The Temple Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, June 7, 1895 Page: 3 of 8
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te&mA fjm
Rogers & Barton,
fSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
ive moved their office to second
y of the Masonic building, over
ris’ drug store, corner 12th St.
. Square. * >. '■ ■
nple, - - Texas
— ■ ■ - ii - ~ 1 ~.
o. cox,
Xj.A.-W-S'EIR.
PLE, - - TEXAS,
ilal attention given to mercantile .collec-
, Beal Eatate and Corporate Law, Refer*
t permleslon to any bank In tbe city.
. Greatest Bail road
i8artl>,
►anta Fe Route.
[etchers and others going to the National
dncational Association meeting at Denver
I in Jnly, sbonld remember that tbe Santa
Fe offers as low rates as anybody else, wltlr
1 better service.
Special Inducements to small or large
[ parties.
Tickets on sale July 3, 4, 8 and 6, limited
to return July 12,18,14 or 16, except that
| teachers and ethers wishing to remain long-
er in Colorado, can obtain extension of limit
at either Denver, Colorado Springs, Manitau
l or Pueblo, prior to July 18. Tltkete thus
deposited will he available for return pass*
age any time prior to and including Septem-
ber let 1866.
Privilege of attending summer school at
Colorado Springs, on return trip.
Low rate excursions into tbe mountains
after meeting is over.
JTor descriptive pamphlets, address
W. 8. KEEP AN, G. P. A.
« .Galveston, Tex,
>st Plcturegqu* Lin*
Colorado. ^
Mi
Church Director;.
mSCOPAL CHUBCH.-Serrlee Every
Sabbath, each month, Sunday school ev-
ery Sunday 9:30, a. m.
J. A. Duncan, Beetor.
BAPTIST^CHUBCH—Services every Sabbath
II, a ui and 7:30, p m. Prayer meeting every
Wednesday night. Bunday school every S«a
ay 9:46. am.
W. B. Maxwell Pastor
flBST M. K. CHURCH SOUTH-Services every
Sunday at 11 a m and 7 pm; Sunday School at
9.46 a m. Prayer meeting at 7:30 Wednesday
evening; Sam'l P. Weight, P. C.
fftESBYTKRlAN CUUHH—Servtoee every Snn
day U, a m, and l, p m; Prayermeeting ev-
ery Wednesday at 7, p m; monthly meetingot
Session, first Monday of each month 7:16 p
B- Jb. Dale, Pastor
CHRISTIAN CHURCH—Services at 11 a m and
7 pm. Prjyermeetlng Wednesday night
Sunday school 9:30 a m»
John Fkhgajon. Pm tor,
CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN - Sunday
School 10 a. m. J. S. Hickman, Sup’t.
Preaching 11a. tn. and 7 p. m. Christian En-
deavor 8 p. m. Meetings at Wagner’s Hall.
C. 8. Bass, Pastor.
iOUTH TEMPLE M. E. CHURCH—Services
every Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Prayer
meeting every Wednesday at 7:30 p .m Sunday
School at 9:46a.m. G.W. Wnm.
On the Hoad.
Fob Tbmplb Tmes:
Weleft Hugo just two weeks ago
today. It rained on us the second
day and has continued to rain. We
lounged at Austin the head of many eat rich food and plenty of it, for
things that Texas is suffering for yoq.«an’t get out messages every
today. Here we find upwards of fewfiays, and entertain your visi-
300 hands, men and women drawing tors from England and not eat and
pay from us, the state, which puts drink that kind of food.
disease is eating a large quantity of
rie|k food and imbibing to much rich
juioes. The symptoms you have on
hands, doubtless, and I shall not
speak of them. Of course, you must
•jrES Constipation
' INDIGESTION DIZZINESS.
CRUF TlONS ON 1 HE SKIN.
Beautifies /Complexion.'
Ig^FOBACASCnrWIIt^lOT^URCjJ
_i agreeable laxative and Hkhvb Tonic.
d by Druggist* or sent by mail 25CnS0c.
1$L00 per package. Samples tree.
Wff% The Favorite TOOTH NOTH
LV W|| for the Teeth and Bir*th,fi6c.
i Sweeney, U.S.A.,San Diego, CaL,
: ‘•Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy la the first
cine I have ever found tb at would dome
rgood.” Price 60 eta. Sold by Druggists.
DIMtf
Imveyoo a severe Lung Trouble. It 1st!
iCUreandspeedilyieBeveaCoughs.
looping Cough and Bronchitis and
1 on a guarantee. 25 eta.
