The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1887 Page: 1 of 4
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Y. JANUARY 1.?, 1887.
m
«gf";
v- "wjirafr ■''•i.
Invites the
just received a carloiid ol
+•* * ""
- '
Austin,
11:57 o*<
rtion of
akeu
shock
experien
•buck waa
the towns of Bsatn
Elgin, Paige sud
towns, all from tw
forty mites east of A
duration of the shock
l u sis seconds.
Bastro
Who Are Theyf
next Legislature will
of 1JJ7 iui tubeis —HI
toia ami 100 Rcim-seu
A compilation of t eir
itions, politics i Hi I places
lativity is shown in the au-
la belated i*i itfiiient, and
worth studying. The coauio-
mi feist urn of population is
'Deed when it appear* that
'the entire IJI7 members elect,
seventeen ate natives of the
|e. The lawyers and fariu
;closely compete for supre
J'ounty. Keeton was Constable,
but a pugnacious man, and his
death ih not a matter of sur
prie e. K\< iteiueut in at ferer
lieat at Morehead, and further
tiloodHhed Uia> be expected.
' *
W®'
Ipmk
,
HI
llll
San Francisco, Jan. 0.—At a
i late hour last night the resi
denta in the vicinity of Ninth
ami Harrison streets were start
led by a tetrible explosion.
Most of them had retired, and
i being awakened from their
„llliliUJ:i11„ i night clothes. The Hrst in
,j. i ,i , j , r presaiou created was that an
• rii nut ' earthquake had shaken down
* *""" ''.r1.'"?, b..iiai'u*. InrMilRHIionahow
IT"tlw,.*<>•« >& Wftrhly-
" ii;t<I been placed in the cable
lot in the Larkiu street branch
4 Mtoker lt aste<l Alive*
San Francisco, Cnl., Jan. 4.
—Details of the cruel torture
of a stoker on Spreckles' line
of steamers to Australia, which
resulted in the death of John
Schroder, of tkia citr. have
just come to light. It seems
that Schroder was one of the
twenty-one men whom the
Spreckles Brothers were forced
to employ recently by the com-
bined action of the Seamen's
WMl LOKK
Menator t'okr
la Opposed to (ir
Pension to the
officii. Loguu.
Unions of this city and Sydney.
These men were expected to do
ft gr ides having litili d
tie a single entrv Below is
le result of the colli pilar Ion;
. mskats -occtl'.v
IP?
'M:
declared-" War^e thaHtlf
rthose lines. He also offers special
low figures on Coffee and Bacon, and particu-
larly on all grades of
<x3FL0UR TOBACCO, TEASI>
And Canned Goods,
R. L. W ASSILL,
Has an elegant stock of Glassware and
Queensware loaded to the guard with bar-
gains. Genuine imported China tea sets, 44
pieces to the set, at $6.50, $0.50, $'7.50, $8.50,
$9.50, besides handsome Ameiican decorated
Chamber, Tea or Dinner sets very, very low.
You are most cordially invited to call.
R. L. Waddill, North Side Square
————— — ' ■-««* • III'"' 'lilL 1,111 •" "" 1 11 . ' * !" f I MIMI II IH I J
j. p. doweix, | THE DEMOCRAT.
DEALER IX
HARDWARE!
riNWAHK. OLASSW A HE
& QUEENS WARE.
AC! ENT FOIl AMERICAN
POWDER CO.
E. Louisana Street.
The Parlor Saloon.
a
•T. M. & W. s. Skelton & Co.
Pure v Whiskies,
Wine, Beer & Cigars.
An elegant and elaborate billiard mom. the coolest and best
concocted drinks, and polite attention. Nothing but the best
of everything kept on hand. 27- Iv
NEW HOUSE! NEW GOODS!
NEW PRICES.
J. C. Matthews 4 Co.
hl'bsriitmok katks:
One Year. $1.50
Kilflit .MonttiN, | .(Ml
Mi* MoiiOim, 7ft
three " 40
' ■ 111 .
A }it'oleHsor of agricaltnre,
yvriiing in the American Natur-
alist, thinks that "agriculture
has been cursed by a greater
amount of very poor yvork tin
'lei-1 he name of experimenta-
tion than any other of the great
industries."
