El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 30, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 18, 1910 Page: 10 of 10
ten 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:
10K f>
>ri
EL PASO, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1010.
These Warm Days
Turn your‘thought to Light and Cool
Clothing. M
“If you want VALUE for your money”
—“If QUALITY means any thing to
you"—our stock of
Benjamin Clothes
Knox Hats, Hanan Shoes and Fine Fur-
nishings will interest you.
R. C. Lightbody Co.
, Corner Texas and Mesa
Fortification Committee of the Panama Canal,
View of the Big Ditch and Thirteen Inch Gun
A wife is either u mau'ts better half
or the whole thing.
Custom Assay Office.
CRITCHETT & FERGUSON
Rm oessors to Hughe* & Crllrhott.
Aiiayer*. — Chemist* — Metallurgiit*
AGENTS FOR ORE 8HIPPER8
62214 Sun Francisco 8t.
Hell Fhoue 334 Auto Phone 1334
TO STOP HICCOUGH
Hiccough is a dlatrcKKlng und some,
time* h dangcroiiH cbuiuJaint. Matty
timet- a swal’ow of water Will slop It
. if (simple measures fail the following
! ha* been found very ettleaclou*.
The nerves that produce hi cough
lace near (he v'ltrtaee or the n..*,k
They may lx» reached aitJTeomtire«»ed
placing two tlngersUC.it In the een
ter of the Lop of Urn breastbone be-
twt-f-n the cords that run up either side
of the n-eelf and pressing Inward,
. downward and outward. A Tew mip-
■’jutes pressure of thiH kind will stop
otIlrj the most obstinate hiccough — OiatitiK-
wcHtlifr burmiu’» weekly bulletin
by of^fur
front* tonight In region* wher* both j
nnd icrain crop* would bo oftt ,
ed In New York the «frenicUi of St>, fonlolla, Iior.h do not grow in
wheat market in face of rortklden a ballroom.
Bpeculfttlv* liquidation w*h marked. ^
Bond* Wi»r* heavy. Total Huilea, I ,—.••■---
value. 11,338,001), j
t’ 8 bond* wore um,’hanged ut» cal i *
New Occidental Restaurant
lemoved to 105 8. Stanton 8t., next door
o Lion Grocery. Furnishing* all brand
ew. Regular meal*, 26c. Short order*
II day. Lowest price* In tha city. I
rl*h all my friend* and old customer*
rould call and give rne a trial.
Your servant,
(’HAH. TEE, 61|T-
Pineapple Swiss and Edam Cheese ■
New pineapple awisa and Edam cheese of the finest qual-
ity has just been received. We also have a fresh lot of
Neufchatel and Roqueford cheese.
Pineapple Cheese, each ............. •’7f*
Edam Cheese, each .................... *
Neufchatel Cheese, each ..............V« x 9
Cream Cheese, each...................12 ^
Roqueford Cheese, lb.....................'
New York Cream, lb .. ...................""
Brick Cheese, lb..........................
Limberger Cheese, lb ....................ZSc
TULAROSA EGGS and SPRING CHICKENS
WATSON’S GROCERY
210-212 Texas Street Auto. 1151
The Cashier Advocates Smiling.
(Stored
El Paso Trunk factory
OppoBlIft i*oat<»f|lcc A'lfrn* l'laza.
IMwik'k I tell, lhr.1. Awl".. JU66.
Tom Johnson, Assayer.
Expert Mine and Car Sampler.
Agent* for Ore Shipper*.
YKARB IN U. B. SERVICE.
Office and laboratory at Smelter.
Phone 2310.
Seamon Assay Company
A88AYER8, CHEMISTS AND
MINING .ENGINEERS
Agent* (or Ore Shipper*
«tor. San FrancUco and I,eon 81*.
telephone 23«. I*. O. Box 97.