For Sale by W. E. WILLIS.
' L. Douclas
$3
CORDOVAN,
p FRENCH At ENAMELLED CALF.
(4*3“ FiNECAlf MGWMHOCl
♦3.5P POLICE, 3 SOLES.
I*2.*I7J BOYSSCHOOLSHOEI
-LADIES'
PvJffBSiSSfS
BROCKTOILMaaS.
Over One Million People wear the
f. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
I oar shoes are equally satisfactory
f flv# til# bwt value for tb#
/equal custom shoes In style and fit.
nr wearing qualities are uaenrpaseed.
• prices are uniform,—stamped an sole,
m Si te $3 saved ever other makes.
(your dealer cannot supply you we can. Sold by
|or Sale by BD VIENO
Temple, Texas.
Houses and lots on installments.
J. E. Moore.
I CONSIDER XIX the grandest liniment for
aches and pains I ever'ssw. DR J L ANTONY
8trawn, Tex. For sale by W. E. Willis. 2-7-2
Have some handsome building lots
inside and ontside at living prices
and terms J, E. Moore,
some money in motion once a month.
We was told that the states paper
must be discounted about 5 tier cent.
Oh, this great and grand Texas pa-
per below par.
Since the legislators left, the
weeds and grass looks thrifty in the
capital yard. I visited all the
asylums and all the offices where
they were not closed. Some was
closed. The insane has 666, blind
150, deaf and dum 225, University
448, all are clean and well cared for.
We leave Austin and view the
farms from village to town. Vise
versa south of Austin for fifty miles
the crop is about 55 cotton, 40 corn
5 sorghum. Oats are not grown but
little next 50 miles, but little sor-
ghum and more corn, 60 to 40. Some
places, water spouts two in succes-
sion have just tore the country ud.
Most of the towns are very dull. No
sign boards, we just travel as best
we can by guess. If the legislators
had of posted the Texas roads,
wculd it ngt have been better for the
j country than what they have done.
rfEJ fro“6ofIa“c“® frr\hon8'l Some large pasture gates all locked.
wss»t workin 15 days. J w welsh, cie- Keys m town I suppose. We passed
a few days ago the town that once
offered to bid up on your worthy
Bro. W. R. Maxwell for his time and
caused Temple to strain some more
to keep him. Of course Temple
needed him, and if we had to be the
judge, Temple needs him very bad
yet, for there seems to the passer by
that he needs help to do the work.
But while that is so and the Lord, if
the Lord did it, it was well. But
these folks here need something.
After looking as I have, I could not
blame him not to have moved here,
if some of them are lost; which I
think will be. The town was or-
ganized about 1837 and it seems that
it has been neglected some. Some
big (I’s) and a lot of little (u’s).
South of this town crops are good,
grass fine, on the west side of the
I hope you will get your interest
bearing bond issue through by the
time spring hunting season com-
mences. I see that you and Dave
Hill are on good terms again. I am
glad of it, for Dave is our kind of a
‘•hairpin.” If you stand right up to
your policy, and I know you will,
you will have Tom Reed and a host
of republicans on your side by
spring. The bankers out here and
the moneyed men generally are ju-
bilant over your scheme; there’s no
one objects except farmers and la-
borers, even a majority of the
preachers are with you. Anyone
ought to know that when we issue
bonds to sell, we ought to have ’em
fixed up to suit our customers. If
congress will let you alone you will
create a rattling demand for bonds
and also a “dick nailing” supply.
Put off the payment as long as pos-
sible, please, for we are already in
debt out west here, considerable,
and if you cause us to be cramped
turned they had twoehildren. No-
blitt refused to forgive Owens, and
took Ms wife and children away
from him. Owens went to the
house and asked to see them. When
he was refused he shot his father-in
law dead.
It was a desire to see his children
again that led owens back to the
neighborhood where he had com-
mitted the crime and where he was
killed by the officers. One morning
he appeared at the house of Fritz
Klute, a fanner, who lived near the
old Noblitt homestead, and asked
for breakfast. It was given to him,
but Klute told him he must go away;
at once. Owens said he would go
after nightfall. He wanted to see
his children, he said. He hid him-
self in the barn and Farmer Klute
went about his work. Two hours!
later a farm hand passed the place
ana carried to the sherriff the in-
formation that the murderer was!
hidden in Klute’s barn.