In lh.js? Samuel Baker, of
Wheeling, VV. Va., bet $10
yyith a friend that he (Raker)
would live thirty-four years.
The money was placed in a
bank, aitd on the 5th Samuel
walked down and drew it out
vrith interest, file other party subsequently taken to
and In
live wer<
1 entire
all dead.
family of
1 from
■ east of here,
ere ahaken on
rick buildings.
McCtie, the operator, was sii •
ting in her chair and she and
her chair were distinctivHly i
; shaken. The clock also struck '
, and glass rattled. Dr. Mei • j
I chant reports that lie git!
! sick at the stomach.
At the town of Paige, forty
miles east of Austin, the shoch ,
lasted three seconds. There
was no serious damage done,
A wooden cistern was sunk in '
the ground four inches. A I
clock belonging to Mr. K. Hud ;
er, which had been running for;
years was suddenly stopped
and marked the exact time of;
shook. At Wilson's hotel the1
cook and waiters became
alarmed at the ratttlin^ of the1
dishes and tin pans, thinking j
the devil suddenly approached
> on earth. At 55. E. Egleion's
store a dozen cowbells which!
hung on the wall all in a row >
suddenly chimed, frightening;
the inmates. The usual appall j
ing rumbling souuds weje
heard, seemingly coming j
from the earth beneath and the
air overhead.
The quake has produc-1
ed an unpleasant itnpres-1
sion. We all had suppos
ed Texas would never be vis-)
ited. A lady who recently
came from 8011th Carolina and j
now resides in Austin says she
felt^nn earthquake tremor in
this city yesterday, and that
she cannot be mistaken, bavin.;
experienced the great shock «<
Charleston. S. C.
YKHTK UDAYH i:at AI.KHo(!K.
Charleston, S. C.. Jan. f .—A
slight earthquake shock occur
led at Snmmetville at H o'clock
this. Everything 4s quiet at j
Charleston.
Captured After Twenty Years.
Narfhville, Tenn., January. *1
—Herman Witte, General
Superintendent of the Amen
can Associated Detective Com
pany, Cincinnati, Detective
Overton and several policemen
of tliia city, walked into th-
rotunda of the Muxyvell Mouse
at H:30 o'clock to niuht, and ar
rested Dr. Joshua N. Doyle, of
Linden, Perry County, Tenn.,
for the murder of Joseph
Deutsch, a barber in Effingham,
III., in 1866. Doyle, who was
taken completely by surpriae,
was at once placed under guard
in a room at the hotel, and wus
Illinois
p "iuueor ,
ind farmer.. .
rmera.. —
irmvrsand iueroliant«
{eri-tiant
|o occupation ...
Total..
huxatk*
Mlr>KiS<ti|t|i|.
(1 port; in
'IVxiim.
Alahamu.
'r«iiin'<Mt'e
Geriiuiny
K«ntn«ky
UU*onri
South Carolina...
ArkiiiixiiN ..
Irrltkiul
Loulninna
Not given..
North Carolina
-NATIVITY.
the Sutler Street Railroad
exploded. Rusalt rocks
eifhe'r side of the street were
jfe tbe
nry tuidiy sTOTTWefl. The
pulleys upon yvhich the cable
runs were also broken, and the
foundation of tht tu ne|
cracked, and window panes in
the .Iciinty were rattled vlo
lently at the time of the explo
sion, and in many cases sliat ,
tered. lu a saloon two blocks I 'e
away a lighted lamp was
thrown to the lloor and nearly
caused a cotillagratioii. The
iron plates on the man holes of
the track were hurled 5i(H> feet
away. A lady living In the
ueighboorhood said that a few
minutes before the explosion
she sayv two men go to the
trap, and while one of them
;t>e<
the work which baa been ferm
crly done by thirty ablebodied
1 Chinamen. The result is they
j were constantly overworked.
On the last trip down to Horn
Inlu of the steatnwr Alameda,
Schroder who was a regular
liremauand worked in the en-
gine-room, where the mercur
stood at 180 ©, waa taken sit
Washington, Jan •*>.
tor Coke, who objected to
consideration of the bill
place Mrs. Lilian on the
sion list with a pension
(.mm) prr year and thereby t
the consideration «>f tilt
live until to-morrow.
uia action by Mtvin^ that
has no personal objection
Mrs Logan, but he does o
to the ustabUshment ol a
cedent wliieli may lead
civil pension list. Mrs.
case is different from that
any other witlow of an
who receive* a pension fr
!•.. the government in that
\ 1 husband wan a civilian at
, and to geta breath of llmt' death, and tor
rwenton tlwal> ftn a m •, t'tuiso^ is not entitled to a
He was spied by an of ^
- —^Senator Coke, buwever.
esh
ment. He was spied by an of
ticer, who cursed him as a ma!
ingcrcr and oidered him beloe
Schroder went doyvn, but th^
moment he took his place i 1
front of the engine he fainted
away and fell to the floor
Then the officer who had ordet
ed him from the deck caused
some sailors to take the faint
ing man and hold him in front
of the wide opened door of 1
furnace, in a heat which no on *
can endure for more than an in
statu. The wre tolled creature
was held and roasted iu front
of the glowing furnace foraev-
eral minutes, until a smell of
Total .. :u
lim M occr-.'.vnos
Lawyer* .......
Lawyer hikI farmer
Farmer* ..
Farmer and i>li.r*li lan..
Ksruiera «n l Minl#i«*r .
Farmera ami Ntockralaeri>
Fararrantl merchant .
McrchantH. .7
Kditoin and JournalHtH -
Teacliern . 'i
Civil engineer •• •
Tempcrance lecturer '
Fbyaic.ian#. ...
i'lanter. 1
MinUtor •• 1
Woolgro«er ..1
Not given.. "
Total 1««
iioi "k—nativity .
Texas.. . ... H
South Carolina. -
Indiuna. . ... -
Alahiimn
(icorgla ■
Tenne aec ....
Vlrginiu
Arkanaaa
Kentucky..
M IMMlHHi«l| i.
Illinois
North Carolina
(.oiiliilaiiii
FruiHln ....
Missouri :i
Pennsylvants <
Hohemla I
Cherokee Nation, I
Florida I
Not given.. . •"
Total I'*'
M10* Tlirotigli tlie tleert.
lilted the trap the other took 21 scorching clothes and blistering
package Ironi his pocket and warned the officer that he
l applied a match to tt, and low was going too far in punish
ered it into the tunnel. The j ment Th,,n Schroder
then secreted themselves
•j;| --- j inrrii. 1 11**11 sirnroaer was
! men then secreted themselves 111|r«>wu into a corner, where h*
i<i: and the exploMion bdloyved. I he jraf4|„.(i once for breath, then ex
1 witness saw the cables and ma j,jr,,,| The death was entered
3 . ehiiiery of the trap lining inalliull ,|l(1 J|(, accidental, and
0 " '* " " "
directions. Many of the ayvak } jj,,. |,otly was buried at sea
ened women and <dnldr«n w'ert* 1 Schroder leaves a wife and three
so allltcted yvith fright that they children in this ^ity, in great
went to the homes of their poverty. The Alameda arrived
Iriendw to spend the night, here a few days ago and Schre-
tearful that it they remained in ,|,.r*w shipmates have begun
their oyvn homes another e\ )() ( tiIint the assistance of the
plosion might occur and
tcrthem. _
Austin.
sha>
1 ft
hi
15
1
i
Austin, Tex., Jan. ,r . -Cotnp
troller Swain to-day deposited
*Lr .<)H0 in the treaattry to t'.ie
• redit of the general revenue
fund
But very lew members of
the legislature have yet arrlv
ed, but man} are expected
within the next few davs. Those
noyv hero say the land and sen-
atorial questions will be the
great issues before the body
•2 sooli to assemble.
: rial ballot will come oil'oti the
1' third Tuesday It is under
21 stood the headquarters of the
various candidates have been
established m Austin Ilea
gan's headquarters will be ai
1 he old Avenue Hotel and
Maxey's at the new Driskill
House. T« 11 ell and Hancock
will have headquarters in soui"
bailing ili<"ight to be iiiomI
pinper by 1 heir friends. Strik
ei> for the different aspirants
lie^in already t<> appear.
1'niled States District Attorney
in investigating the case It is
probab'e the matter will be in
t le* courts tomorrow.
IMeri of Alcolioilaia.
• OKALKRH IN
Buggies, Wagons, Threshers, Engines, Hinders, Heapeis
and Mowers. Invite the farmers of Collin county
to call on us before purchasing elsewhere.
