Corsicana Democrat and Truth (Corsicana, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 26, 1925 Page: 3 of 8
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CORSICANA DEMOCRAT AND TRUTH
• (i
RECOVER QUICK
FROM GRIPPE
OR FLU!
After a spell of Grippe or flu,
%hen your system Is all run down
and your legs are so weak they can
hardly bold up your body, tho best
thing you can do to get back your
health and strength quick, Is to
etart right in taking Tanlac.
It's wonderful bow soon you
Tcally do start to Improve! Tanlao
sails right la and puts the system
In fighting trim. It cleans the
blood, revitalizes the digestive or-
gans, gives you an appetite for
eolld food and makes you feel like
a new person.
Nothing will turn the tvlck quite
as fast as Tanlac, made after the
famous Tanlac formula from roots,
barks and herbs gathered from the
four corners of the <>arth. Buy a
bottle today and g-.t started back to
full strength and vigor.
Takt Tanlac Vegetable Pills
for Conttipation
TANLAC
FOR YOUR HEALTH
ATE m FAST
South Carolinian Took Black-
Draught For Indigestion, and
Says He Could Soon Eat
Anything.
Ballentine, S. C.—Mr. W. B.
Bouknight, of this place, gave the
following account of his use of
Thedford's Black-Draught.
"Just after I married I had indi-
gestion. Working out, I got In the
habit of eating fast, for which I
soon paid by having a tight, bloated
feeling after meals. This made me
very uncomfortable. 1 would feel
stupid and drowsy, didn't feel llko
working. I was told It was indi-
gestion. Some one recommended
Black-Draught and I took it after
meals. I soon could eat anything
any time.
"I use it for colds and bilious-
ness and it will knock out a cold
and carry away the bile better and
quicker than any liver medicine I
have ever found."
Eating too fast, too much, or
faulty chewing of your food, often
causes discomfort after meals. A
pinch of Black-Draught, washed
down with a swallow of water, will
help to bring prompt relief. Bloat-
ed sensations, eructations, bad
breath and other common symptoms
of Indigestion have disappeared
after Black-Draught has been taken
for several days. NC-164
King Tommy
<«>-
li.
WHERE'S NORHEYS?
SYNOPSIS. — In London the
teller of the mory of the adven-
tures of "King Tommy,'' and
known hereufter an "Uncle Bill,"
Ih Informed by Lord Norheys, son
of an old friend, that Lord
Troyte, head of the Urltlsh for-
elxn olllee, Norheyt)' uncle, has a
scheiiitt to rnuku him (Norheys)
kins of Lymrla, In central Eu-
rope, through iiiarrluge to Ca-
lypHo, daughter of King Wladla-
1 itvvh, deposed monarch of that
country. A financier, I'roeoplus
('utile, knows there Is oil In pro-
fusion in Lymrla, und with an
HiiKllsh king on the throne the
output could lie Hecured for Kn«-
land. Norheys. In love with a
hiaiio dancer, Viola Tom pie. I
not enthusiastic over the propo-
sition. The patriarch, Xlcnolaus,
highest ecclesiastical dignitary
In Lystrla, Is heartily In favor of
the restoration of tho monarchy,
and Cable has generously financed
the sentiment. Calypso Is malt-
I li K u living danciriK In the "Mas-
cotte," Merlin cabaret. Norheys
refuses to entertain the Idea of
'rIvIiik up Viola Temple, to whom
he Is secretly engaged. "Uncle
Hill's" sister Emily urges him to
secure a passport from Lord
Troyte for a certain Janet
Church, sironnmlnded female
who wants to visit Lystrla In
the Interests of a society for
world peace. Janet Church leaves
for Berlin. "Uncle Bill" Is again
appealed to by his sister to find
a certain curate (name not giv-
en) who has left his parish In
Ireland for a visit to Berlin, and
canhol lie found.
BLACK-DRAUGHT
LIVER MEDICINE
LIVER MEDICINE
Make hay while the sun shines, but
•don't get sunstroke.
*'CASC ARETS" IF BILIOUS,
CONSTIPATED—10c A BOX
If Dizzy, Headachy or 8tomach li
Sour, Clean the Bowels.