Fifty yards from the barn im
Jwhich Owens was hidden, and across
the big road, stood the Niblitt farm
house. The fugitive had been told
that his children were there, and he
waited patiently for them to come
out into the warm sunshine where
he might see them, It was hours!
before they appeared, but at last he
was rewarded by tv Sight ol them
4fm, i
I
m
'means so much more than’
you imagine—serious ani*
fatal diseases result frow r
Browns
Iron
Bitters
■ j
if you are feeling
out of sorts. wo*S
and generally ex-
_____■fSJSjS'
prfA'-rc»
ing the most rell
blestreni
Brown’s L—
tan* A fe* b®Jri
ties cure—benefit
cosies from, th»,
very first doitr-w
won't tUtfn juwr,
Ueik, and It’s
pleasant to take.,
too much all at once it might hurt tihder the trees in front of the house.
borne, Tex, For sale by W. E. Wlllis.2 2-7-2
The Shops a Certainty.
Better buy that home before any
advance in property, the best bar-
gains offered by Downs, Pratt &
Cannon.
XIX gave more relief from weak back than
anything I ever used. -JOHN JACOBS, Cle-
burne, Tex. For sale by W. E, Willi* 2-7-2
I have several applications for
cottages on north side rail road.
Can rent your house, see?
J. E. Moore.
XIX LINIMENT cored my wife of femal2
trouble when I though her Incurable.
JAS I MOODY, State Lecturer Farmers Alli-
ance. For sale by W. E. Willis- 1st 6-2
KARL’S CLOVER ROOT will purify your
blood and clear your complexion; it is guaran
teed to do this, is It notworthyour time to try
It? For srle by W. E. Willis. karl U-9-eow
XIX LINIMENT cured me or a oad case of
flux. A H BOONE, Ex-Att’y. Gen. Navasota
Texaa. For sale by W. E. Willis. lBt6-2-
IF YOU NEED a blood medicine XIX Sarsa-
parilla is surely the best. Price 75 cents. For
salebyW. E. Willis.
SHILO’S CURE, tbe gTeat cough and cronp
cure, Is in great demand. Pocket size contains
28 doses on 25 cts; Children love 'it: For sale
by W. E. Willis. karl 6-9-eow
SHILO'S CURE tne gieat cough and croud
cure, Is in great demand. Pocket size contains
25 doses only 25 cts: children love it. For sale
oy W. E. Willis. karl 8-9-eow
1107 acres of the Mary Thomas
headright in the southeast of Polk
county; well watered and heavily
timbered, about 800 acres of good
agricultural land: will take $2 per
acre or will trade for property in
Temple or Bell county, or any ad-
joining county.
An excelent business house and
lot and restaurant and fruit stand
business, well and centrally located,
with a fine run of excellent paying
business. $3,200, on easy terms.
J. E. Moore.
the party.
I wish you would stop the publi-
cation of the doings of congress.
These blamed populist newspapers
are publishing it and the farmers
are reading it, and I’ll be darned if
it is helping us much. The farmers
ought to take agricultuial papers
and let politics alone.
Old Pide had a a calf last night,
but it froze to death, and I reckon
its for the best, for you can get
yearlings for $3 and you cant raise
them for that.
What do you bait with to catch
bass and biue fish? I know your
bait for “suckers.” Wheat is 35
cents a bushel, hut liquors and to-
bacco a>'e the same old price. What
is good liquor worth in your town,
i. e., where a fellow buys it by the
keg? We all smoke long green
tobacco, here this winter, as it is
cheaper and healthier.
Hoping to hear from you soon in
river too much rain is the complaint.
We go from Cuero to Beeville on the form of a “special message,
the road we have passed over the close for this time,
push and get up is liking some My pen is poor,
I
P.P. P.
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
AND OLD SORES
PRICKLY ash, poke root CATARRH, NIMRU.
AND POTASSIUM KIDNEY TROUBLES
Wakes
Warvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up
the weak and debilitated, gives
strength to weakened nerves, expels
good land. The county is unde-
veloped and the. land too high for
pushing men to tackle it, while so
many other places holds out her
hands and savs come. Bell countv
is above par in excellency, good and
cheap lands.
We forgot we saw a lot at Austin
we cant tell you Bell county folks.
It would not do. Perhaps some of
the Bell countv people know it, but
they had rather that the country
folks would not catch on to it, so I
may see you and tell you all to our
selves sometime in the future, ot
course I don’t mean any crooked-
ness, or bad management, no, no. I
saw the great dam and the miscel-
laneous part of it as well. There is
a great deal ot the latter.