ONUS DOOM WKPTOrTHK POhTOFFICK.
j. g. matthews * co;
The K IS.ibb' Machine Dealeis.
The Boys's Exchange.
Howard & Williams^ Frop'rs,
DI'.ALKKH I^t-
Fir lies, Wis, Opt
The choicest brands of llquots and cigars will be kept on
hand, and the public are cordially Invited to come and sample.
Our building, on the north *id« ot the square, hits been hand-
eoflwly decorated u:id eveiMhiug a 1 ranged for the comfort of;
•ar visitors. You are especially i-iviied to call. 91 j
Ileid. 1 lie absconding Con-
gressman, has sent iu Ilia res-
ignation. He wrote it on the
last day of the year and left it
in Washington to be delivered
to the House when it met. He
went out with the dying year
and went where no one has yet
succeeded in finding him Few
Congressmen resign. Reid waa
hustled out.
LETTHK L.1MT.
List of letters remainingin the
post-office, at McKinney, Collin
county, Texas, for the week end-
iuu Jan. 8. 1887, which, if
not called for iu four weeks,
will be sent to the dead letter
office at Washington. 1). C.
Barnai I. Jesse
Ha le, S II
Birds. John
t Nutk. Mrs S E
Edwards, (ieo
11.1 •> ■ «rt a ^ D E
Hy att, J H
Ji'dilie.iH, D f
Join , M1 sa Mat tie
I ley, Eliga
Letvis. S J
M.fcbel, Master Art he
Parker, Mrs Amanda
l*ow rs, J H
Sanies, Mr- Marie
Scroggin, Marshal
Scr-'Ugin. Miss Nora
Wilaoa, O H
Wilson, O W
Williams, TZ
When calling for the above
lettets say advertised."
Jaa. W,
by Mr. Witte. Doyle had tu>
opportunity to otTer any reais
tam e, ami wua handcuffed to
prevent an attempt in that di
reciion. He watt regarded aa a
desperate man, and the detec-
tectives did not propoae to
give him a chance to defend
himself. Detective Witte said
that Dovle shot and killed
Deutsch in July, 1866. because
the latter would no longer cted
it him for work in his line of
busineaa. He sent a bullet
through Deiitsch's heart while
: standing at a bur, and although
I he waa quickly arrested and
committed to jail he eacaped,
with two other murderers. The
citizens of Effingham offered a
j reward of fll.OUO for the arrest
1 of Dovle, and six weeks ago
. Mr. Witte took the casein hand
'He traced Doyle to Arkansas,
and thenoe tu Linden, this
State, where Doyle had bsen
engaged in the practice of med-
icine for several years. Doyle,
it was found, had come to
\ Nashville, and the detectives
followed III rn here. Ill the
i meantime Mr. Witte had oh
| taitied a requisition from the
(lovernor of Illinois, at«d re.
turned to this city. It ia said
that Doyle was always on the
alert, and carried a shot-gun
I even when he paid profeasional
visits. Doyle has a wife and
son in Linden, while the widow
of hia victim and three children
fare living in Miaeonri,
mm m m «
| The best of farmera will often
find a change of
■ sary with a
Mount Sterling. Ky.. -Ian. 4.
There wum a dance at Judge
Meitix's, iu Morehead. lam
night, with the usual concomil
ants of pistols, whisky and
death. M- son Keeton, a young
man of dissipated habits, wa
> killed, undJohn llogers, atiotli
young man of similar proclivi
t ties, narrowly avoided the same
J fate, losing one tingei of Ins
left hand. It seems to have
j been some outcropping of that
1 factional strife which lias made
Rowan County a synonym for
bloodshed. Rogers, who is of
the Towlliver clan, had been
dancing with the daughter of J gambling table,
the murdered John Martin, and however. L'ot a
when he had ceased dancing
Keetoll took his place. Then
was a rivalry for the girl, and
Keetoll W(4| embittered because
Rogers Iihk jIiowii the young
| lady attention. Rog el's had
I no sootier left the premise*
i than Keeton left his charmer's
presence and followed him on
the streets. The) met Moon at
ter, and Rogers, in perfect good
humor, asked why lie wasn't
dancing Keeiou's oniy iep|y
was Jo dmw hi-> pistol and lire,
the bullet taking one id' If Iger*'
lingers off. After 1 he shot K> e
ton ran into the Powers Hotel
office and shut the door, not in
time, however, to escape a futdl
ede which followed itiin from
patties Oil the street who h if!
' witnessed I lie d Hi* ulty l!
1 Was discovered alt' 1 >l|e niitol;,
had 1 leat ' d it 1 ♦ lhat lie It.el
'been shot thloU.,h the h* a I
and m ad dead, ii is not kn w n
who filed the latai shot. About
alx allots were fired in £.11 Hog
era had no pistol as was di*
j covered at the Coroner's in
rat, and the jury found that
deceased came to his death
by a pistol shot at the hands ol
Some unknown party. Rogers
>od family and bears a
tton. Hei«amph
T. Young, formerly
iy wf Rowan
The Houston Herald says
ill-' arresi of the Cfalveston
drummer there on a charge of
swindling yvas for giving a
draft for fti<hi borrowed at a
gambling table and then stopp
ing its payment. There is an
- ld story of a noted ex Texan
and his father, which carries a
moral in such matters. The
lory says the father and son
were gambling at thM *amc ta-
ble. The latter last all his
money and asked his sire for a
loan. The father refused, say
iutr. " Never loan money at a
The youth,
loan from a
friend and was quite success
fill, yvh le the old tauti I oat all
liis money. He applied to the
A man named Luster, with a
wife and four children, remov-
ed from Arkansas to this
lion a few weeks since, and set
tied at Binrdstown, in this
county. Hcwusuhard yvork
ing blacksmith, but somewhat
addicted todrink. Latterly it
was noticed that he had been
The senato drinking more heavily than us
mil, and stranger at i 11 that h«
had fallen into the habit of
drinking undiluted alcohol.
Last Friday evening he was dis
covered at the foot of the stuii
way leading to the second story
- f N B. Ratlin's store in nn
unconscious condition 11 •
was carried to his home and
medical aid summoned but to
no avail. He lingered in an on
conscious state until Saturda;-
afternoon when lie died. It i <
said that his stomach and in
testiiics were a mass of corrup
tiou ami that he bled constant
ly from the mouth until th •
remains were buried. He ha«
a sou at Benton, Ark., who wa<
Ol'esses the belief that
bill will pass the senate
morrow, ami it is hardly likelj
that any serious objection wil
be offered to it iu the house.
It K<'ii V| VIKMIKI) KoK TKX.ys.
Washington. Jan 5. -The
house couimitice ' u rivers and
haibors ha'> completed a bill
which is very much smaller
than that of similar measuroa
for some years past The
whole amount appropriated
about ♦T.fioo.ooo Texas im-
Krovements provided for in the
ill are us follows:
Galveston, ♦'ioo.oou.
Sabine Pass. fl25.00<>
Mouth of Hia/.os.
1'ass Caballo, ^.*1,000.
Aransas Pass,
Brar.os Santiago. ijiy.ri.('Hm.
Bulfalo Hay011, ^
ol 1! Ml \n W VI l .N IsTKK.
Washington. Jan *>. -The
president has - <- fat failed to
nominate Mr Manning as miu
inter t«i Mexico, and the ini-
pression is almost general that
this appointment will be al-
lowed to laps-'. This relief ia
strengthened by the fact that
theie i> Imt one ni'-ie day iu
which 1 he noininatton <;in be
made, and further bv an un-
, official statement by the jires-
blent that all the recess nomi-
nations bh^• been sent in
| The—_____ . ^
It is 110A nearly a
years, says the Phila la^'iii
Titnes, since a homely, grace
fill woman stood between the
lace curtains that shaded the
window of a lovely home in
Brooklyn, watching a slender,
datkhaiie 1 man who turned to
w«\e hi-i h t'i-l before passing
out of sight There was a
sin 11e on both liii J-s a* the hill'*
rying feet of the pedestrian
carried him around :i corner
end the womsn leate d out of
the window to watch his van-
ishing fiu m Two children
played about le i feet, and, so
fur 11 s t he or-'i nai v
Serf, tile house ll«
abode of domestic <
if Hot love The
man was Th >l|' i|V
the woman, it ;s
add, wan his wifi
■ye could
df was the
ontentaient,
dark haired
Tilton, and
needless to
I>ut what
borne has undergone a sadder
telegraphed for, but no reply Mrif| greater change in the same
relentless time? After roaming
from place to place the rest-
was received. Laster leaves a
family of a wife and four ehil
dren dependent upon the met
cies of a cold world. They
were brought to this state by
the accursed demon, rum.—
Paris News.