To clean youi
bowels without
cramping or over-
acting, tuke "Cu
carets." Sick
headache, dizzi-
ness, biliousness,
gases, Indigestion,
sour upset stom-
ach und all such
distress gone by morning. Nicest lax-
ative and cathartic on earth for grown-
ups and children. 10c a box—all drug
stores.
A good many heroes are made of
wood pulp and printer's ink.
How s Your Health'/
Dallas, Texas—"I have used Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription for fem-
inine trouble and
it has helpec1. me
very much, and
1 Itave used Dr.
Pierce's Golden
Medical Discov-
ery as a tonic,
to build mc up
when I was all
, rundown, and
' fou. d it very
beneficial. I hope
these medicines
will help others
also."—Mrs. Pauline Lyles, 2U16
Cockrell Street.
Obtain Dr. Pierce's remedies now
from your dealer in medicine, or send
Dr. Pierce, President of tin Invalids'
Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., 10c for a trial
pkp. of any of his medicines, and
write for free medical advice.
A safe and soothing
^^remedy for cuts,
t burns, or skin trou-
bles. Protects, ••
lie vesand heals.T ake
internally for coughs
and sore throats.
Vaseline
WUi« «*.
PETROLEUM JELLY
Chetebrough Mfg. Co.,Con 'd.
Stat* St. New York
• u •
CHAPTER V—Continued
"Viola threw Ills dirty money In
<i|s face," said Norheys, "and you'J
have thought that would have been
enough for him. Hut It wasn't. When
lie saw she wasn't going to he bribed
he took a high moral tone with her,
lull<etl about ruining the prospects of
a bright young life—mine, the beast
meant, not hers. There'll have been
some sense In talking about getting
married ruining her prospects consid-
ering the way she dances. Hut what
was the good of talking about ruin-
ing i^?7 All the same, that's what
h^ did. ile told her all about that
Calypso girl ii in I \\ hut a scoop it
would be for nie to marry her. Now,
what do you think of that, Uncle
Hill?"
"Did she promise to give you up?"
"Of course she didn't. And what
the devil good would it have been If
she had? I wouldn't have given her
up. What I always say is this: If
a fellow won't give up a girl, there's
no use the girl's trying to give up ttie
fellow, especially if she happens to
be fond of him. You see what I
mean, don't you. Uncle Hill? Well,
after making,Viola cry, which is a
thing no man would do unless lie was
an actual devil, that octopus took to
threatening her. He said that, being
a princess, the Calypso girl could
marry me If she chose; only had to
say the word and there we were.
Viola doesn't know much about prin-
cesses, but she didn't believe that.
All the same, it made her more than
a bit uncomfortable."
It seems, as I heard afterward, to
have roused Miss Temple to simple
but effective action. I do not know
whether she told Norheys what she
had done. If she did, lie did not con-
fide In me.
"So you can tell Uncle Ned," he
said, "to keep that disgusting Semit-
ic toad of his chained up for the fu-
ture. If 1 catch him fooling round Vio-
la's liat again there'll be murder
done."
"I'm afraid," I said, "that this will
be a disappointment to your uncle.
He's rather set his heart on seeing
you king of Lystrla."
"I haven't the slightest objection to
being king of Lystrla."
"Hut you can't be if you won't mar-
ry the princess."
"I'm not so sure about that," said
Norheys. "After nil, if a thing can't
be done In one way it generally can
In another. Just you try and make
tbtit clear to Uncle Ned. Tell hltn
rm an uncommonly dutiful nephew
and till that, as keen as nuts on buck-
ing up the family and pouring oil all
over the good old empire; but there's
one thing I can't and won't do."
"Marry the princess?"
"No. I'll marry her If I have to,
hul. I won't go hack on Viola."
I never made all that clear to
Troyte. Indeed, I never tried to. But
Norheys succeeded In explaining lilm-
■elf, more or less, to Ills uncde, nnd
t heard no more of tho matter for
tome little time.
Another worry—a small, even a ri-
diculous one—enme to ninke my life
uneasy. My sister Emily wrote to
me that she lost n curate. She want-
ed me to set the whole machinery of
the British empire to work to llnd the
crenture for her. He was not, it ap-
peared, a particularly valuable curate.