Yours etc., W. A. Clark,
Hugo farmer.
anil DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash, Poke Roct and Potas-
sium, the greatest blood purifier on
earth.
Aberdeen, 0.. July 21,1891.
Messrs Lippman Bros., Savannah.
Ga.: Dear Sirs—I bought a bottle of
your P. P P. at Hot Springs,Ark. .and
it has dono me more cood than three
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs.
Sand throe bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully yours
JAS. M. «BWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, O.
Cspt. J. D. JoLnston.
__________ „ ___________ , 7b all whom it may conrern: I here*
diseases, giving tbe patient health nnd testify *° tho wonderful properties
happiness where sickness, gloomy of P. P. P. for eruptions of the skin. I
feelings and lassitude first prevailed ' i offered for several years with nn un-
------------ sightly and disagreeable oruption on
‘anlf^ekln^ diseases! Ke wP**'WINSTON,
blotches, pimples, old chronlo ulcers, Bavaunah, Ga.
^6m’.-Te1<1m.hyeasday!)0^hoe,1[SS^f »*«“ * «"”<»•
Srofi^purtfler ln*the world," and'makes Simony fromihe Mayor of StjuinJex.
positive, speedy and permanent cures Sequin, Tex. , January 14,1893.
Inall cases. Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah,
Ga;: Gentlemen—l have tried your P.
Ladies whose systems are poisoned " " * J‘
and whose bloodis in an Impure con^l-
are poisoned p- p-for » disease of the skin, usually
Impure concl- known as skin cancer,of thirty years'
tion, due to menstrual irregularities, standing, and found great relief; It
#r# peoollarly benefited by the won- purlfl## the blood and remoras all lr-
dentil tonic end blood cleansing prop- ritetlon from the seat of the disease
ertles of P. P. P.-Prickly Asb.Poke »n<1 prevents any spreading of the
Root and Potassium. sores. I have taken flveor six bottles
an<^ f *®1 confident that another coarse
-fsssSft?,h°eCge.vtt»
your medicine from my own personal
knowledge. I was affected with heart
trouble*. YoorstrHly.
CAPT. W. M. RUST.
Attorney at Law.
vut uuuiug ioiiuk s uavc wui/ uiiau
SX.W done’rno'more
good than anything I have ever taken.
I oan recommend yonr medlolne to all
•Offerers ot the above diseases.
MRS. M. M. YE ARY.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
O-
Book on Blood Diseases Mailed Free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LIPPMAN BR08.
PROPRIETORS,
Uppmsn’s Block, Savannah, G*
A Letter to Grover.
(Pnblished by request.)
Chicken Bristle, Mo.—Dear
Grover: I take my pen in hand and
seat myself to write you a few lines.
We have had a very mild and oDen
winter, which, in view of the finan-
cial condition of the country and
oi»r agricultural deficit, has been a
a boss good thing. The relations
are all well. There is not much
sickness in these parts, except
several democrats, who are sick of
the administration, but that will be
all right if you will keep on sending
in special messages to congress
every few days. We have come to
the conclusion that your forte is on
messages. Several of our boys are
\ deserting the party and going over
I to the populists, but don't let that
worry you; its two years before we
have another election, and by that
time they will all come back if we
have good crops.
We are a little short of money
and seed, clothing and eatables, but
if you will only send us garden
seeds we will try and pull through.
Out west a little further scores of
women and children are starving to
death, but as they can’t vote nohow,
it will cut no figure in the next
campaign. Don’t let such matters
worry you one bit: Remember
Nero; you remind me much of him.
I hope your gout is better. I would
gladly send a recipe for it, but I don’t
know much aoout it. Out here and
further west it is not known. I
understand that the cause of the
My ink is pale,
Old England’s got us bv the tail.
—“Sport's cousin” in True Ameri-
can.
Ploughing Around the Stump.
According to Thomas Carter,
chairman of the Republican Nation-
al committee, the republicans pro-
prose “to plough around the silver
stump”—in other words dodge the
issue-
No doubt they do, but whether
they will succeed in doing it is an-
other question. If Mr. Carter and
a number of other practical states-
men ot his school are to be believed,
the party must either straddle or
split, dodge or be divided. And so,
according to Mr. Carter, the Nation-
al Republican convention must re-
affirm its former straddle and in ad-
dition thereto resurrect the old
Whig plank condemning presiden-
tial vetoes, in order to render a
sound-money president innocuous in
case there is a free silver congress.
