The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 133, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 22, 1913 Page: 1 of 8
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Full Leased Wire
Associated Press
News Service
JJlTir ±JJU [
CENTRAL TEXAS' GREATEST NEWSPAPER—LARGEST NET PAID CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED BETWEEN DALLAS AND HOUSTON.
C o in p le t e Local,
County and State
News Service
^PRICE FIVE CENTS
TEMPLE, TEXAS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1913.
VOL. VI. No. 133
BABY FARM
EVILS BARED
BY PROBERS
Montenegro Cuts
All Communication
With Outside World
FINAL FIGHT FOR
PORTER CHARLTON
IN HIGHEST COURT
SHOCKING CONDITIONS SHOWN
TO EXIST IN CHICAGO
INSTITUTIONS.
LONDON, April 21.—The Ottinje
correspondent of the Times, by in-
direct route, telegraphed/That the
Montenegrin government^ ha« stop-
ped all communication bete^en Mon-
tenegro and the outside world. No
telegrams are being accepted.
It is believed that the decree of
isolation is connected with the nego-
tiations for the surreuder of Scutari.
BABESN FOR BOARD
Mississippi Belle
Weds Upton Sinclair
To Live In Holland
Many Mothers Forced to Renounce
Claim to Infants in Payment of
Lying-in Hospital
fTeea.
CHICAGO, April 21—More evi-
dence of "baby Juggling" in lying-in
hospitals was dragged from reluctant
witnesses today by the legislative
committee investigating maternity
hospitals.
Witnesses admitted that babies
were taken from their mothers in
payment of their board. An >ther
finally stated that prospective moth-
ers performed house work at his
residence, when he was accused of
having solved the servant problem
in this manner.
A third superintendent of a "baby
farm" said infants were sent to all
parts of the country when a few-
hours old and without a material in-
vestigation of the characters of the
foster parents.
Secretary Morris of the Chicago
Orphan asylum said the contract
signed by mothers entrusting child-
ren to the institution contains this
clause:
Pledge Signed by Mothers.
"If I fail to pay board for six
FREDERICKS BURG, Va., April
21.—Upton Sinclair, the writer, and
Miss Mary Craig Kimbrough, daugh-
ter of Judge and Mrs. A. MaC Kim-
brough of Greenwood, Miss., were
married here today at the home of
Mrs. John Burman, a relative of
both bride and groom.
The bride came to Fredericksburg
to meet Mr. Sinclair, accompanied
by her aunt, Mrs. W. S. Green of
California.
York. They expect to make their
home in Holland.
Dp
mi
TO ABROGATE
CANAL PACTS
WITH BRITISH
SENATOR CHAMBERLAIN OF-
FER8 RESOLUTION FOR TER-
MINATION OF TREATIES.
O'GORMAN FAVORS IT
I'LL FLY ACROSS ATLANTIC YET''
SAYS BRUCKER, WHOSE START WAS
DELAYED BY A LEAK IN GAS BAG
Chairman of Committee Who Will
Handle Problem Believe* Reso-
lution Will be Adopted
by Senate.
Club Women's
General Council
Meets At Capital
WASHINGTON, April 21.—A final
The couple left for New j effort was made in the supreme court
to save Porter Charlton from extra-j
dition to Italy to answer a charge of
murder. Charlton is in jail in New
Jersey charged with the murder of I
his wife at Lake Como, Italy. The
state department through Secretary j
Knox decided he was a fit subject j
for extradition under the treaty with j
Italy. Charlton sought a writ of
habeas corpus from the federal court i
in the district of New Jersey and on |
I being denied the writ appealed to the j
WASHINGTON, April 21.—With i SUpreme court. Arguments were (
more than five hundred delegates heard in court in support of the
from all sections of the country in contention that he cannot be ex-
attendance the mid-biennial council , tradited. The Charlton murder case
of the General Federation of Wo- i was one of the sensations of the dpy
men's Clubs convened here tonight j three years ago. *
for a four days' session. The meet- j , ^ ,
ing was devoted to welcoming ad-
dresses and to the reading of reports
Later the delegates were tendered a
reception by the District of Colum-
bia Federation of Women's clubs.
