The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 10, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 12, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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2 Veaey St., New York.
Work*
Sunday, Junk 12, 1910.
mailed on
Specimen copies maile
application. Large book cate
lopue furnished free.
This paper goes to press Fri-
I da vs, at noon.
■4
W'W:'
Your Doctor
Wants
Yon to lave the best
medicine. He tries to
prescribe the best, and
you owe it to him as well
as to yourself to take his
prescriptions where you
can get the best.
J. F. Tinsman
Where Medicine
Is Purity.
208 W. Main St.
Tklkphonks:
(Southwestern Telephone Co.)
|Ga*bttkkk, 246.
B. C. Murray. Residence. 361.
oui -**•«-
Substantially constructed. Good}cattle barons went to other points.
Quality, Reasonably Priced Fur-1 The Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe
niture. look our stock over. | made Gainesville a formidable ri
val and the Fort Worth and Den-
ver controlled the vast cattle in-
Pbone 5. 307 W. Main St. J terests of the Panhandle. The
Texas and Pacific and the Inter-
furniture troubles to
Little StsriM at N
NO. XXVI.
The historian who tells of the
early period of Denison, must for
material draw largely on the cat-
tle era. From 1873 up through
the eighties the cattle transactions
amounted to many million dollars
aud the number of cattle shipped
and driven through here signifies
as many cattle as dollars.
When the M. A T. reached here
in the winter of ’73 there were
thousands of cattle around here
waiting for shipment, and vast
herds were moving slowly down
through western Texas for this
point. For ten years Denison was
one of the largest points tor ship-
ment in the state. There were no
Frisco, Santa Fe, Rock Islaud or
other systems in the state as
rivals in the cattle business. As
railways were built the business
I.SSS
D
day and
This was indeed the reigD of un- electrical lines. The
iridled license. We can recollect au the roads is 4,094
on one occasion, when about fifty
cowboys were quarted at tiie old
Nelson House, They were of the
Mulhall-Scaling outfit and received
their money here. They were
wild and woolly and hard to cur-
ry. W. B, Boss was then mayor
and some timid people went to
him and advised that he put the
dtp under martial law, and be
came very near doing it. Many
had their guns and it needed only
a spark to explode the magazine.
There was one man in particular
whose presence we’ll never forget.
We went among the crowd to get
pointers. They were all game
men, but they seemed to stand in
awe of this man. His name we
have forgotten, but Matt French,
chief clerk tor Carnes, said that
1m had a bloody record and had
killed at least twenty men. He
happened to be with the outfit
when it was en-route to the Black-
toot reservation in Montana. He
was a wolf hanging on to the
fianks of the cowboys. It was
said he would start trouble before
le left tbe city and perhaps put
SCOTT & JEMHH6S
West End Mill
Custom Grinding a specialty.
Can shuck, shell and grind
your com into chops at any
time. Custom ground meal
Tuesdays and Saturdays.
ED. FORD
Old phones. 447.
A. E. Pelierin
JEWELER
Watch repairing. All
kinds of fine work a
specialty. Carries fine
lineol jewelry. Can save
you money on watches.
The con-
roads is under four
trol of all
systems.
The Pennsylvania railroad
pany has signal instruction cars
equipped with all means tor teach-
ing signaling in all details and
employes are instructed in their
duties through them.
The science of electric welding
has reached high efficiency and
electric welding equipment is found
in the larger plants and ship-yards
throughout tbe world.
It is proposed to build eight or
nine miles of underground road
in the city of Chicago. These
lines to tie used as hubs as it were
for extensions into suburban re-
gions later.'
During the past three years the
Canadian Pacific railway has sold
and colonised over 1,000,000 acres
of rich agricultural land in th«
province of Alberta. To do tbit
they established a number of
demonstration farms on which
was shown growing every product
of the north temperate zone. Over
1,000 miles of irrigation canals
coating $36,000,000. The
will be between 6th and 6th
«rssv sss
some men welroe** M; either sort
national and Great Northern com-
panies shipped thousands of heads
I of cattle to the eastern markets.
In the seventies and eighties
I the great cattle barons all main-
j tamed offices here, and this was
lone of our sources of revenue. We
had the Addingtons, N. B. Carnes,
I the Lovings, the Rues, Matt
French, Blassingame, John Tay-
ior, and a number of lesser lights
The cattle business at that periot
I overshadowed all other interests.