Kmlly admitted that she did not like
him. She went so far as to say that
he was not the sort of man who ought
to have been in Holy Orders. But he
was the only curate there wns In
Kmlly's parish and they could not
get on without him because the rec-
tor, Canon Pyke, had fallen suddenly
ill.
The curate had gone off on a hol-
iday, which, according to Kmlly, he
tlld not deserve. Almost Immediate-
ly after his departure Canon Pyke
bad broken down.
"All we're heard from him sine® be
left Is one postcard which came from
Berlin and has a picture of a mu-
wis. ea It. I don't think, consider-
By George A. Birmingham
Couyright by Bobbs Merrfll Co.—W. N. U. Service
Ing all that happened during the war,
fiat Berlin is a place a clergyman
"tik'lit to go to for a holiday, not a
good clergyman. It seems to me a
callous thing to do. scarcely what 1
should call Christian. Anyhow, ho
went there. At least he said he wail
going there, and I suppose he really dlit,
for that Is where the postcard cumo
from. He left his address before ho
started, In case anything went wronu
In the parish and we wanted him
back. Directly the poor canon broko
down Sirs, Pyke telegraphed to Ber-
lin. but no answer came. Then I tel-
egraphed. When I got no answer II
telegraphed again to the manager o/
the hotel. I got a reply saying that
he hud left two days after be ar-
rived and not given any address.
"Now I know that with your lnllu-
ence and all your London friends—
I am sure Lord Edmund Troyte could
do something to help us—"
Apparently I was to set our con-
sular service to work to llnd a curate
who was rampaging about Central
Kurope. I should look a nice fool If
I went to the Foreign olllce with a
request like that. I was Inclined to
agree with Emily. That curate of
hers should never have been a clergy-
man. I sympathized with her, and
with Canon Pyke, and with the par-
ish. I even sympathized slightly with
the curate. But I was not going to
do anything.
I slipped Emily's letters into the
"Unanswered" basket on top of her
earlier letter about Janet Church. But
III
Then My Servant Brought Me In Some
Letters Which Had Just Arrived by
Post.
I was not allowed to dismiss the mat-
ter from my mind. I got unotlier let-
ter the next day.
"I'm afraid 1 forgot to mention,"
she wrote, "that the address be gave
us was the Adlon hotel. He said that
if anything went wrong In the parish
he would come back at once."
She had not forgotten to give me
that address. What Kmlly had for-
gotten to tell me was the curate's
name. That rather tied my hands,
or would have tied them if 1 hud
meant to do anything.
Next day I got a fourth letter from
Emily, In It she enclosed twelve
penny stamps.
"Please get our ambassador In Ber-
lin to telegraph," she wrote, "as soon
as he finds out where our curate Is.
I don't know what It costs to send
u telegram to Berlin, but I send twelve
stumps which ought to be enough
considering the present state of the
exchange. Besides, an ambassador
probably gets his telegrams sent
cheap."
That letter Joined the others in the
basket.
By the same post came one from
Canon Pyke himself written in pen-
cil from ills bed. He began apolo-
getically. He would never have
dreamed of troubling me with his pri-
vate affairs had not his friend Mrs.
Chambers (my sister Emily) urged
him to write to me on u subject very
near to bis heart at the moment—
the lost curate.
"The dear fellow," he went on. "Is
not in all respects exactly what a
clergyman ought to be. At the same
time, he Is a worthy young man, full
of heartiness and energy. What
makes us fcur that be may have In-
volved himself In some serious diffi-
culty is that he Is by natural dispo-
sition both daring nnd adventurous,
more so perhaps than one of our
younger clergy ought to be. If you
can—"
He, too, seemed to think that I
ought to get the Foreign office to
send out a search party to Berlin or
perhaps to get the ambassador and
the head of the Inter-Allied Mission
of Control to take the matter up.
Ills letter joined Emily's In the
basket.
Then Emily took to telegraphing to
me. She Is a frugal woman whose
spnre money goes to missionary so-
cieties, but she spent a lot on tele-
grams. They kept getting longer and
longer. There was no douht that she
wu In earnest about finding that
curate.
I disposed of the fourth telegram
la tit ami way. The pile In the
basket on my desk waa becoming
large.
Then my servant brought me in
some letters which had just arrived
by post. 1 glam-ed at the envelopes
anxiously, fearing that either Emily
or her dear Cauou Pyke had written
again. 1 was relieved to llnd that the
only real iriivr was addressed in
EdmUnd Tri.yte's writing. Along
with It was u postcard. I began with
Edmund Troyte.
He Invited me to dine with him
that very evening.
"You and I," he wrote, "nobody
else. I want to talk to you aboiK
Norheys."
I was getting a little tired of be-
ing talked to about Norheys. I ad-
mit that I am tliut young mail's god-
father, but that does not make me
responsible for all bis actions. Lord
Edmund ought to be capable of look-
ing at'ier his own nephew. Then it
occurred to me that If Edmund
Troyte went on worrying me I might
as well have the satisfaction of wor-
rying him. 1 would tell iiiiu the story
of Emily's curate and see bow he
liked being consulted about business
which is none of his. I telephoned
my acceptance of bis Invitation and
then went back to the postcard.
It came from Janet Church and
announced that she had got as far as
Berlin and meant to go farther.
Janet was staying in the Adlon ho-
tel. The address reminded me of
Kmlly's curate and a really brllllnnt
idea occurred to me. I would give
her a little in return.
I wrote her a long letter In which
1 explained that a really valuable
curate had disappeared, having been
last heard of at the Adlon hotel in
Berlin. 1 said that foul play was
suspected, which I am sure was true.
Emily evidently thought that the
young man had gone off on a disrep-
utable spree, which would have been
fmil play on his part. Canon Pyke
feared that he bad been decoyed Into
a den of Infamy and there robbed—
foul play on the part of someone
else. I asked Janet to stay a few
days longer In Berlin to go Into the
matter thoroughly. It was Just the
sort of thing she ought to do.
"The curate's name," I wrote, "has
unfortunately not been told me. But
that won't be any real obstacle.
There cannot be many English
curates at large in Berlin. If you
find one at all, he'll probably he the
one we want. He has a hearty man-
ner, Is full of energy and good spirits.
In all probability his face is round
and plump. My sister Kmlly is most
anxious about him, so I'm sure you'll
do your best."
Then I wrote to Emily.
"I'm delighted to help in any way I
enn in the good work of finding your
lost curate. I am dining with Edmund
Troyte this evening and Intend to put
the whole case before him. You can
confidently count on everything pos-
sible being done. 1 have also writ-
ten to Janet Church, who is in Ber-
lin. She is Just the kind of woman
who will find a curate however care-
fully he Is hidden—or. If your suspi-
cion is Justified, however carefully he
has hidden himself. It would be a
thousand pities If he were perma-
nently lost. Hut we need not antic-
ipate that, (jive my kind regards to
the canon."
CHAPTER VI
Troyte and I dined very comfort-
ably and, being wise men, talked
about nothing unpleasant until the
business of eating was over. When
I had finished my second glass of
port we went Into the library for
our coffee. A servant put a small
table before us, set coffee, cognac
and cigarettes on It and then went
away.
I was Just about to begin the tale
of Emily's lost curate when Troyte
asked me an abrupt question.
"Do you know where Norheys Ih?"
"At this hour," I said, "he's gener-
al I,Vf In the Belvedere."
The Belvedere is tho theater In
which Miss Temple dances. Norheys,
unless he has some Important en-
gagement elsewhere, hangs about her
dressing room until her turn is over.
Then he drives her home.
"He's not at the Belvedere to-
night," said Troyte. "In fact, he's
not In town at all."
"He didn't say anything to nys
about going away," I said, "but then
I haven't seen him for the last two
days."
"Nobody has seen him for the last
two days," said Troyte. "I wanted
to Rpeak to him today and I tele-
phoned to his rooms. His man fold
me thnt he went away the day he-
fore yesterday. He left no address,
so his letters aren't being forwarded.
I made Inquiries at his clubs, but he
left no address at any of them. All
his man could tell me wns thnt he
went off with two suitcases and the
taxi man was ordered to lake him to
Charing Cross."
Well, in the circumstances It
does seem a bit important to
know where Is Norheys. Has
he skipped out or eloped?
(to bb continued.)
Silk Long Known in China
Old records Indicate that silk was
produced In China over 0,000 yeuri
ago.
OKe KITCHEN
CABINET
((£). 1926, Wealern Newaimper l.'nlua.)
"A little thing. sunny umllo,
A loving word at mora.
And all day Ioiik the day shone
bright
Tho carea of life were made more
llnht
And sweetest hopes were born."
FOOD FOR THE FAMILY.
A salad which Is out of the ordinary
and will be enjoyed by all Is:
Cheese Sabid.—
Take four table-
spoonfuls or dry
gra ted cheese
(the snappy
kind), mix with
one pint of
whipped cream
and one t a b I e-
spoonful of gelntln. Sou mm highly
with salt, cayenne and a little dry
mustard. When thoroughly mixed put
Into individual molds and set In the
Ice box. Serve In, lettuce hearts with
French dressing.
Rolled Oats, Fruit Cookies.—Take
two cupfuls of rolled oats and brown
or toast to a light brown in a mod-
erate oven or in an iron frying pan on
top of the range. Beat one cupful of
butter or sweet fat of uny kind with
one cupful of sugar, add the beaten
yolks of two eggs, one-fourth cupful
of sweet milk, a cupful of rai-
sins, one-half cupful of nuts chopped
fine, the whites of two eggs beaten
stiff, the rolled oats, and two cupfuls
of tlour sifted with one teaspoonfui of
soda. Stir and mix well, roll out and
bake. Tills recipe makes live dozen
cookies.
Toasted Marshmallow Cake.—Heat
half a cupful of butter to a cream;
add gradually one cupful of sugar and
the Deafen yolks of three eggs.- Sift
together one and one-half cupfuls of
flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow-
der, add to the lirst mixture alternat-
ing with one-half cupful of milk
Flavor with a teaspoonfui of vanilla
extract. Fold In the stlflly beaten
whites of the eggs and hake in two
layers. Put together with chocolate
Icing or fudge and decorate the top
with toasted marsbiiialiows.
Chocolate Pie.—Take one cupful of
milk, two tablespoonfuls of grated
chocolate, - three-fourths of a cupful
of sugar, the yolks of three eggs. Heat
the chocolate and milk together, add
the sugar to the yolks, heating to a
cream. Flavor with vanilla and bake
lu a pastry-lined pan. Make a
meringue of the whites beaten stiff,
adding three tablespoonfuls of sugur.
Brown lu the oven.
Good to Eat.
There are times when serving punch
for a company, It Is nice to know how
much fruit will be
needed. The fol-
lowing recipe will
serve fifty per-
sons :
Party Punch.—
Make a sirup by
boiling two anil
one-half cupfuls
of sugar with two cupfuls of water for
live minutes. Add two cupfuls of
freshly made tea and chill. Measure
three-fourths of a cupful of lemon
Juice, six cupfuls of orange Juice, two
cupfuls of crushed pineapple, one cup-
ful of maraschino cherries, two quarts
of water, six sliced oranges. Into the
punch bowl over a block of Ice, pour
the water, fruit Juices and pineapple;
stir well, add the cherries and orange
slices cut Into quarters.
Simple Apple Pudding.—Put a layer
of sliced apples In a baking dish,
sweeten and flavor with spice or grated
lemon rind. Butter n few slices of
bread, dip them quickly Into boiling
water without touching the butter, lay
them over the apples and bake a deli-
cate brown. Any fruit may lie used
for this pudding, which will be found
much better for the children than rich
pastry or steamed puddings. Serve
with sugar and cream or any liked pud-
ding sauce.
Orange Sandwich Bread. — Take
\hroe cupfuls of Hour, four teaspoon-
fuls of baking powder, one cupful of
jnllk, one-half cupful of sugar, one-half
teaspoonfui of salt, one-fourth cupful
of walnut meats, one-half cupful of
candled orange peel and one well-heat-
en egg. Mix all the dry Ingredients,
add tlit* milk gradually and the well-
beaten egg. Pour Into two well
greased pans and let stand ten min-
utes, Hake In a moderate oven for
4.ri tllltllllcs to all hour. Cool before
cutting into thin slices, buffer lightly
with creamed butter and make Intc
sandwiches, This Is delicious served
with tea and oraice marmalade.