A preliminary business meeting
was held by the council during the
day, at which reports urging the pop-
SENATE TO FIGHT
TARIFF REVISION
ularization of art; conservation of
forests and birds; teaching of social FINANCE
consecutive months, that shall be a hygiene Jq normal schools and the j
full surrender to the asylum. j nee(j 0f a SyStem for training school
"The rule is never enforced, ; g,rja jn duties of home-making
and motherhood were presented and
discussed.
Morris explained.
"It's like putting a horse In a
stable and when you fail to pay for
his feed they sell him only," com-
mented Chairman Thomas Curran.
Dr. L. D. Rogers, superintendent
* of the national "institutions" which
include an emergency hospital, a
maternity home, a school and a night
university at one address, was inter-
rogated for five hours, but gave the
committee little information. He as-
serted he kept no books at his quad-
ruple establishment, depending en-
tirely upon memory. The doctor ex-
pressed himself as satisfied with bis
methods. He compared himself to
Doctor Friedmann and Dr. Alexis
Carrell.
SEEKS TO PREVENT
HUNGER STRIKES
COMMITTEE OPENS
WAY FOR OBJECTIONS AND
AMENDMENTS.
HOUSE GETS THE BILL
WASHINGTON, April 21.—A de-
mand for abrogation of the treaties
with Great Britain bearing upon isth-
mian canal rights, presented to tho
senate today in a resolution by Sen-
ator Chamberlain, brought a new ele-
ment into the canal controversy in
progress between this country and
Great Britain over the right of the
United States to exempt American
coastwise shipping from paying tolls.
Senator O'Gorman, chairman of the
interoceanic canal committee, who
must handle the resolution, endorsed
the Chamberlain resolution tonight.
Earlier in the day state department
officials had expressed ignorance of
Senator Chamberlain's plan to in-
troduce the resolution.
Would Abrogate Treaties.
The Chamberlain resolution would
require the president to proceed at
once to terminate the Hay-Paunce-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT.)
POPE MUCH BETTER
PHYSICIANS REPORT
.
IP
SWS5
SfLPH B
THE
S OF THE. AIR.
WASHINGTON WORRIED
BY JAPANESE MENACE
CALIFORNIA STANDS PAT
Determination of Legislative Leaders To Frame
And Pass Anti-Alien Land Owning Bill
Complicates the Situation.
PRESIDENT WILSON HAS ONE CARD LEFT
Should State Legislation Encroach Upon Field
of International Relations Reserved to the
National Government Washington Admi
istration Will Intervene.
Cough and Irritation of the Throat
is Gradually Disappearing—
Pontiff More Cheerful.
Bill Aimed at Peculiar Methods of
Suffragettes Passes Mouse
of Commons.
21.—The bill
Underwood Measure is Formally In-
troduced and Immediately Refer-
red Back to Ways and
Means Committee.
WASHINGTON, April 21.—Demo-
LONDON, April
aimed at hunger strikes by militant | cratlc force9 lQ charge of tariff re-
He could not recall the disposi- suffragists was passed in the house | viaion in the 8eQate 8lightly yieidcd
today. Home Secretary McKenna
appealed for urgent action because,
tion of an infant born at his hospital
last Saturday. When confronted
with facts gathered by the investi-
gators, he said he had given a baby j
to a midwife on the "south side."
"Is your hospital a clearing house j
for babies?" inquired Mr. Curran?
"Not at all," he replied.
Kept No Track of Rabies.
Dr. Rogers could not say what had
become of any other of the more
than.
out."
He said he appointed a woman
solicitor and that she received 25 per
cent commission. He asserted he
advertised in journals at Albany,
New York, Indianapolis, and at
Louisville, Ky.
After telling the witness he knew
today to the demands for hearings
upon tariff schedules. In addition
to the permission given al! interested
pending the passage of the bill, he
felt it his duty to continue forcible Pa,"ties to file statement! with the
r .. , , , . .finance committee. Senator Si unions
feeding, which he was desirous of | . , , .
avoiding. At the same time he re-
fused to accept an amendment pro-
hibiting forcible feeding for the
reason that he wished to retain
power to resort to this method when
today conceded to a group of west-
ern senators the right to appear and
state their arguments against the
free wool and free sugar provisious
that have been agreed to by the
600 Infants he has "farmed j £ opinion the release of" a hun-1 dei"°"f,t8 of the h°U£e-
1 A full meeting of the senate fin-
ance committee is to be, held to-
ger striker might, endanger public in-
terests.