We had one or two of Quntrell’s
rough riders in the cattle busi-
ness. Lee McMurtry and John
Mauphin at the river were large
I shippers. Once in a while a buf-
I falo call would come in with the
I herds. John Boling had in the
I back yard of his saloon on Hous-
Iton avenue and Main street a
buffalo cow that was purchased of
I the Addingtons
The cattle were nil longhorns,
I savage beasts that were the ter-
ror and sometimes death in the
stampedes. Many and many a
I cowboy had the life ground out of
I him on the western prairies; hun
Idreds perished in that manner.
[They sometimes furnished amuse-
ment and excitement in tbe streets
|cd our city.
Yon never saw a cattle town
| that wasn’t a rough town. The
[cattle men had plenty of money,
| and when looking around for a lit-
tle excitement they got all they
wanted at tbe poker and faro
tables. Thousands of dollars were
lost and they stood the acid and
never cried over spilt milk. They
SUMMER EXCURSION were the £ame8t k* of 8P°rts that
TICKETS [ever shuffled a card or called a
hand. If tbe inside history o
At Greatly Reduced Rates to I Denison could ever be written a
Points North, East Colorado, , .
aLi un p thnHing chapter would be of
another notch on his gun. He have been dug. Another branch
bad been driven out of Hays City 1ms been built through a 3,000,000
where he killed a man on an even acre section which was recently
>reak. We looked upon this bad inhabited by cattle, antelope and
man with a sort of admiration, coyotes.
He wore a buckskin shirt, spread Within the past two years the
his hair out upon his shoulders, Canadian-Pacific railway has built
and carried a bowie knife and pis-|Up seven new towns on its main
tol. He refused to put off his pis- hjne east Calgary ami 20 eleva-
toi and the officers did not insist, tors are now busy.
He presented an eye-filling specta- HoHow terra blockfJ #tuffed wilh
cle. That evening the crowd Hminerml wool are used in a manu-
ceived orders to go north and join• factarin plaut ,n New York to
their outfits. It was great relief L a wa„ to prevent tbe noiae
when they left for a night * disturbing their neighbors.
Denison would have meant mur-
der. Inflamed with whisky there "^e Pennsylvania railroad has
was no telling to what extremes a w<r'‘'e8S apparatus at Altoona
they would go by which it can communicate with
The cowboys of that period had wireless stations along the Atlau-
a dialect of ttieir own and to get tic co*8t an<1 ve88el8 at
into a crowd of them you were at The Canadian-Pacific railway is
sea as to what meaning they in- preparing to establish flower gar-
tended to* convey. dens at each of the 2,000 stations.
The world will never see again besides planting millions of trees,
the scenes associated with the 80,000 packages of seeds will be
great movement of cattle from distributed this year comprising
Texas, largely Denison, and the 132 varieties.
vast herds which crossed near a wonderful region ol country
here. There was always a grim I wjji opened up as soon as the
sort of romance connected with far Northern Canadian railway is
the old cattle days in Denison ; bujjt to Hudson Bay. The diz-
not so grim after all, tor the cow-1 from Hudson Bay to Liver-
boys were a little rough, but theyjpooj ia 3t200 miles,
were indeed the knights of that
of traffic on both those
avenues.
Representatives of Vensuela are
in this country after $200,000
worth of steel to build a dry
dock in that country. Immigra-
tion is being invited and Amer-
ican capitalist are told there are
big chances there.
An immense steel bridge with
29 piers and 29 spans is to be
built across tl>e Columbia River,
Oregon. It will require 9,000.000
pounds of steel. Will be three
quarters of a mile long and will
cost $1,600,000.
The Mexican railroad managers
are to stop using Pullman cars
and to build ami to operate their
own sleepers.
A 6,000 barrel gusher has just
started to gush oil ou the Banta
Maria property in California. The
oil was struck at a depth of 2,800
feet.
A southwestern railroad, tbe
Missouri Kansas and Texas, con-
templates borrowing $100,000,000
n Europe tor a grand system of
raprovements which will make it
the greatest railway system in the
southwest.