Sanitary Washable
Hair Rolls
Esther Allen’s
211 St. Louis St.
Panama, May 18—A'-’ing under or
dor orders of t'reaident Taft, the Pan-
ama canal fortification committee has
concluded its report of how i'ncle
Ham will guard the big ditch in time
of war. President Taft's report is in
I tie hands of the congressional com-
mittee, and action on hi* recommenda-
tion is expected by dune 1, The re-
port* do not give the exact locutions
of tie proposed fortification*, hot it
is explained that this cannot be fur-
nished until information has been ob-
tained regarding, the “Main* and avail-
ability of certain parcel* of land sit
anted along the route ol the canal
The armament for the proposed forth
float.Ion* l« enumerated a* follow*:
Ten fourteen-inch rifles, twelve six-
inch rifles and twenty-five twelve inch
moplat. . Tlie cost Is estimated In
excess of $14,000,000. The report
state# that the board has examined
the ground at the termini of the canal
THE WAY OF BOLTON HALL 12STS
will pay good wages for the extra la-
1 — ’ j hor involved.
These three factors give a wonder-
ful range in the acreage needed to
(By Milo Hastings).
Bolton Hall is a lawyer. He lives
v.ithln a stone’s throw of Fifth ave-
nue He doesn't know a
support a family. A sheep owner on
..... .... the plains of New Mexico might
. ..... ............ „ „ sod-plow starve with a thousand acres, and yet
(lie ground at the termini m the cairn |r,om a lister, but he is doing more to there are numerous records of gross
and of territory iti the neighborhood j metcast' the production of American
of llic canals course with a view v>f j wj| Hum any professor of agronomy
choosing the best sites for the big .- gootochnv in the country; he is
the ndv'ertlsing agent of intensive
WE MANUFACTURE ALL
KINDS OF HAIR GOODS.
ieo. H. Higgins, M. D>
HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN.
tan reaumed the general practice of
Medicine, giving apodal attention to
,.he diseases ef Infants and Children.
SPECIAL SALE
25c
ITALIAN CREAMS
15c A POUND
WEDNESDAY ONLY
The Elite Confectionery
Company.
C. S. P1CKRELL, Mgr.
206 N. Oregon 8t. Phone 347
guns. "If Is tie- right and duty of the
I'nlted states to defend the work
upon which it is expending such an
enormous sum," the presldont says in
liis message "An adequate defense
retpilres suitable fortifications near
the approaches to the terminals 1
am of the opinion that such works as
may lie erected for the defense of the
i-anal should ho completed, occupied
and toady for operation at. the lime
itself is completed and opened to tho
passage of vessels."
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
THE SILVER KING
RESTAURANT
In tt.r Bas-ment on San AHonlo »tr*«t.
No 2*1 I* tho place to sot a KINK MKAL
AND QUICK S1CKV1CH.
OSCAR UHLIG, Prop.
Hotel Arrivals
♦ ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Zelflor.
i’ha.!(’aHRltly, VuWjnlnn\ Tc\.: W.
O'Nrnll, Hrmala*, Aria.; Churha II 11H -
ion, Hotel on: Allen Potter. < li.v; I: O
HHIupa, 1‘oiimI'Jh; Hiram ApH, ,\Hm»<ila,
T«‘X«h; -J. A. Martin, -h\, Toyah; AIIh-N
LIiuImih'I'. <’iilunilaiH, N M ; U U. Pe-
Lffrtin, ICfuiHus (’Uy: O M. »L«\ 8a< ih*
nu nto ihliifli; NN . Taylor.
(IraiitlcH, Mi v : l.>0|nniti, l’iu*l»l«t; W.
K Kraiuo, illy; C. L»., NHwuii, l>«ltilnK.
N. M.
DR. SMITH
Specialist
'itiptnre. Blood, Skin, Liver, Kidney
ind Bladder Diseases. Modern Equlp-
inent 107 San Antonio St.
GEO. G. SAUER & CO.
309 S. El Paso St.,
El Paso, Tex.
Commission Merchants.
Consignments Solicited.
Automobiles
independent Assay Office
EfttabUili.d lass.
BRUSH—$525 TO $900.
OVERLAND—$1050 TO $1550
MARION. $1900
CARRIAGES—$75 TO *650
SPRING WAGON8—$55 TO $150
i
FARM WAGONS—$60 TO $150
HARNESS, Single, Double, Truck
and Farm—50 style* to select from;
$12.60 to $G9.00.
HORSE GOODS—WHIPS, ROBES,
I BLANKETS, NAVAJO RUGS,
j BUGGY AND AUTOMO-
BILE ACCESSORIES
Bullion Work , Specialty j GUARANTEED REPAIR WORK
CARRIAGE PAINTING
AND TRIMMING
RUBBER TIRES
AUTOMOBILE TIRES
D W Reckhart, E.NI
I'uurtn tok.
Agent for Ore Shippers
Assa;s and Chemical
Analysis.
Mtn«» Ctaminad and
ftaportod Upon
- P. 0. Box 88.
/ Labornwuy
Cor. San Francisco 8
Chihuahua Sts.
EL PASO. TEXAS
Oi-ndoi'tf.
A. Munoz, (flilliunliim, Mex ; F U MB
1,.t unit fiimlly. NV C Kin.wti’*, <-ltv: 8.
I*', V.iiill.i-rg, I kuntng. N. At.: *T. Kill*,
t'iili iign-, 1' I-’ Aimin', Dill**.
St. Reals. ,
M ll UtlngMim. A r. Belly, Wm.
DuvtdKon. New Vnrlc. It l> Allen, fln-
I-Inriall: K. It. Devore, lliitlglUH, AH* '. •<-
K. Buntv Itiuieloii .1. B Mi I «‘i molt.
Mrs. ft, (.ildemnlj, Ml Wlnert, New Or-
teiiiis: II. I*. Boss, 11. .1 i- HVilli. Son
KiumlM-o; II. M rollmill. Mineral Well*.
Ton.: H Hurl. SI. l.ont.-; A, It. Kgan.
t’hllftdidptdu.
Hotel Sheldon
\\- it. |.i\ItiKNione. -I K Hunt.-r, Ike
Neer, New York: Ci. \V. Thorp. Denver:
\V, K. Mlltef and Wife. Houston: .1. T.
.lone*, Hrernvltlo; .1. H ro,.n.*. Houmoii.
om MrCatTei-tv. Ned Wood. N.-ll Adunl*.
.lisKle Kilmmul*. IWiiigliir. All-/.: A. 1
White. .'I l Murileon, Kimsun Hi', 11
C I looill lie, Denver , I-' W V\ ikellelil.
Son Krain-lreo: Mrs, Vineyard, Lon An-
Ui 1, A I. Daslle. Qutni-v. Ills.: .tolm
I tonkhn. HI t-uso: Jolm Hampton,
rill ton. AH* <!. Siekle, Si. Joseph; >1
\ \\altnte anil Wife. Bertram. Tv\ :
rhris Motlatt. I'earson, Mevo li.
I Moil.ia lia>. AD!-..; W. It KII*on, rl,l“
■ .ti!n; I. II. I lot oslle. Kansas i ii> I.. B.
r.,*e:ui. Itosweit, N. M l-‘. t* At-* t'11'
I-', li 1 tow.>11, Denver, K \V Hoekley and
family, Sonora; i-'., 1>. HntUfor’I. Denver.
agent of
agriculture,
Button Hall'.j me age eoinea as h
word of good cheer for the soil hungry
man wtm is discouraged at the
thought, of 160 acres of land ai a hun-
dred dollars an iu i'c*—tin- rl/.e and
value of Hu: typii at farm of tilt: mid-
dle west. For the clerk or artisan to
purchase such a farm i.-> quite impos-
aibie. hut ilia price of three, live or
ten acres la vvithlr hia retusonkble
ht>r«‘. and the city man's chance for
a living from the smaller place is
quite as good as frfim the larger one.
The fact that the inconu; of Hie fill -
mer bears i|>ut. little relation to the
si/e or his farm will he hotter under-
stood when we have noted the full- w-
ing points:
.First Crops vary greatly in the ac-
tual amount of food siibstnnee produc-
ed per acre. The average wheat
yield or the Fulled States is 800
pounds per acre: of corn, 1300; po-
tatoes (dry weight! 20,00 pounds; ef
sugar heels (dry weight) 9300.
Second—Some crops, because of
greater -tastiness combined with
greater difficulty of production, com-
mand far greater prices thru others
of equivalent food values. The psy-
chology of the value of rare gems
doutbtjess plays a part to re Worn
turkey and celery less difficult ol pro-
duction. chicken and cold slaw might
be the menu on tho national feast
day.
Third—All c ropn, with increased
tillage, mere careful fertilisation and
better' controlled sol! moisture, give
EAT
AT EL PASO’S NEWEST
AND BEST RESTAURANT,
Club House Cafe
DOC SING,
Formerly of the Florence Cafe, In Ohara*.
109 S. EL PASO BT.
H. P. Noake
Established 1889
OVERLAND AND 8ANTA FE STS.
SPECIAL OFFER.
We are making a special offer of 10 per cent off on all Framed Pie
turea for the next 30 day* in order to make room for a large ship-
ment coining in.
TUTILE PAINT AND GLASS COMPANY
The Arm of the Law.
in a certain Canadian city a lad''
was defending an action for a large
sum of money which she felt she was
not morally entitled to pay. When
it looked as it ihe case would go
against Iter she sold all her real
estate and put tiie proceeds, some
$1.3,000 or more, in her pocket book
which in her case, as is the custom
with some women, was her stocking.
The judgment was given against her,
and' because she would not pay nor
tell where the money was she was
sent to jail for a year. Her counsel
I tried to get her released. The follow;*
ting conversation formed part of the
! proceedings:
j "You admit," said the judge, "that
this woman lias property to the value
of $15,000?”
| Yes, you? honor,” said the coun-
sel.
‘And you admit that she.sold the
property, and put the money in her
stocking?”
"Yes. my lord.1'
"And do you mean to tell me that
the arm of the law is not long enough
to reach It?”
SAVE MONEY
on our .
“Middle-of-the-
Month”
Grocery
Specials
ATTEND THIS
SALE TODAY
100-111 S. Stanton St.
incomes from strawberries, onion*,
rhubarb, chickens, pigeons or miscel-
laneous garden truck that run upward
of $500 an acre. There are men mak-
ing a living today on farms of every
size from an acre up.
In addition to the advantage of les-
ser capital, the city man will find less
competition in the field of intensive
agriculture. The old-time farmer may
pitch hay and husk corn at a speed
which the city-thorn agriculturist can
hardly hope to attain, but, the book-
learned man can do a better job mix-
ing artificial fertilizers or controlling
the evaporation of incubator eggs;
Mr, Hall places the land required
n't three acres. There is no doubt
that this is sufficient land to support
a family at vegetable gardening, -but
tm the original cost, especially in
sandy soils, which, when properly ma-
nured. form tiu> best trucking lands,
is so small that a somewhat larger
purchase would seem advisable.
Those who would go- back to the
land mnut remember:
First- Tint farm produres crops,
not wages, and some one will have to
m-nvtde for the living until the crops
are sold. Moreover, the first year’s
ernp on new land is inferior, it is
unwise for the city man to go to the
soil without a means of livelihood for
t w o ve'ftr*.
Hcrond—Timber or brush-covered
land will necessitate an expense for
clearing of from $25 to $50 an aere.
and the loss of one or two years' pro-
duction.
Third Never buy land milII you
have seep it have seen what others
ai,, doing on soil near by—have sent
a description of tle> land, its location,
and samples of the soil to the state
experiment Motion or the bureau of
soils at Washington.
Fourth ’Marketing is half the bat-
I Ho iii intensive agriculture. With a
ten-acre truck farm, a hundred trips
fb (lie station a year and interest fig-
ured nt 5 per cent, each mile from the
railroad station decreases the value of
land $40 an acre,
BLAINE'S DIPLOMACY.
11 i* -story whlrii Chauncey M.
J),-,.. n* t.-ll* of a dinner that the late
Knu: t’.Jward as Prilu-e of Wales on.-e
g.iv in i .nior of .lames 1:. Blaine, on one
of his Dsils to Knttlnnd before he bad
even been a lamlldnte for presidency,
Tio- one disagreeable man nt tlie dinner
was (i duke of tlie royal house, who bad
n ivpiitflifon for lac* of bu t, During 1
toil iti conversation Hot blurted out
"Tin greatest courage In hi*tmy was
lire revolt of ,our people against King
Hinrge til Then was no JujHm niton
for it then, and there ts no excuse for
it noxv." The prince, a. cording to Dr.
In-pew, was plainly embarrassed. The
one man wl.o had the to. (fulness to
tarry off tin* situation was Mr. Blaine,
who, in a carefully-modulated voice, re-
plied, "Perhaps if George Hi had pos-
sessed ns muoli diplomacy as tiis great-
grandson. America might still be Kng-
Visli." Tiie Prince of Wales, after the
sublet t "a* passed, gripped Blaine's
hand with a sparkle of admiration.—Bos-
ton Transcript.
EARLY ENGLISH FLYING
Perhaps the reason the English are
so far behind In flying is because they
worked the whole thing out long ago.
and are sick and tired af it, for Sir
John Milton in "Britain to the Con-
quest." says that the youth King Har-
old. last of the Saxons, strangely as
piring. had made and fitted wings to
ids hands and feet. With these on
1 he to|> of u tower, spread out to gath-
er air. he flew more than a furiong;
but, the wind being *00 high, he came
fluttering to the ground, maiming ail
this limits; yd so conceited was be of
l.ls an that the cause oi his fall was
attributed to the want of a tail, as
birda have, which he forgot to make.
Why the cloud upon your brow,
Johnnie?” inquired the cashier solici-
tously. "What has banished toe sun-
.ibltie from your fee*-, and given you
the as;' ft of one *ho ha* bitten in-
advertently into a green persim-
mon ?"
"Do I have to keep up a steady
grin?" snapped the hill clerk. "Have
got to act as if I was at a minstrel
show all the time? I don t notice any-
thing around this joint that s calculat-
ed to make a fellow merry.
“No, I don't ask you to grin,” an-
swered the cashier. “I haven’t any
tasts for the grotesque; but a cheerful
smile of not more thit.i eight inches
is becoming to the countenance of
youth, in my opinion. ! don f know
where you were last, night. I ask no
questions that migut prove embarrass
ing"
"It’s none of your ip'sinc.vs where 1
was." growled the bill clerk.
"Of course it isn’t assented ihe
-’cashier amiably. Thais Why. 1 .otbear
j any inquiry. I don’t know what supple-
mentary trouble you have had euher,
hut believe me. the outlook it not neat-
1-- as gloomy as your expresshm would
Indicate. Bear in mind Fiat when
things are at their wore, they are sure
to mend; also that it is a long lane
that has no turning; furthr’nrore, that
U'f darkest just beft dawr ”
••ecu tnrt'i prove tha.,’’ said the bill
c erk.
“Smile, anyway," advised the cash-
ier “Smile and keep right on rail-
ing. If you find the moths have been
at your last season’s spring suit, just
smile, and get what you can tor it
from the old clothes merchant.”
Not Enough for a Moth's Meal.
My last spring's cult did me for
last summer and fail,” said the fill
clerk. "By the time I got through
with it, there , wasn't enough to last a
healthy motlv a mouth.” .
All the more reason for smiling,
su’d the cashier. "Strim even if it lbs
to last you through the winter. Smile
and put a newspaper over your manly
breast. If your landlady raises your
board on you, smile. You might just
a* well, as look sour about it.
"If you don’t like what she is giv-
ing you to eat, smile and make some
light, jesting allusion to the food. Any
comic paper will furnish you with the
jests. Don’t let it disturb your diges-
tion to such an extent, that, little child-
ren will fly shrieking at the sight of
votir face, if you go to see your best
girl, with fond emotions bubbling in
your breast and a pound of chocolates
in your pocket, and find the said
girl entertaining your hated rival, don’t
scowl; smile. Smile easily and affably
and talk wittily until you make the
other fellow look foolish and futile!”
”i always make them look like that,
assented the hill clerk. "Fhats no
trick at ail for me."
“Its the smile I’m insisting on,
said the cashier. "It’s the smile that
counts even more than the flossy
spiel. If it gets to the point whera
(By Kennett Harris).
he invites you to step outside with
him, keep on smiling. If he aims a
savage blow at you, smile and side
step.”
‘What if he lands?" queried the hill
clerk.
■'Smile inscrutably,” advised ^nhe
cashier. "Under any circumstances,
maintain the pleasant contortion. . If
it’s the father instead of the rival, and
he boots you off the premises, don’t
allow him to suppose, from the expres-
sion of your countenance, that you are
at all annoyed or offended.”
“Oh. I naturally wouldn't said the
bill clerk. “The only thing is 1
couldn't help feeling put out."
“I was going to say that," the
cashier rejoined. “To sum the whole
matter up, be a sport. If you’re bluffed
out of a lovely little jack pot by a
pair of deuces or a bob-tailed flush, ap-
pear 10 enjoy it; if you fall in public
and injure your spine join the general
mappimunt - ,r von eo to nav a b'll
merriment; if you go to pay a b'll
and find that the amount is twice as
much as you thought it was but
that’s absurd, of course. We’ll say, if
somebody sent you a hill smile
though your heart is breaking. Smile
when the inquisitor gives an extra
turn to the thumbscrews—smile, What
are you grinning at, like a Cheshire
cat?"
‘Tm merely following yoc instruc-
tions,’ replied the bill eler*. “I’m
trying to look as if I enjoyed listen-
ing to your talk.”
BOBBY’S AMBITION.
’What are you going to do when you
grow up. Robert?” asked tlie visitor.
T m going to be a business man," said
Hubert. ‘‘Pop took me down to bis busi-
ness last week and I’m going to lie like
bin, and work and have a good time.
What are you going to do in busi-
ness?” asked Ihe visitor.
•Tm RoinK to *lo just like pop. I ,n
going to catch tlie car every morning
and when I get down town I’m going
to light a great big cigar and sit down
at my desk and say that there’s so
much work to do it ain’t hardly any use
beginning until after lunch, and then
l’H go out with another big man and
we’li eat and cat until we can’t eat any-
more and then we’ll go back to buriress
and I’ll ask everybody else why tlie
work ain’t done, and then I’ll get so
mad because nobody does anything tti.it
Pit go home curly and be nil tired after
I get home so t can’t do a tiling ’eepting
to read the paper and smoke more greut
big cigars.”—Detroit Free Press.
The peculiarity of a crank Is that
ho always thinks It’s his turn.
One can’t always find conservative
people In a conservatory.
DON’T THROW AWAY
YOUR OLD SHOES
Send them to us. We make old Shoes
look like new.
Shoes half soied, nailed ............$ .50
Shoes half soled, sewed .............100
Rubber heels ........................ 35
Special low price* on all other work.
ENTERPRISE SHOE STORE
316 Mesa Ave.. opp. Plaza.
ARE YOU CONTEMPLAT-
ING A HUNTING OR FISH-
ING JAUNT?
Arc you interested in things
PRE-HISTORIC?
If so, write Traffic Department
MEXICO NORTH-WESTERN RAILWAY
Trains leave CIUDAD JUAREZ Mondays, Wednes-
days and Fridays:
1:25 p. m. (Mexican Time).
1:00 p. m. (El Paso Time).
DAILY SERVICE FROM CHIHUAHUA.
H. C. FERRIS, T. R, RYAN,
General Manager. Chihuahua, Max. Trafflo Manager.
>MMMM»»H44»WWM»t*tt«e4mMMW99t«4Mmt44
New and Select Chatelaine Sets
The new assortment just received contains everything desirable for
the chatelaine.
Separate pieces may be purchased as well at complete SETS of from
three to »tx pieces.
A SET makes a handsome GIFT—a separate piece will be a moat
acceptable START toward a complete group.
MEMO TABLETS UP SALVE BOXES
PENCILS KNIVES
COIN HOLDER3 POWDER PUFF CASE8,
EYEBROW PENCILS PERFUME BOTTLES
MIRRORS HAIRPIN CASES
DRINKING CUPS VINAIGRETTES.
Ail for the Chatelaine.
A. H. RICHARDS
“THE JEWELER.”
; Herald Building. El Paso & San Francisco Sts.
1 ►
■ai' -
’..Ai&vTLrAai.a
t-vw
*
. • '
v.,-.
♦<»*»*
ABB
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 Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 30, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 18, 1910, newspaper, May 18, 1910; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth582934/m1/10/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.