The bill provides for the tempora-
ry discharge of prisoners whose de-
tention is undesirable on account of
the condition of their health. Pris-
oners discharged in this way would
have to return to prison on the ex-
morrow. Republican senators will
then renew their demand that gen-
eral open hearings be given. The
attitude of the majority of the dem-
ocratic members of the committee is
against this, however. They claim
that such course would delay tariff
less about his business than any j piratlon of the period stated in their . . . ..
man he ever heard of. Chairman order of release, or would be liable revl!"0"' *nd }h*} D° l argument
Curren instructed the doctor to be j0 arrest without a warrant,
on hand Friday with a "refreshed s Property belonging to Duchess
memory.
I Adeline of Bedford, an ardent suffra-
would be brought forth that have not
already appeared in *he hearings be-
fore the house committee, or in the
briefs filed with the senate commit-
tee.
Bill Introduced in Hoose.
The Underwood tariff bill, as fin-
Dr. W. S. Briney, superintendent j gist was levied on today for non-
of the Anna Ross sanitarium, said payment of her taxes. A silveij cup
he gave physicians a 33 per cent com- j waa taken to satisfy the claims.
mission on business they turned over | The Duchess took this means of
to him. He denied that 85 per centshowing her hostility to the taxa- ; ally aPProved *nd revised by 'he <au
of the unmarried women in mater- j tio uof WOmen while they are still j CU8 of se democrats was reintro
nlty hbmes arterward leaf. immoral j without the franchise.
lives, according to a statement of
the head of a charitable institution.
He insisted it was better for these j
women that their babies be taken
from them.
— .
ROME, April 21.-r—Every night the
pope's cough and expectoration be-
comes very troublesome and still
cause bim pains in the chest and
back. He finds relief in hot, sooth- I
ing drinka and in poultices covering ,
the whole chest.
Some improvement, however, is
I observable every night in the pon- ;
I tiff's condition and the period in I
' which the bronchial affections takes
on an acute form becomes of shorter
| deration each evening. Thus his
holiness is beginning to go to sleep
j earlier and enjoys longer and more
! strenghtening rest.
During the gravity of his illness,
| Doctors Marchiafava and Amici con-
cealed from the pope his real condi-
\ tion, fearing greater depression if
he knew the actual state of his health
but now they gradually'are inform-
ing the patient of their past anxieties,
| wishing to impress upon hi mthe ne-
| cessity of taking extreme care and
a long rest.
When the pontiff heard that an
! American pilgrimage, conducted by
the Rt. Rev. Jos. Sehrembs, Biship
| of Toledo, would arrive in Rome
j Tuesday, he expressed the hope that
he would be able to Bee "the dear
j children who have come from so far
j away and who have crossed the
j ocean."
| It has been decided that the
American pilgrims shall be received
by Cardinal Merry Del Val, the papal
! secretary of state. The presenta-
i tion will be made by Mgr. Thomas F.
Kennedy, rector of the American
college at Rome.
Joseph Brucker, the Austrian-American balloonist, hopes to get away j
successfully soon on his attempted flight across the Atlantic ocean from j
Las Palmas, Canary islands, off the coast of Africa, to the West Indies or !
Florida. This is the latest picture of him. He says he believes his great
dirigible balloon Suchard II. will accomplish the feat and not meet with
the same fate that befell Weliman and Vaniman when they started from
Atlantic City, N. J., and tried to fly across the sea. When Brucker was
ready to start the other day' he found that the gas had leaked out of
the big bag, and he had to delay the trip. "1*1 fly across the Atlantic yet," |
he said, as he made arrangements to get a new supply of gas.
MYSTERYCLOUDS STEELCORPORATION
DALLAS TRAGEDY! DIRECTORS ELECTED
BKRT ASHLEY, 17 YEARS OLT). Geo. W. Perkins and Others Whose
SHOT TO DEATH BY J. M. Terms Had Expired Are Con-
REYNOLDS. tiuue<1 in 0ffk«-
CAUSE IS NOT KNOWN
Youth is Slain While Engaged in
Washing Face and Hands in
Kitchen of Man Who Fired
Fatal Shota.