Owing to tlie progress of tiie
motor car a railway station in
South Africa has been converted
into a garage. Trains have ceased
to run and the station has liecn
given over to the housing of self
propelled vehicles.
The Canadian Pacific Railway
is distributing over 80,000 pack-
ages of flower seeds among its
2,000 railway stations to beautify
the gradens which are now main-
tained. In addition to the seeds,
arge numl>ers of bulbs and shrubs
are being planted and millions of
trees are lieing planted.
There m« timid men who seed ‘
-r,
Fred Sherburne
SHOE REPAIRING
Good work by workmen
who know their business.
Don’t throw away your
old shoes.
123 W. Main Street. *
period, hale fellows well met, big
lcarted, with open purses, and a
T. E. REARDON
Real Estate, Insurance
Rents Collected
Notary Public...
106 North Rusk Ave.
Pacific Coast and Mexican Points
via
H&T.C.
Railroad
‘On Time”
On Bale Commencing June 1st.
[party of cattle barons who sat
around the table in a private room
I on Main street and where in one
night about $20,000 exchangee
I hands. Money was prodigal in
[ the old cattle days and the cow
| men had the most of it, and they
spent it lavishly. Some of the
I barons held thousands of head o:’
cattle around Denison. There was
Return limit October 31st, 1910 . . .. ...
Loop Trip via New Orleans and f awakeniD£ m the cattle
Southern Pacific Company [business. Then began the great
Steamers I exodus of Texas cattle. The gov-
Going via Steamer and Returning I eminent was in the market for
via RaU Lime or vice versa larjre quantie8 of beef to feed the
fhe Celebrated Wooten Well Now w thou8ands of IndlaQa cooped
Open tor the Season
For father information, call on
nearest Agent or write to
T. J. Anderson G. P. A.
Houston Texas.
up on reservations, and now that
the buffalo was gone, tbe substitu
tion was cattle, drawn very large-
ly from Texas, that harbored mi
lions of longhorns. Denison was
the horn of plenty, a great chute
tnrough which there was an un
ceasing flow of Texas cattle to the
reservations and tbe northern mar
keU. Tbe climax was reached in
the latter portion of 1879 and the
early eighties. In one year it is
T g* I -a o' ™tu«
,J, and Poultry, also 8t*bl» Cbartto j crossed Red river at or near this
mg up, mailed fme.
FREE BOOK
F«r Every living Wag oa i
A conference of representatives
of 44 emigration societies onenet
friend in need is a friend indeed in En«land discuss the whole
irivUvi Hi IlCvU 1*5 H 1 ilvlHl 11 lGvvll• I , . • • • |
heir transactions ran up into (‘uest,on of emi*rat,on; U *‘l
„ ... „ • attempt to promote schemes tor
the millions, their presence m l “ ,, ... , , . .
Denison made flush times. They d,vwt,n*f to Br,t,8h «*»*■*«
, , ,• stream of emigration now going
were men of good digestion, . . T
. , , (outside the empire. Last year
strong and healthy, and it was a^ u ... , .
.. . , _ ., • 110,000 British emigrants went to
very easy matter to know their ’ . , 0. . . .. .
... ... (the United States, while only 8b.-
y 0n 000 to Canada, 27,000 to Austre
In the eighties the co. business *“■ 22-000 to C,oe Colonv'
in Denison went to pieces, other There are 32,655,000 acres
railroad lines having absorbed the planted in cotton this year am
business ; the offices were closed the condition of the croi>s is placet
and the cattle were scattered, at 80.02 per cent of the 10-year
xK>king back over the list we can (average. Oklahoma leads in the
mournfully say that they-have condition of the crop,
nearly all crossed the great divide Anthracite coal shipments dur-
and the trail is cold. We don’t ing the past month from eastern
tnow of one alive at the present producing territory, 6,224,396
time. In this little story we have gross tons, were exceeded only
just skimmed the surface, for once in the history of the trade,
there was never a period in the I Live stock arrivals at 7 primary
history of Denison more interest- j jutgj-toj. markets during April ag-
ing, more romantic, than the wild L^amd 2,234,907 head, being
cattle days of tbe seventies and raore than half a million head be-
eighties. I low the number received during
Texas Pateats [April of the two proceeding years.
, 1 The decline seems to have been
rrij11""
toraevs, Washington. D. C. „ •
The latest California oil well is
always
I war* stay Sown daws
Thau among an aot afraU la
taka rrapouslbimy you Bad imm who
are loo cocksure about It. ready la
then, right^o* tbe bat. big or little,
going ahead Jauntily slapdash; not a
food aort at man this to bare at a re-
eponelble poet.
**Aleo you bare the man aot afraid
who thifrea on respooalbUlty aad ea
Joy* the tncreaee of power, bat who
Is cool mad clear beaded, a man of
keen and tree dlneerwmeat, who
knows Instinctively and logically what
la the right thing to do and who tbea
fcarleealy goes shead and doea H. a
man of bretais and courage. A rare
combination tbit, tba os an itet
poaaeaare It gnu far.
“For courage la the manly tribute
that men most admire; we d nil dearly
tore to ha courageous, to dare; aad
the man of courage plus brains, the
man aot afraid to take the reaponat-
blllty aad who has also the downright
ability to make good, we cotton to.
and him moat of us are sritllag to fol-
low and obey. He can hare what be
wants In this world, and If he sheald
want It he can bare the biggest pair
of wings In the world to come.
If you expect to get aaywb“re
don't be afraid to take the responsi-
bility' Hut really to get on you went
to mix roar courage with brains ~
John W. Oarhart, Austin^ ve-1 eiviliar 576 barrela of oi,
hide tire; Samuel G. H. Glas-jf°‘w /*,I.Jeve7
gow, Palentine, shoe-blackener; 2^ hours. All of the California
Edgar R. Hall, Austin, lock-cor- oil companies are making fortunes
ner; Howard R. Hughes, Hons- out of recent strikes.
sBrou£*• *-«st= 01
dow shade and roller ; Virginia D. copper have been exported from
Manev, Hallettsville, ink-bottle the United States,
hokier for desks; John Martin, Mexico is becoming a great ag-
fcTtonah'- ““-‘7 -?
plow frame; Samuel E. MeKnight, ™ents of agricultural machinery
Lobn, valve; John C. Morefield, are being made there. Some of
Houston, heel support; Richard the farms are controlled by large
W. Shockley, San Angelo, ®na- companies and include several
cSK
W. Thornton, Dalhart sanitary The laying of pipes for the
gad indieatiDg device I transportation of oil is becoming
, . an important business. An order
o a ve | wa8 pjaced )a8t Week for enough
The 0wl«.
The Owls, which order is hard-
y one year old, has a membership
of nearly 300. They occupy the
quarters formerly occupied by the
Eagles, which order moved to
to their new quarters across the
street. The Owls have a lodge
room fitted up in handsome
style, tbe walls being adorned
witli iieautiful pictures.
In the south part of tiie building
there is a comfortable reception
room furnished with easy chairs
and an elegant settee. Here one!
may enjoy the society of hie)
friends aud quaff the nectar of
Gambrinus. Tiie stewurt is Hal
Sims, who entertains the guests.
Hal is one of most agreeable and
popular young men in Denison,
and in his society yon forget all of
the cares and troubles of life. If
Hal every had a worry he never
showed it, but he is always brim-
ful of good humor, and if you
have tiie blues or dumps just
touch elbows with Hal and you
will feel better.
The order was founded Nov. 20,
1904. It is established in Canada,
Alaska, Mexico, Cuba, Porto
Rico, Philippines, Sandwich Is-
lands, New Zealand, Australia,
and all over the United States.
The order in Denison is growing
very rapidly. It is composed of
many of our leading citizens. A
folder says; “Its the outgrowth
of tiie best, the result of the evolu-
tion of hearts. It has become a
great society of men who love,
laugh and enjoy hie as it flies;
who help the sick, bury the dead,
brighten dark moments, light up
gloomy places. Some are not
saints. None are in Potter’s fields
or poor houses. None are hungry.
They do good, speak kindly, shake
hands warmly aud respect tbe
honor of their women. They are
the Order of Owls.”
What better in life could be
asked. It is the social amenities
that span the bridge of life with
flowers, and if you wish to enjoy
the fragrance of flowers, cross the
bridge and ioin the Owls.
Kaal Gypsy Romance.
Aa extraordinary ay pay romance
baa taken place at Btent-Marion. oa
the Roumanian frontier.
Anaetaaia Bogni. daughter of a
wealthy land owner, conceived a pas
slon (or Janoe VoJtila. a violiaiet and
chief of a gypsy band, and an elope-
ment was arranged. It was agreed
that the gypaiea should attack the
land owner's eaatle and pretend to
entry the girl away by force. VoJtila
promised to take her to America, say-
ing ha would make a name there by
his playing.
A night attack on tbe castle was
duly made, but, ‘having secured tbe
girl, tbe gypsies proceeded to plunder
tbe castle while tbe girl and her lover
fled In a caravan. Tbe land owner
and hla servants armed them selves,
killed two of tbe gypsies, wounded
others and finally forced them to re-
treat. Then, when order was restored
the land owner first noticed that his
daughter was missing
After several days' searrh tbe girl
was discovered In tbe depths of a for-
est without covering of sny descrip
tlon She had been abandoned by ber
lover, who had robbed ber of every
thing Borne of her faithful servants
succeeded In tracing VoJtila and beat
him to death with clubs
The heroine of this wild romance
la now lying In a hopeless condition
Her death Is expected every hoar, as
tha la suffering from Inflammation of
the lungs as a result of ber hardships
In the forest
Kinship Through the Calf.
Dr. Adolphe Block has contributed
to the Paris Anthropological society a
memoir on the alxe of the calf of the
leg as an anthropological character
Its relative smallness, not only ia the
negro, but also In the Ethiopian, tbe
Australian, the Papuan, the Weddah.
tha Dravldtan and (according to tha
monuments) the civilised Bgrptlaa of
antiquity, constitutes. In his Tln'on.
an atavistic character revealing the
negro origin of all these races though
their subsequent evolution has been
different, under different media and
conditions of existence. ‘ The small-
ness of the calf la thus, be thinks an
anthropological character of great
value, since It enables us to assign a
common origin to races which would
otherwise have been regarded aa com-
plete strangers to each other.—Prom
tbe Atbene-um.
An Old-Fashioned Cough Sirup.
Here Is an old-fashioned cough sirup
which has been triad for yearn with
good results In succeeding families of
childrens
Steep a small bandful each of dried
bops and dried bo rehound In a cup of
cold water until tha strength of tha
herb* la drawn out.
Strain through a clean linen bag and
■ -
AND
RICH
The Biggest Can
of the
BEST LYE
for the
Leant Money
Light with Gas
and Cook with Gas
▼here is nothing like gas lor cooking, for deanli-
■ ness, for economy, or for saving labor. In hot
weather it is indispensable for comport. Try cook-
ing with gas, if you have never had the pleasure,
and you will never use any other fuel for kitchen or
house purposes.
Denison Light&PowerCo.
307 Woodard Street
HAY! HAY! HAY!
All kind* of Food Staffs.
DENISON FEED COMPANY
ni8NC115 131 L SLAB ST.
n't B*y a hg to a Nr’
| is an old saying, and it
•a It.
add a cupful of honay and two cup- | are going to get for your money “i: . *. n*DQ”WU\0.
fuU of sugar, and boll .lowly U.L coming to our yard. Our JTJSiLaS
thick sirup Bottle while hot and cork stock of lumber, etc. is complete, *£■“ ' “"T!
.....- -—....... '.mhdtek-rete'M gstfjtwsrts
tightly. Keep In a cool place
This la a somewhat sickening mix-
ture and should not be taken oftener jWhenJOO, want building, enjoy 4 rrpatntwti lor reliability,
than I. necessary; a tenspoonfu. every | lumbertbatWlU give you complete [ to hre
hour until the cold Is better will rare-
ly cause disordered stomach.
satisfaction buy at
tor drinking vessels.
For copy of any
It is reported that it is tbe in-
tention of the President to appoint
ex-Pre8idept Roosevelt as (he head
of a Peace Commission which
some members of Congress in the
^ .t»l pip. to l.y » mile, anil the: to.u, are di.p<~d to.„>bori» JX iXtSSTJ!
Heard at the Crossroads.
“Oh. you hayseeds may laugh at this
machine.” snorted the Irate motorist,
aa he plunged around In the roadway
mire, “but It has more horse power
than all your country teams put to-
gether.” —
“Gosh all hemlock, mister,” drawled
the old farmer who was sitting on the
fence chewing a straw, “It must have
more pig power from the way It
flounders around there In the mud.”
Tbe bingo-beeper Co.
Improved Cutting Blowpipe.
Tbe cutting blowpipe, of which
many surprising things have been
ported, has recently been Improved la
Prance la a way to render It mors
generally nseful. Two Inflammable
gases most be employed One le re-
quired to keep the metal at a high
A. A. ffOr
a. a. Per;
C. C. fferi
». h Far
£. B, Par
LIST OF BPE01FICS.
, MUfc Paver. Lose I
, liswsnsss. Bros
point bound for the new north
west. Some idea may be formed
when we state that to manage
these vast herds it took 4,000 men
and over 30,000 horses, for every
cowboy bad bis several mounts.
The drives ran into tbe millions.
The M. K. A T. was not equal to
the occasion and vast herds were
driven on loot to the Indian reser
vations, as far distant as Montana
and the Dakotas. It is no wonder
0a,0^?*,|that money waa plentiful. The
IMS, Bets, Grabs.
MM.CeMs.baM
y r.fsrOI»UC.MIfsM.b
stamps with date of this paper to
C. A. Snow A Co., Washington,
D. C.
Veteran of Great Industry.
An Interesting man was Edward
Entwtstle, who baa Juat died, at the
great age of »6 He had the honor
of beta* fireman of the first locomo-
tive ever built. Indeed, he helped In
the construction of Stephenson's en-
gine, at the age of 18 was chosen
from hundreds of other young me
chanice as fireman, and accompanied
Stephenson on the famous “Rocket ”
when It astonished thousands by ma-
king the high speed of 12 mites an
hour. Later on, be emigrated to the
United States, and became one of
the first steamboat engineers on the
Hudson river.
---- - ■ - ; , # iL * I wbcbiiubw bvuuu UJ UAIUBUUH along
material will cost $4,000,000. - by an appropriation for that pur- the lias of the cut. For beating, either
... _ i pose. The idea is that the Peace
In order to overcome the effects, IT__■ • ___u
. u ”! •. V k • sw | Commission shall tour the world
h«l‘ nilrM charges .0 «M*e«r to h.,e the
Mississippi \ alley . large fl«l of ^ ^ chMooUerie, ol
»*“ b*T h*great powers sgree to . limitatioo
to ply on the Ohio and Mississippi o| ,rmie< armalMnu „.ub .
Klver8’ view to limiting the staggering ex-
The packers of all kinds of can- pensa of military and naval estab-
ned fruits and vegetables have Ushments and in
made the greatest pack ever known peace,
and the immense supply is now
warehoused and ready tor delivery.
Tbe United States government Lariifit' WatriMS, $1 ta SIS Baatto
coni gan, acetylene or hydragea le
employed, but an there le sometimes
difficulty In procuring a supply of
thoee gseoe. the new blowpipe le ar-
ranged to see Instead of the ordinary
gasoline employed by
has decided to pay the Utes Ii
di&ns $3,400,000 tor 8,
Mil II
South Magnetic Foie Shifts.
Later information on tbs results of
Lieut Bhackieton's expedition to the
the interests of antarctic revealed much that was not
discussed In the preliminary dis-
patches. It ta now brought out plain-
ly that tha south magnetic pole, Uka
the north maguatlc pole, shifts Its
position. The discovery will enable
geographers to revise tbe
charts sad this wUl render
Cotton seed Meal Bread
Tbe New Bread
Has tbe Grahrtn flavor,
but excels in nutritious
goodness; s very de-
litrhtful, palatable bread
that quickly makes all
users constant ones.
5c a Loaf.
Home Steam Bakery
916 W. Woodard St.
Free Delivery.
Both Phones 69.
PAT MULLEN'S.
421 N. Houston Ave.—Both
Phone 218.
A. CUFF
REAL E8TATE
319 W. Main 8i.
We Cany the Largest
Stock of
PICTURE FRAMES
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ive.
W. H. HALTON & CO.
CON QUINN
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The Sunday Gazetteer. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 10, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 12, 1910, newspaper, June 12, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571293/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.