCH.
Edwin ■Grosvenor a special attor-
ney In the department of justice and
Gilbert Grosvenor a business man ih
the national capital are twins and
they are exactly alike in build face
and manner. At a banquet one night
Gilbert Grosvenor mistook Jesse L.
Suter. tjie newspaper representative
of the postoffice department for a 1
waiter and gave him several orders
about the food.
After Suter had thought th® matter
over he felt hurt cast down arid dls-|
graced because he had been taken for
a waiter. Moreover he made up bls
mind to ask Grosvenor why the mis-
take Jhad been made. Butt as jet. he
has not succeeded.
Every time he goes up to a Gros-
tenor. scowls heavily and demands
whether It is Gilbert the reply is:
"I'm Gilbert’s brother."
"I wonder.” mussed Suter after one
of these encounters “if there are four
or five of those twiqs." —The Twlce-a-
month Popular Magaaina
Up-to-Dat« Vctm
vn osa* or rAono*.
■y Fesey naw.
I that rats and puffs must go
The war of friends departed.
And hobble aowna no more must show
The 11 nee our folly eklrted.
Instead ‘twill bo the form divine
That lovely Venue boasted—
A darmont gulltleaa of design
That ancient gallanta toasted.
I often wonder who ho lo— *
This Grand Monarque of dressing
Who calmly nays: "Wear that or thia"
An scoffs al curse and blessing.
Twss ho who made Ute crinoline.
The peyehe-knot. the bustle.
The ekln-tlght sleeves whome every line
Betrayed the Idle musele.J
'Twas ho who said. "I will It ao
That taetea aquatic
May Ilka the nymphs unbluehlng go
And not be thought erratic •
Then may their eklrto be very high.
But In the even—listen
Their lack of waist must catch the e-
And nut an unale glisten.”
Twas he who doomed the poor egret—
Who dreamed the basket bonnet
And smiled when plume and garden met
In weird profuelon on It.
‘Twas ho who fashioned clanking ehains
With bags and dazxllng dangles.
‘Who grinning racked his weary brains
Tie he who fills tho home with woe.
Alas if I could meet him;
It seema'Wtth all the blits I owe
I'd know just how to greet him.
Of course 'twill never be but still
With -other males Caucasian.
I'd love to torture then to kill.
Thia haughjy csar called fashion.
New Heat Unit.
The use of gas for heattng as well
as lighting has made obsolete the old
unit the candle power owing to the
fact that thia unit rates merely the
brightness of the flame not the heat-
ing power. •
Deville and more reednt experl-
menters discovered a remarkable pro-
portlon-between the light and heat of
a mantle and using this makers are
rating burners according to the units
of heat given to jhem per unit of time
in standard calorics. Gas of 6200
calorics efficiency a cubic meter has
been recommended as the standard.
The latest designs of burners for
heat and lighting require that the gas
have a fairly constant consumption
since the maximum efficiency of the
burner is attained only when the rela-
tive quantities of air and gas are
closely regulated. Water gas may be
added to prevent excessive variation
In calorific value. —America.
■ At tht Show
The GM to Ito Train."
“The GM in the Train." alias "Die
Gsochiedeae Frau” given at the
Grand last night. Is a decidedly must-
eal comedy Bomewhat risque in parts.
It manages to purvey a whole lot of
healthy fun and even manages to be
satirical There is a judge who die-
ponses justice very much as ons
would trade hones and who fully
harmonises with the court room spec-
talon who betray a predilection for
the salacious which although some-
what overdrawn is entirely In ac-
cord with the facts In the case.
Tho comedy has a rather clear story
well within ths limits of tho possible.
Karol Van'Myrtona a court secretary
surrenders his sleeping compartment
on a train to Gonda van dor Loo. an
aotress. Hie wife. Jana hears of this
and brings a suit for divorce. Judge
Van Tramp tries the case and prompt-
ly takes an Interest in Gonda who
appears as co-respondent In the cnee.
Although tho evidence does not war-
rant thla»Van Tramp grants tho di-
vorce. Van Myrtens is In love with his
wlfo and Vin Tramp with Gonda.