Angel Parfait.- -Boll together one-
half cupful each of sugar and water
until the sirup forms a thread. Pout
over the stiffly beaten whites of three
eggs. Bent well, add one teaspoonfui
of altuopd extract, and when cold folr?
In one pint of cream whipped and one
cupful each of chopped walnuts and
candled cherries. Pack In Ice and salt
in a mold. Let stand four hours.
Split Pea Soup.—Take one pint ol
dry peas, one onion and half of p.
bunch of celery. Soak the peas ovel
night, drain and simmer until tender
stirring often. When the peas an
tender, fry one onion until footier, am
the celery nil fine In a little tieef fat.
Add to the soup and cook until smooth
Put through a sieve, add three table
spoonfuls of butter and floor cookei!
together, one-half can of sfralnei
tomato and one cupful of cream. Ser\>
Help That Achy Back!
Are you dragging around, dajr after
day, with a dull, unceaaing backache?
Are you lame in the morning; bothered
with headache*, dizziness and urinary
disorder*? Feel tired, irritable and
discouraged? Then there's surely some-
thing wrong, and likely it'a kidney
weakness. Don't neglect it I Get back
your health while you can. Use Doan'i
Pillt. Doan'i have helped thousands
of ailing folk*. They fhould help you.
Aik your neighbor/
A Texas Case
~ Mra. P. J. Wil-
liams, <01 8. Waco
St., Oroeabeck,
Texas, Buys: "I had
■harp pulna acroaa
my back and it was
ao weak and lame
I could hardly get
up mornings. I
had aevere head-
inches and dizzy
spella, with black
specks before my
eyes. My kidneys
acted too freely,
alao. I used Doan's PIIIb, and they
cured me of thin trouble.
DOAN'S^
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Fo*ter-Milburo Co., Mfg. Cham., Buffalo, N. Y.
IT BEATS ALL
How Those Old, Creaky,
Stiff Joints Limber
Right Up With
Joint-Ease
Just rub on the new application
called Joint-Ease If you wunt to know
wluit reul Joint comfort is.
It's for stiff, swollen, or pain-tot*
tured joints whether caused by rheu-
mutism or not.
A few seconds* rubbing nnd It soaks
right In through skin and flesh right
down to ligament and lionet
It oils up and limbers up the Joints,
subdues the Inflammation and reduces
the swelling. Joint-Ease is the one
great remedy for all Joint troubles
und live druggists have It or can get
it for you—a tube for (10 cents.
Always remember, when Jolnt-Easa
gets In Joint agony gets out—quick.
hot with wafers.
Where There's Health
There's a Way!
ABILITY and will cannot win
through to victory in life
unless there is also energy—
health. And lack of energy in
eight cases out of ten is caused
by Anemia—blood starvation.
The test above is a guide to
blood condition. Press the flesh
between hand and thumb firmly:
unless the blood comes rushing
back, Anemia is indicated.
For thirty-two years thou-
sands of physicians have seea
their patients regain health and
energy by the use of Gude's
Pepto-Mungan. It rebuilds the
latent power in run down bodies
by supplying the blood with the
Iron and manganese it lacks.
Your druggist has Oude's
Pepto-Mangan in liquid or tab-
let form.
Gud.e's
Pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
\V " "'Iff
Aifight
IB a mild, vegetable IasatWe,te
WWt relieve Conitlp«Uon and Blli-
outnenn ond keep the dlgeitlvji and
[ ollmlnaUve functions normal.
I jjjVoi fbroivr j
joyears '
Chips off the Old Block
i\ w JUI
L Utt!
littk One-th
PBllir do
same
ft
M JUNIORS-
tittle Ms
One-third the I«t
dosa. Made of
Ingredients,
then candy coated. t
For children and adulti.
•OLD BY YOUR DRUQQISTa
Pt
The New Freely-Lathering
Qiticura
Shoving Stick
ForTender Faces
EMOLLIENT MEDICINAL ANTISEPTIC
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Corsicana Democrat and Truth (Corsicana, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 26, 1925, newspaper, March 26, 1925; Corsicana, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth292763/m1/3/: accessed March 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.