NEW YORK, April 21'The Unit-
ed States Steel corporation held its
annual meeting in Hoboken, N. J.
today, re-electing the following di-
rectors whose terms had expired:
I Geo. W. Perkins, Alfred Clifford,
; E. G. Converse, Jas A. Farrell, El-
bert H Gray, J. P. Morgan and
Henry Phipps.
| Alfred H. Murray, assistant sec-
| retary of the corporation, was "nom-
j inated" a member of the board, suc-
| ceeUing the late J. P. Morgan, it Is
| understood Mr. Murray, who repre-
WASHINGTON, April 21 —News of the determination of the legislative
leaders in Sacramento to frame and pass an alien land-owning bill, directly
discriminating against the Japanese, unofficially conveyed today to the
white house and state department, was received with grave concern and
disappointment. Su<h a development had not been expected in view of
the favorable comments in California upon the President's suggestions
that regard be had for preservation of the friendly relations between this
country and the Oriental nations
Without exact knowledge of the form discrimination will take in the
new bill, those here assume that it will resemble the so-called assembly
measure, which proposed to bar from land holding persons ineligible to
citizenship, which covers only the Chinese and Japanese.
The administration is not yet at the end of its resources and will con-
tinue its efforts to ameliorate harsh features of the projected legislation
until the measure is beyond reach of amendment in that direction.
Wilson Has One ( aril Left.
While the president bus in his message to Governor Johnson, transmit-
ted through Secretary Bryan, recognized the right of the people of Cali-
fornia to legislate according to their judgment tin the subject of land
tenure, he also is under the obligation of guarding against encroachment
bv state legislation upon that part of the field of international relations
reserved by the constitution to the National government. Therefore in the
event the California legrelation takes the form of direct discrimination
against the Japanese in violation of what the administration itself regards
as their treaty rights, the National government itself might enter the lists
against the state of California, before the judicial tribunals of the land
It does not follow that the United States government would take the
initiative in the judicial proceedings intended to test the legality of til®
state's action.
♦ Method of Procedure.
In the ordinary course the Initial
step would be taken by Japanese In-
dividuals or corporations In Califor-
nia, w1ifSse lands are sought to be
escheated. Hut it is fully expected
that the department of justice would
come forward as an intervenor, *
throwing the weight of the United
States government into the scale in
defense of the treaty rights of the-"
.Japanese. If the stale courts should
uphold such a statute*. the ca*e
would be appealed to Ihe United
StatfF circuit court and almost cer- i
taitily by one party or the other,
■ :.ken to tli<* I'nited States supreme
court which tribunal has never yet
passed upon tli^e Japanese claim of
the right of naturalization in the
United States,
An important development In the
situation is the announced purpose
of the opponents of anti Japanese
legislation to challenge the correct-
ness of the figures and the state-
ments relative to the extent Of to
called Japanese Invasion of Califor- |
nia, telegraphed to Washington
Sacramento bv the leglstat'
, , ^itiB at her
ers. In answer to Hep
Raker's request. For some h(, wa„
quiet Bearch has been madenonn on
RIVER BREACHES
MISSISSIPPI LEVEES
PARTS OF FOUR COUNTIES WII.l
HE FLOODED, < At STING
HEAVY LOSS-
RAILROADS STOP TRAFFIC
Train Service on Both Main Line
ancl Riverside liranch of the
Y. & M. V. Has Been
Suspended.
VICKSBURG, Miss . April 21
The first serious break in the main
sented Mr. Morgan on the boards of levees of the lower Mississippi river records of the United States llrt he
several steel subsidiaries, will retire occurred this afternoon when the
from the parent company as soon as Wood lawn levee just north of May-
Wit h i n a
$ DALLAS, April 21.—Bert Ash-
ley, not quite seventeen years of ago,
was shot and almost instantly killed .. , ,
Mr. Morgans successor has been se- „ravjii„ vnR, «Pnt out
at 5:30 o clock Monday morning. ersvnie, Miss., went out
(CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT.)
THE WEATHER
(Philosophical Phelix.)
OIL PLANT FIRE
AT PORT ARTHUR
RATE MAKING SUPREMACY
CLAIMED BY GOVERNMENT
Barrel House of the Texas Company
Is Destroyed and Other Dam-
age Done.
If Motion is Sustained by Supreme
Court State Railroad Commis-
sions Will be Rendered
Lm potent.
Special to The Telegram.
Port Arthur, Tex., April 21.—A
fire of unknown origin practically
destroyed the barrel house at the j
Texas Company's oil refinery plant \
here tonight. The flames were dis-
covered at 6:45 o'clock by one of the
employes and inside of an hour the j
fire was under control. The' tire!
fighting apparatus of the company >
worked effectively.
The officials of the company to-
night could not estimate the dam-
age but stated that the usual routine
at the plant would not be interfer-
red VMt v
WASHINGTON, April 21.—An un-
expected development in the state
rate cases which have been pending
before the supreme <?ourt for more
than a year, occurred today when
the department of justice obtained
the permission of the court to file
a brief as a "friend of the court."
The contention of the govern-
ment in the brief was that the in-
terstate commerce commission is su-
preme over state rate making bodies
and many annul state regulations In
the disguise of state rates, when in-
terstate commerce is arfected sub-
stantially thereby.
The brief was a copy of one filed
by th« government recently in the
"Shreveport rats oin" in the com-
j merce court. In it the government
upheld the right of the interstate
commerce commission to require the
railroads to reduce interstate rates
from Louisiana to Texas points or
increase rates in Texas. The com-
mission had held that the action of
1 the Texas authority in requesting
I lower rates on state shipments so as
to "protect home industries" was a
discrimination against interstate
J commerce commission.
It is not believed that the action
; today will delay the decision of the
^ rate cases, which is expected any
Monday.
Thaw Case Echo.
Washington, April 21.—The su-
preme court today decided to review
the decision of" the federal court in
New York which denied John B.
Gleason, a New York lawyer, the
right to collect $60,000 from Harry
K. Thaw for legal services because
Thaw was- discharged in bankruptcy
proceedings,
M S TOO ttt ON "too)
no
) fVLVQvN-
Xt-Yl!
The shooting occurred at the home
of John M. Reynolds, 2107 Wall
j street. A few minutes after the
killing Reynolds was taken in cus-
tody by Mounted Officers Williams
and Riddell and lodged in the city
jail. Later a formal charge of
murder was filed against him and
he was transferred to the county
I jail by Deputy Sheriff Edling.
Shot Three Times.
! Ashley was shot three times, once
through the stomach and twice
through the body in the vicinity of
the heart. A 41-calibre revolver was
the weapon used and anyone of the
three wounds would have caused
death. The bullet which entered
1 the stomach went through the body.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT.)
Society To Blame
For Dance Abuses
Says Boston Mayor
lected.
There was represented at
meeting preferred stock to
amount of 1,857,502 shares
the
the
few minutes the crevasse was two
hundred feet wide and during the af-
ternoon the space through which the
an<* flood waters are pouring increased
considerably.
Parts of four Mississippi counties
will be flooded and the property
damage which will result is esti-
about 2,678,000 of common stock.
A committee appointed two years
ago to investigate charges of ill
treatment of laborers employed by
the corporation, reported that the
charges were not substantiated.
Commenting on this. Judge Gary,
chairman of the board of directors,
said that last year only a few com-
plaints were received from stock-
holders that working hours were too |
long. Many laborers w*3uld leave Republican Senators Block Confir-
gration bureau and of the Califoruia
tax offices and other places where
data might be found bearing upou
the precise number of Japanese land-
lords in California and the extent of
their holdings and these figures foon
will be laid before the state depart-
ment.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT )
APPOINTMENTS HELD UP
and engage themselves elsewhere if
the hours were shortened, he declar-
ed, and in fact 4,000 had left during
the year becaifse they were not al-
lowed to work on Sunday.
mation of President Wilson's
Nominations.
BOSTON, April 21.—"Society
dances eclipse in ooldness anything
attempted In public halls, and are
developed in dance halls," said
Mayor Jno. J. Fitzgerald today.
The mayor's statement was made
in connection with an announce-
Senator Stillwell
Must Either Quit
Or Be Kicked Out
WASHINGTON, April 21—Repub-
lican senators succeeded today in
temporarily delaying action on many
of President Wilson's appointments.
At a short executive session of the
senate it was agreed that all ap-
pointments to which objection Was
made should be passed until the next
session. Republicans objected to
('IX)AK IS THROWN OFF. «
California Legislation is Aimed at
Orientals Only.
Sacramento, Cal , A 21—The
two bills dealing with the question
of land ownership IfV aliens in Cali-
fornia, each representing the view
of a considerable faction In the leg-,
i islature, will be offered and it is
! expected voted on by the senate this
j wee k ' w,,
] Through an agreement reached by
I leaders of the majority party, a dras-
tic law directed solely against the
Japanese and Chinese will be pre-
pared as a substitute for the Thomp-
son-Birdsall measure and probably
! will be passed. If not. an end will
have come to the anti-allent land leg-
i islation at this session, floor lead-
ers declare. It now is planned to
practically all civil appointees exoept jthrow out entirely the guarded lan-
ALBANY, N. Y„ April 21.—State !eadlng diplomatic and state depart- SUAgo of ,he Thompson-Birdsall bill
Senator Stephen J. Stilwell is to be ment nominations. hiMtionsPla°e tW° pr°"
given another opportunity to resign.! "The senate confirmed the appoint- ...
mainly responsible for the abuses H H t . . Werlne* ments of Walter H. Page as ambas- , * ° ineligible to citi-
T; : he declinp8 to do by Wednes- ^ U)Ddon; john B«»ett izen#bip 8ha11 be Permitted to ac-
day, the evidence taken before a Moore „ coun9elor for the Btate de_ Qu're and hold land in California a
senate judiciary committee con- partment; John E. Osborne as as- period of more than one year aft*r
cerning the charges of attempted ex- I Blatant secretary of state and Dud- j ^ suc.h acquisition.
ment that unless dance hall condi-j tortlon nreferred bv Oeo H Ken- le>" Fl®ld Malone as third assistant | corpowmn, the «8oritJf
i >n Itort,on' preferred by ueo. H. *en- j stock of which is held by aliens, who
Washington, April 21.—Forecast:
East Texas—Cloudy Tuesday;
Wednesday unsettled, ? probably
shower*.
West Texas—Generally fair Tues-
day and Wednesday*
tions in Boston are improved, he will
close up "the mest offensive" places
[and might be Compelled to adopt a
uniform hour for closing, either mid-
night or 1 o'clock for all other ball
; rooms.
Representatives of the public
secretary of state
dall, president of the New York A repubi1(.an conference early ln ineligible to citizenship, shall be
Pre" the day had partially mapped out
permitted to acquire and to hold land
Bank Note company, will be _
sented to a granc jury. the course the republicans will follow ^
This announcement was made to- i in dealing with the Wilson nomina- j ^ 8 Procedure
night after a conference at the exec- .tions in the future and at another ja °r .' "... f"*0"' Prwt»dent prot
utive chamber between Governor meeting tomorrow the party plan j" ®r ° e ll^p®r *lou
franchise league, which called upon • Sulxer and Attorney General Car-! will be completed. It is expected .. . a ' .C^rin*11
the mayor to ask for tsireter muni- j mody. Senator Wagner, democratic the republicans will pick out a num-; . ec ary comm tee, Senator \V.
cipal regulation of dancing ex- leader in the upper house was. sent ber of Wilson appointments for par- ' 0 a rm"-n the oom-
, pressed surprise that the m3yor J for and requested to inform Senator ticular targets, where they believe e u®. on _
, should include hotel ball roems with Stilwell regarding th« governor's de- political influences alone have ey w opposed \
j ths cheaper dance ha**- * - jcleloa, - t brought about the nsw appointments. t (CONTIKUBB ON Paok KIOHX.)
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Williams, E. K. The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 133, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 22, 1913, newspaper, April 22, 1913; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth473356/m1/1/?q=%22Texas+Press+Association%22: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.