ft is now charged that Logan'«
doctor hurried hiin into eterni
ty. Whether or not there is
any truth in this will never be
known. But it should be re
metnbered that there was some
thing very strange about his
sickness and death. While
less Til ton has m-itlcd down in
Paris, where it is announced
that he means tu stay. In a
lonely chamber of the Protea
tent convent at Newark Mrs.
Tilioti sits and sews from day-
today, the gray light of No-
vember falling tipori her fur-
j rowed face and lending an ash-
en color to her always pallid
cheeks Of th" little girls that
•laved at hei feet that Septem
er morning in Brooklyn, one,
Florence, is Ii ving a student's
C!
young hoi eft.l for a stake, but Jbirfield waa lying on hia bed ,if„ il( s^jfit„r|
and, and the oth*
- ... from his wounds every bulletin
sent out celled attention to the
the latter" repeated the lesson
he had been txught, and advis
ed the old man neither to bor-
row nor lend at a gambling ta
hie. In some States money
loaned at a gambling table is
put upon the same footing as
money lost at gambling and
can not be recovered at law
condition of the attending
physician while it told tlieron
dition of the tmtient. When
Orant was in his last ruottent*
his doctors stood between him
and the outside world iu all re
porta a« to his condition. The
'.Z-. physician who attended Arthur ||,e
The railroads have agreed to also got in his w uk Infaetit J' ....i,./, . .1,
carry the Texas Rangers to has become a well established ^ ^ charitably
their reunion this year at 4
centsa mile lor the round trip.
fsct that whenever a great man
in this country dies the dia
Th * railroads care nothing patchea aay a* much about the
about the quarrels of years ago. attending physician and Par
son Newman, who is always on
hand, as about the dedeased
In lite case of Logan his physi
e{-in seemed indisposed to work
iumsell into any great uromi
nence. This fact is suspicious
Th
u
•V will ;e
mi d- '•
i. hei l
in
dst at any
unioti« of
>. i l|-*V
I«e} I poWel
at the rate of 4
it.mid trip
time
^■oldii
will d<i
to bury
oi 1 di Hi't
1 (its .( mile pel
I'rue. tie re is progress in the
South A Florida newspaper
man ill the recent election sold
his vote for a dojsen egg«. Af
to a vybile tin* Southern people
will become sufficiently advanc-
ed to charge the Ohio aud Itidi
ana price, $8.
. • 4^) ■!'« —
Asthma is something almost
iiiHtan 4y relieved by taking a
little hot honey.
er has found a home among
friends in Chicago, fhey say
that Tilton expects to marry
again, but the rumor is onlv a
rumor. It is quite too late for
him to retrieve hi* former er-
rors. what' ver 1 h*'y were, and
he best serves himself by his
dignified silence. F01 the olh-
gr *at contro*
• sain*' 1 atl al-
ao he chant:i • Iy -aid. AH the
element? of a tragedy are con-
tained iu the affair, excepting
the necessaty death, .ir.d that
iN more than equaled by the
unbroken *il ucc whii.di at least
I wo of *le prificipal mviutaiu.
Lard, if applied at once, will
remove the discoloration after
a bruise.
A te w weekly !' ]" • ie to
stait in Sherman on the first of
Feluuarv next under th* man-
age im-lit of (t. A. Dickerman
and Jesae Loving, with Tom
Ed Botrmr to manage the me-
Everv former should andeav chaui" al departuietit Vk e un-
01 to raiae all the pnelucts ofiu^'siaml 1. will be a Sunday
the climate for his own use [Herald. Messrs Hieiermen
Herein lies thoindeiMsndwnceo;' and l. <vinu* ar imocg the Hrat
farm life settlersof Shermrn. ?.mt will ui
... doubt succeed iu their new en-
Fine job printing af this of lerprise. (iaim .ville Hespeir-
Hce. inn.
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The Democrat. (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1887, newspaper, January 13, 1887; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth191485/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.