However circumstances conveniently
arranged make it necessary the
latter court—in a cynical fashion —the
divorced wife of Van Myrtena while
he. in turn woes Gonda. Finally ev-
erything turns out well—naturally
but before the happy climax Is reach-
ed Judge Van Tramp has to play many
a card. Tho honorable Justice Is
quite a "Lobeman.” an Individual who
informs tho world that- he has two
standards of life one of them official
and the other social. That such Is the
case ho demonstrates quit* well. Ho is
a sort of villain met with eyerywhare.
Subscribing to nothing not'in accord
with the statutes he reaches his ob-
jective through a* modus operand!
that is quite interesting though rather
"crooked."
C. William Kolb made the boot of
the rale of the judge. He Is a clever
comedian and seems to have gauged
the possllUlltiee of the part well. Ed-
win Wilson who plays Van Myrtena
portrays the divorced husband who
alternately loves his wife and finds
solace in the company of Gonda with
a great deal of realism. Miss Violet
Beaton as Jana has a part which is
somewhat overshadowed by that of
Gonda played by Mias Olga Steck.
That however does not prevent her
from rising to the occasion try the sec-
ond and third acts in which last night
her acting and singing were good.
The part best filled is that of
Gonda taimen by Miss Steck. While
the role in question does not prescribe
much that would lend itself to suc-
cessful exploitation. Miss Bteck has
succeeded In making the actress a
piquant and charming character.
Most probably this is due to the in-
herent qualities of the Impersonator.
Miss Steck is an ingenue fine singer-
good actor and graceful dancer and
as such fits the part without particular
exertion.
Among others who fill their roles
well are Walter Paschall as Willem
Kroutvliet; Bessie Franklin as Mar-
tha; Otto Schrader as Cornelius
Sefbp; Edna Houck as an old maid
and Joseph Merrick who gives the
part of Piet Bokenstiegel. Henry Vin-
cent as De Liege and J. A. Bingham
IT WAS ONLY A DREAM
ffKPT. M ion.'
Observant Citizen
Sho was a woman with a determined
manner and tightly grasped la one
hand was a large braes ring attached
to * strap. The strap was stretched
taut and the other end of It disappear-
ed into a crowd of people craning their
nocks in front of a window display.
When tho lady with the determined
manner was ready to move along sho
yanked on tho strap and alowly Uto
other end of it emerged from tho
crowd. To that end was attached a
boy. Ho was a small boy and ho was
securely harnessed to the end tho
strap. Other straps ran. under hie
arms around his body and bold him
firmly.
"Tou see. it's thia way" explained
the lady with tho determined manner.
"Willie Is a runaway. I never can toll
where to find him. If 1 leave him
alone a minute he disappears. I’ra
had so mych trouble with him that I
decided to harness him to mo with this
strap. He can't got very far away
and when J want him to come along
all I have to do Is to pull oa tho
strap."
And the lady with tho determined
manner walked majestically away.
Willie trailing after at the end of tho
■trap.
There is one question that every
druggist In Ben Antonio answers at
least a score of times every day. It is:
"What's good for prickly heat?"
Of course the questioner moans
"what's 6ad for prickly heat" but
the* druggist' who has probably
scratched and suffered ta
meant and proceeds to name several
remedies. _
He tells of some powder warranted
to cure tho Itching and the customer
promptly orders enough of It to liter-
ally roll in It It Is safe.to say that-
the drug stores just now are selling
more prickly heat cure than any other
one remedy in their stocks
HODGE AND HIS •‘HUNCH.’*
William Hodge the actor-who has
made a great hit In 'The Man From
Home.” got hie start in the theatrical
business fifteen years ago by walking
up to the manager of a repertoire
company in New York state and say-
ing: /
"I can act.” v A
This interested the manager who
was George A. Hill.
"What makes you think so?” asked
Hill.
"I've got a hunch on it" answered
Hodge with confidence.
"Well.” said Hill 'Til play that
hunch.”
It turned out tq be a sure thing.—*
The Twlce-a-month Popular Maga-
sine. 1
as Van Dender also deserve special
mention.
There is quite a chorus of course;
a good looking one at that Its mem-
bers are dressed well and one would
almost say chastely. There Is only r
one ballet robe —decidedly risky—ln
the entire production and that
strange to say. is worn by the woman
who furnishes the argument and ex-
cuse for the play a very paragon of
virtue-J-the divorced wife.
. ‘The Girl In the Train” will be re-
peated tonight.
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Diehl, Charles S. & Beach, Harrison L. The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 248, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1911, newspaper, September 28, 1911; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1693066/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .