El Paso Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 16, 1904 Page: 7 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
EL PASO MORNING TIMES. TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1904
7
■■.■■eggy
A
TIMES’ TOW LINE WORKING
& *§ ' '}■'
9 ?
\
T'lrrri-----—----ft
WANT ADS
GET THE MEAT
if /
______
ONE CEM A WORD
CASH IN ADVANCE ^
• & tM
’PHONE
V.
FOR A WESTERN UNION MESSENGER.
PAY HIM FOR THE AD,
AND WE PAY THE m*V _
Money Lean—Seal Estate.
real estate and insurance.
This space belongs to J. H. Smith,
who has this day removed from tire
old stand, comer of Mesa avenue
and Texas street, to No. Ill Musa
Ave., threo doors sooth of old stand.
To Porter ft Hall's stand. See add
in few days. Don’t forgot to call.
Phone 441, Ho. Ill Mesa Avo.
J. 11. SMITH.
Wanted—Help.
BARBERS WANTED
Oregon St.
"S
3
<
1
202 N.
WANTED—Girl l'ur
general
house-
work and washing.
532 N. Santa Fo
St.
WANTED—A flrst-class canvasser for
city. Call at 1212 Ange St.
HOME Employment Office, 700 San
Antonio St.—White woman cook
wanted.
Wanted—Situations.
WANTED—Man in plaster mill to
learn calcining; must understand
machinery, bo steady, sober and relia-
ble; steady job fur right parly. Hock
Island Cement & Plaster Co., Ancho,
N. M.
WANTED—Good reliable stationary
engineer. Must be fair blacksmith.
Steady job and fair wages to right
party. Rock Island Cement and Plas-
ter Co., Ancho, Nov/ Mexico.
AN HONEST Japanese wishes posi-
tion as flrst-class cook; hotel,
boarding house or family. Address
Kuul, 401 N. Oregon St.
Wanted—Miscellaneous.
WANTED—To loan $20,000 on dia-
monds, watches, jewelry, trunks, va-
lises or any other good collateral. See
Turner, 304 San Antonio St.
WANTED—Every one to buy old pa-
pers; sold In bundles of 100; good
for laying under carpets, wrapping
packages or making Arcs. Apply at
Times office.
WANTED—Plano and violin pupils
by graduate Berlin conservatory.
Prof. Geo. Markaroff, 920 Magoffin,
phone 1401.
Business Chances.
NOW Is the timd to fix up your home
neat for a little money; all kinds
of new and second hand furniture
cheaper than tho cheapest. Dawson
& Maloy, 309 S. El Paso st., phone 909.
THE RIGHT MAN with $10,000 cash
can buy a long established money-
making business; will bear thorough
Investigation; don't answer unless you
have the money. P. O. Box 301, El
Paso, Texas.
NOTE 8ALE!—Several notes, $500 to
$3,000, real estate security. W. O.
MILLICAN.
Business Personals.
WE pay the highest cash prices for all
kinds of second hand goods in 'El
Paso. Dawson ft Maloy, 309 S. El Paso.
Osteopathy.
uate American School Osteopathy.
Telephone 202. 208 Mesa avenue.
DR. A. T. STILL’S Osteopathic Inflrm-
mary, from Ktrksvllle, Mo., Dr. Ira
W. Collins, physician-ln-chlef, Is lo-
cated at Angelus Hotel, north of Plaza.
Dr. Christensen and Dr. Hettle Ross
will be In charge during I)r. Collins’
absence.
Lost.
LOST—Gold-rimmed nose glasses.
Liberal reward. Address H. M
Times office.
Medical.
DR. ANA REUM, L®dy Physician and
Surgeon. Dr. Chas. Reum, Specialist
for Men. Center Block, phone 805.
Storage.
STORE your household goodB at the
Texas Storage Co.; lowest rates.
405 S. St. Vrain.
Brokers.
FRANK G. ROBERTSON,
Brokerage and Real Estate.
202 Mesa Ave„ phone 1453.
PARKER A PARKER,
Mining and Consulting Engineers.
Mining Investments, Examinations
and Report* on Mining Properties.
ROOMS 11-14 MASONIO TEM-
PLE.
Phons M4. El Paso. Taw
Piano Tuning.
for Rent—Rooms.
FOR RENT—Boom with board, $6.00
per week. Housekeeping rooms In
suite or single. 310 E. Franklin.
£
ST. CHARLES HOTEL.
Outside rooms. Coolest In city.
Special rates to permanent parties.
Overland and El Paso.
PLANTERS’ HOTEL, 304 S. El Paso
St.; nicely furnished rooms at rea-
sonable rates, with free use of bath.
$6 A WEEK.
Fine Table Board and Room.
526 N. EL PASO ST.
PHOENIX HOTEL—The beat fur-
nished; cool, airy outside rooms;
close in; corner Santa Fo and Over-
land. ’
NICELY furnished rooms, everything
modern. Columbia, corner Sonora
and Chihuahua Sts.
THE ROOSEVELT.
Nicely furnished outside rooms for
housekeeping; free baths. 606 Texas
St.
TO RENT—Large furnished rooms
with good table board. Corner N.
El Paso and Missouri Sts. Mrs. Stew-
ard.
FOR RENT—Unfurnished, coolest
rooms ip city; electric lights; free
bath. 3rd floor Buckler Bldg.
FURNISHED rooms and houses at
summer rates. Apply 6 Merchant
Place, City.
FURNISHED rooms for light house-
keeping, cheap; also furnished
rooms. 311 Missouri.
FURNISHED ROOMS—Also furnished
housekeeping rooms. 609 N. Kan-
sas.
FOR RENT—Storeropm. 118 South
Oregon.
THE HADLEY—Nicely furnished
rooms. 421 N. Oregon St.
FOR RENT—Three nicely furnished
housekeeping rooms, with bath;
very reasonable. 1006 N. Ochoa St.
EIGHT tents, large and small, fur-
nished or unfurnished. J. B. San-
burn, 415 N, Stanton. '
Builders, Attention!
WM. RHEINHEIMER, contractor and
builder; estimates furnished; job-
bing attended to; good work a spe-
cialty. 405 S. Florence. Phone 232.
S. E. PATTON, practical architect and
builder; will contract for any class
of buildings and furnish modern plans
free.
Dentists.
DR. J. B. BRADY, DENTIST.
Tel. 614. Wells-Fargo building.
Hours 8 to 11:30, 1 to 4:30.
DR. P. H. BROWN,
Dentist.
Masonic Temple, rooms 24 and 25.
Nitrous Oxide Gas Administered.
A. E. BROWN, Dentist, corner San
Antonio ft Utah Sts. Patterson Block.
DR. I8ABELL WELSH. Phone 1265.
Rcom 16-17 Mills building.
DR. E. T. HOUSTON, Coles Block.
Teeth extracted without pain.
MONEY to lend. See J. W. Magoffin.
$700—MONEY TO LOAN—Whole or
part; quick. W. O. MILLICAN, en-
trance Buckler Block.
Restaurants.
SOUTHWESTERN Re'sTAURANtT
First-class meals 25c. 408 N. Stanton
St., close to Southern Pacific depot
for Rent—Houses.
FOR RENT—2 and a 3 room house,
furnished' for housekeeping; close
in; shade trees, grass and yard. Ap-
ply 410 Sonora St.
Table Board.
Home-cooking, cleanliness, good ser-
vice, refined surroundings. Only llmit-
lted number accommodated. Mrs. Stew-
ard, Buckler residence, comer North
El Paso and Missouri. 'Krone 971.
U. T. RESTAURANT.
Serves the best 25 cent meal. A trial
solicited. 317 San Antonio street.
Phone 1583.
H and
room cheap, apply to Mrs. L. J.
Faulkner, Hermanns, N. Mex.
j M -
For Sale—Miscellaneous.
CHEAP HOUSE SALE—$500 buys
frame house and two lots; $750 buys
3-room adobe; easy terms. W. O.
MILLICAN, Buckler Block entrance.
CHEAP LOTS—2 south fronts, corner,
in Franklin Heights, fine, $450; lots
In EAST EL PASO, soiling fast, $10
down, balance $5 pfer month: no inter-
est or tax. W. O. MILLICAN, Buckler
Block entranco.
ROOMING HOUSE SALES—All good,
19 rooms, only $50 rent; sell $850 or
less. W. O. MILLICAN, Buekler Block.
FOR SALE—A furnished or unfur-
nished tent, 12x16 and 12x14; 12-
ounce duck; cheap. Roy, Times office.
FOR SALE—First class combined ro-
tary and standard well drilling out-
fit complete. Price only $2,000; ready
for shipment. Wyndham Robertson
Storage Co., Dallas.
MERCHANTS' AUCTION STORAGE
AND COMMISSION CO.,
321 Texas St.
Second hand organ for sale.
Navajo blankets from the Indiaif
reservation for sale.
10,000 feet 4 inch steel casing (pipe)
average weight C 8-10 lbs. per foot.
For sale at 24c per foot.
Books! Books! Books! Books!
All new, by standard authors, at your
own prices, as they must be disposed
of quickly.
Goods taken on storage or for auc-
tion; auctions to be held at ware-
house or at residence.
Cash advances made on goods stor-
ed or at auction, also on contents
residences at auction of private sale.
RAILROAD TIME TABLE (Local Time)
Leading Merefeasts if El Paso.
! Loading Merchants of El Piso
Arrive.
No.
El fun or Mountain lime.
N)
Depart.
PIONEER GROCERY CO.
6:10 a. m.
8
Southern Pacific.
9
8:45 a. m. !
! ZfIGER’S—Cafe • Restasrant
6:00 p. m.
10
Southern Pacific.
7
6:35 p. m. j
PAYNE-BADGER CO.-Cement
8:40 a. m.
27
. ....
8anta Fo.
22
9:15 p. m. j
JOHN BRUMER-Merchant Tailor
7:00 a. m.
...
,
G., H. & S. A.
10
7:00 p m |
! LION GROCERY COMPANY
5:40 p. m.
1
Mexican Central.
2
10:10 a. m. j
< W. G. WAIZ & CO.-Curios
7:43 a. m.
3
Texas ft Pacific.
4
0:50 p, in. ;
! IASSETT fc KELLY—Hardware
3:25 p. m.
a2
R. G., S. M. ft P.
bl
9:05 a. in. j
\\ H. LESINSKY CO.-Jobbers
6:00 p. m.
3
E. P. ft N. E.
[ 4
7:25 a. m.
A. H. RICHARDS—Jeweler
5:45 p. m. : 2
E. P. ft S. W.
1
9:45 a. m. ;
CAU8HER—-DRtf GOODS.
SUSEN^I**«LER.
- * - ■ 1 , .......—
UNION CLOTHING CO.
NATIONS—MEATt
TUI! PAIR, DRY BOOTS.
WATSON—GROCERIES.
UGHTBODY C0.-C10THIERS.
SPRINGER—FURNITURE.
KKMAHKS—« No. 2 arrives Mondays, \Ve*lne»<1a.ve and Fridays, It No. 1 leaves Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays,
FOR 8ALE—Two cottages, 5 rooms
each; Wyoming street between Lee
and Dallas; easy payments.
FOR RENT—Two cottages, 6 rooms
each; Wyoming street between Lee
and Dallas; under lease; $20 per
month; large barber Bhop, Douglas,
Ariz., to responsible parties.
FOR RENT—New 5-room cottage,
with reception hall and basement;
electric lights and all conveniences;
on Arizona St.
FOR RENT—Desk room, ground floor,
front.
Iroans on personal effects and stor-
ago. , .
DAVID Q. BALDWIN,
El Paso Office Tufa Stone Co.
Real Estate and Loans, 121 Texas St
Phone 711.
FOSTER A VINING,
Carpenters.
We are from Now Orleans and do con-
tract work; job work a specialty; best
references. Phone 711. 321 Texas St.
WANTED TO LEASE—A small piece
of alfalfa land within 4 or 5 miles
of city; must be good land and have
machinery oh ground for pumping;
must be fenced or owner to furnish
material for fencing; will pay liberal
rental for 10 to 20 acres. Inquire of
Myrtle Trading place, 1200 Myrtle
Ave., phone 491. S. L. Hughes, Mgr.
Wanted—To Purchase.
H. MOHR, 407 3. El Paso, buys cloth-
ing, shoes, musical Instruments and
all kinds of tools; highest prices paid
for a" second-hand goods. .
Architects.
EDWARD KNEEZELL, A. L. A.,
architect Office over State Na
tlonal bank.
Upholstering.
ROCHON on hand again; upholster-
ing and repairing of all kinds do.ia
at reasonable prices, Including musi-
cal Instruments, guns, machines, etc.;
box couches made to order; neat
carving done. Have worked at K. B.
Welch’s nineteen months. 505 S. El
Paso St.
Balt In the Spectrum.
The extreme' delicacy of the spec-
trum test Is Illustrated by the fact
stated by Lororoel, that the tbree-mll-
lioutli part of a qilfflgraru of n salt of
sodium, an imperceptible particle of
dust to tbe naked eye, Is yet capable of
coloring tbe flame of a caudle yellow
and of giving the .yellow lines of so-
dium In tbe spectroscope. Indeed so-
dium In tbe form of a common salt
(sodinm chloride) Is so uulversally
present as an Impalpable dost floating
*a to impossible
to get a spcctrumiwhlcb does not show
the sodium lines.
OWN YOUR HOME.
Be your own landlord. Own your
own home. Stop paying rent.
There Is nothing that gives a man
standing In his community so quickly
as the faot that he is a property
owner. It shows Industry and thrift
and also gives permanence and solid
Ity to a man’B character, as real estate
Is known to be the safest of all In-
vestments. To own one's homo is
the dream of almost every man and
woman. Paying rent is just like pour-
ing water into a sieve; many people
slave tjieir lives away just to keep
the landlord in a good humor on rent
day and after years and years of rent
paying they have nothing to show for
it, nothing provided for old age, noth-
ing to leave to their children. How
long have you been paying rent? Arc
you any nearer owning a homo than
when you first began? Have you any
thing but rent receipts to show foi
what you have paid? What Is the
total amount you have paid for rent
in all these years? Did you over stop
to think that if you had applied the
money you have paid monthly, as rent,
to the payment of a home on the
installment plan, you would have
owned two or three homes by this
time, and you still have no shisltci
to cover your head that you can call
your own home?
Few men of ordinary Income can
save enough to build a home while
paying rent, but almost any man or
woman can become a property owner
under our plan. If you want a home
for personal occupation, if you have
a mortgage on some property that Is
worrying you, or if you want to take
advantage of advancing realty values
in some location as- an investment,
write and tell us aJP about it. We
furnish you the money to buy a home,
pay off a mortgage, or build a home
and give twelve years to pay it back
at the rate of »$7 7.5 per month for
each $1,000 you borrow WITHOUT
INTEREST, We protect you in sick
ness and tho loss of employment by
making yonr payments until you get
well or go to work" again. No in-
terest. No fine. Wo guarantee a six
per cent saving investment, hacked
by real estate security and afford you
more protection than a savings bank,
besides twice tho benefit. If inter-
ested write to F. P. Hickenbach, P. O.
Box 825, El Paso, Texas._
STICHOMETRY.
A Book Custom Thnt Never Attained
Aar Very Extensive I saac.
Stiehometry, from the Greek stlohos,
a row, line or verse, and matron, a
measure, is user! In two senses. The
first applies to the subject matter of
Hebrew literature, whereby the rhyth-
mic lines which constitute the parallel-
ism of the poetical books are portioned
off from one another; the second to
an entirely artificial method of measur-
ing off the contents of each book by so
many lines of fixed or average length.
The former is of great antiquity and
may have beau introduced by the sa-
cred writers themselves. The latter Is
due to Eutbalius of Alexandria, 458,
who applied it to the Pauline epistles
and later to the gospels.
St. Jerome professed to have founded
his method upon a similar treatment of
the text In existing manuscripts of
Demosthenes and Cicero. Ills origlnat
arrangement Is thought to be represent-
ed by the Codex Amluttnus at Florence
ami that of Eutbalius in tho Codex
Claromontanus at Paris.
As this system left a large propor-
tion of each page blank and as vellum
wan costly, stiehometry never attained
any very extensive usage.
GROUND PEARLS.
FOR RENT.
Good brlclc store room, 408 Wyom-
ing, $25.
Fourteen-room house, partly fur-
nished, north of tracks, $65.
5-room house, 1308 Wyoming, mod-
ern. $25.
C-room modern house, 1110 North
Florence, $32.50.
7-room house, 309 Chihuahua stroet,
$27.50.
Store room, 208 Moso avenue, $65.
$4,000 to loan at 8 per cent for three
or five years.
FOR SALE.
New 5 room house, south front, near
high school, ground 4"xl20.
South front lots on Wyoming, Boule-
vard and Rio Grande streets, reason-
able.
Gentle horse, buggy and harness,
cheap.
COLLIER & DORBANDT,
Real Estate and Insurance.
205 Texas St.
THE “KATY” LAND
OFFICE sells real
estate anywhere, every-
where No matter
where your property or
business is located, we
can sell it for you and do It In less
time than the averagi roal estate man
would take to “consider the matter.’'
We are connected vith good agents
all over the United States and Mex-
ico, and our adverti Ing system en
ables us to find buyers In the short
est possible time. Send us a de-
scription of your property, state Its
price, and we will do tho rest. If yon
want to buy property or business of
any kind, tell us your requirements
We can supply He m. We furnish
homes on the small payment plan, in
any part Of the country. ,
We have 5,000,000 acres Mexican
ranch, timber and farming lands, 25
cents to $1 per acre Also plenty of
good farm and ranch lands In Mis
sour!, Kansas, Texas and all the terrl
torles.
F. P. BICKENBACH, Mgr.
P. O. Box 825, El Paso, Texas.
Proved.
“But do yon think you can support a
wife?”
“Of course. Why, we’ve been en
gaged two years.”
“Well?”
“Well. If I can buy flowers and ciin
dy for a fiancee for two years and not
go broke I can surely support a wife!”
—Illustrated Bits.
Closed Para.
Mabel—Mamma says our consciences
should tell us when we are naughty.
Kitty-Yetb, but I don't litben to goo-
slp.—Harper's Bazar.
Advice.
Emellne—Sarah and I can hardly na
derate ud weft other pver the telephone.
Edgar-Well, talk one at ■ tlmc!-Tlt-
Bits.
The Product of the Voting of Certain
Seale Inaeete.
The large order of hemlptera in-
cludes what are known as scale In
sects (eoccldne), some of which arc very
destructive to fruit trees, while others
are the source of cochineal, mid, per-
haps, were the manna upon which
the children of Israel fed in the wit-
donums.
The life history of these insects In-
cludes n motionless pupa stage, simi-
lar to the chrysalis of a moth or but-
terfly. Before passing into this dor-
mant and helpless condition, the young
of certain scale bugs make their way
inlo the eurtti, and then a sticky fluid
exudes from their bodies and quickly
hardens Into a protective coating, re-
sembling plain or colored glass, and
causes them fo look something like
beads, so that in some parts of the
world they are known as "ground
pearls."
The best known of these ore dug out
of the earth In the West Indies and
strung into necklaces or other orun
incuts. Similar objects are prized and
worn by the natives of other regions.
KEROSENE OIL.
It In I'nrnffln In Crrnt Britain anil
KeSnril Petroleum lClaevvhera.
Petroleum (petrn, rock; oleum, oil) Is
a liquid bitumen exuding from rocks.
Paraffin (parum, little; aftlns, akin),
discovered by Reloheiibneti in 1830, In
investigating the tar produced In the
distillation of wood, is a colorless wax-
Ijke solid, which he named from Its ex-
traordinary chemical Indifference, Its
“little affinity" with anything. He aft-
erward isolated from the same mate-
rial u liquid oil, which ho called oupibn,
“very fat.” For years both were re-
garded merely ns chemical curiosities
until it was realized that euplon forms
tlie body of petroleum.
Pure paraffin resembles spermaceti
and is Inodorous and tasteless. Paraf-
fin oil is ehiefly a mixture 'of fluid
hydrocarbons, and ns It approaches gas
more closely than any other tllumlnat-
Ing agent and Is cheap it lias come
Into general use. Illuminating oils
manufactured from petroleum are sold
in Great Britain as “paraffin oil," In
the United States as “kerosene" and
on the continent ns “refined petroleum.”
—London Globe.
Copperhenil and Hrittlrr.
The copperhead Isn't a bad looking
snake, as snakes go, but it has a mighty
bad reputation. In fact, It Is generally
regarded as a mean sort of snake and
Is apparently without a friend or even
fln Apologist. Although it won't etinse
you tlor go out of its way to get a crack
at yoh, It probably does more business
pcrN snake Jbnn does the rattler, tile
moccasin or any other of tbe venomous
kind. It is said that where there is one
there are always two copperheads, so
when you smell green cucumbers look
out, for that sei ins to be the only warn-
ing yon will get of the presence of this
reptile. The rattler is a little more po-
lite, also more vicious, for after giving
you timely warning it will stand its
ground and fight like a good fellow,
while the copperhead will run and hide.
Qurrn.' Name* an Onka.
Many English queens have chosen
oak trees In VVIndsor forest whereon
their respective names, with the dates
of their choice, have been commemorat-
ed by means of brass plates. In dif-
ferent parts of the forpst, with scats
round them, arc oaks bearing the
names of Queen Elizabeth, Queen Caro-
line, Queen Charlotte and Queen Vic-
toria. “Uerne'a Oak,” mentioned In tbe
“Merry Wives of Windsor” ns being
In Windsor park, was destroyed by a
gale on Aug. 81, 1S(U).
El Paso Connections
WITH -----
ALAMOGORDO. CLOUDCKOFT.
.JAR ILL A. liA LtTJZ,
High rolls, titlArosa,
mescalf.ro, n. m.
ALAMO TELEPHONE CO.
Office ALAMOGORDO, N. M.
WHERE
The barometer don’t change. You will lose
confidence in the old thing at Guadalajara,
Mexico. It’s because the air is dry and the
temperature changes infrequently. Ask your
doctor about it. Guadalajara is a city of 150,-
000 inhabitants; second only to Mexico City.
It has great wealth aiul good hotels, where
living is reasonable. Round trip nine months
tickets, $54 U. S. currency. Guadalajara is
located only on the Mexican Central Ry.
For Descriptive Mutter Apply to
W. D- Murdoch. <i. i\ A., Mexico City. **,
A. Dulohery, Commercial Agent, El Paso, Texns.
DIETER ft SAUER
EL PASO, TEXAS AND CIUDAD JUAREZ, MEXICO,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS. “
Groceries, Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Leading Brands of Bonded Whis-
kies In Bulk and Bottled offered at nnr station In the Interior of Mexico.
1 MAIL ORDER8 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
+ + + + « + ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦
| H. W. GALBRAITH, l*re»Wcnt. A. P. JACKSON, Secretary.
CAPLES LUMBER CO.
HAVE CHANGED HANDS
But Are SIIII Selling Yellow Pine, Oak, llh.kory and Ash lumber, and
Laths, Shingles, Doors, Sash, Mouldings, Etc , of the
Best Crude at Lowest Prices.
Yard: Cor. Tesrae and Octavl. Street.. Tclcrnon. 242
«««•»« a-* ♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦
The El Paso & Southwestern Railroad
THE RIGHT WAY
El PdSO
bouglus
Bisbcc
V. R. STILES, General Passenger Agent.
Nuco
Morcnci
Clil toil
Nacozari
La Cananea
Tombstone
J. D. MASON, City Ticket Agent.
Editors
» 4---^
The Art Department of the Times is equipped to
turn out the finest kind of Half-Tone work—no better
cuts are made anywhere. If you contemplate any
1 ©pedal ©dfitfow® fee0 sf©-f
Fully illustrated with pictures of your town and this
prominent men and women who are upbuilding it, then
write, THE TIMES PUBLISHING CO.
Art Department. El Paso, Texas.
V'-W-
If You Have an Unsatisfied \V\fiT Tell of It In The Times
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
El Paso Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 16, 1904, newspaper, August 16, 1904; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth579022/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.