This may be ploughing around
the silver stump, or right it might
be if it were an old field stump. The
repuoliean party is breaking new
ground, however, and, as every one
knows, new ground stumps have
very long and yery tough roots.
The ploughman who makes the cir-
cuit around them and miscalculates
the length of the mam side roots by
two feet or a foot or six inches is
certain to be jerked across the
plough handles, with disastrous re-
sults which no amount of subse-
quent profanity can wholly remedy.
There lire stumps and stumps. 1836
may be a good year for stump ex-
tractors. Let Mr. Carter remem-
ber that.—New York World.
He crept out of the bapn and down
the dusty lane oil his hands and
knees, peeping through the fence at
the little ones. The boy was gal-
loping on a broomstick-horse and
the girl was carrying a doll. Tho
murderer gazed at them a long
time, and forgot that he was a fugi-
tive, for whose capture a heavy re-
ward had been offered by the state.
Farmer Klute had slipped down
the lane to inform the sheriff’s posse
that Owens was in the barn. There
were six of the men all armed with
Winchester rifles and revolvers.
They tied their horses and crawled
towards it through the field. They
saw Owen’s tracks in the dust,
where he had crossed the road. Two
of them went cautiously in the direc-
tion of the house and caught sight
of the fugitive in the fence corner.
He was on his knees, looking into
the yard where his children were
playing. The boy on the broom-
stick-horse was looking up with
wondering eyes into his father’s
face.
Suddenly a shot rang out and a
rifle ball crashed into the fuagative’s
shoulder. Owens turned upon his
pursuers with a revolver iu each
hand. They leaped the fence and
shot at him from under cover. He
fought his way back towards the
barn, while the children ran scream-
ing toward the house. Owens
reached the barn, reloaded his
weapons and came out again on his
horse with a revolver in each hand.
The sheriff’s men fired a volley and
a shot passed through the body, but
he rode away, shooting at his pur-
suers as he ran. A hundred yards
away he fell dying by the roadside.
The fugutive’s wife had come out
of the house when the firing begun,
and stood looking on at tho battle
down the lane. She saw a man
throw up his arms and fall from his
horse, and saw the sheriff’s men lift
the blood-stained body. But
she didn't know whose it was. It
was not until her little son pulled at
her skirts and lisped, “It is papa,
that she knew that it was her hus-
band that had been killed.
It Cures
Dyapepri*, Kidney and Liver! '
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments )
, Women’s complaints. _ ,
Cet only the genuine—it hi* Crossed rtd
S' lines on the wrapper. All others are sub-
\ slitutes. On receipt of two ac. stampi we
J will send set of T*n Beautiful World’*'
I Fair View* and book—free. ,
| BROWN CHEMICAL CO^ BALTIMORE, MO.
J. F. FLANIKEN, Oenaville,
J. J. BOOKER, Temple, Tex.
A Great Offer.
The “twice a week edition of the
New York World, formerly the
weekly, lias proved a phenomenal
success. It is a semi-weekly of six
pages, mailed Tuesdays and Fridays,
eight columns tc the page; forty-
eight columns each issue. Jt gives
the news fully half a week ahead of
any weekly paper, and at the same
time retains all the literary, agri-
cultural. miscellany and other feat-
ures which made the weekly World
so popular. Yet the price is only
one dollar a year. For sample copies
address the World, N. V.
Saw His Babies and Died.
St. Joseph, Mo., May 30.—The
body of James Owens the murderer,
who was killed by a sheriff’s posse
in Atchison county, will be brought
back to this city for burial.
Owens escaped from jail in this
city five months ago in company
with Pat Crowe, the train robber,
and three other desperate prison-
ers. He was under sentence of
death for the murder of his father-
in-law, Judge Seneca Noblitt, in
Atchison county a year ago. The
young farmer had run away with
Noblitt’s daughter five years before
and married her. When they re-
Thc summer normal term of
Spivey’s High School is conducted
by Prof. L. M. Conn of Corsicana.
He is a man of broad experience,
having been in this class of work for
years. He was principal of Gibbon
Normal tor years and president ol
Washington college afterward. See
J. W. Carter of Belton for pianos
and organs.
Summer Excursion*.
Be sure to see the Katy ticket
agent for best rates and routes to
the principal watering places north
and south, tickets on sale June 1st.
Save time and money by purchasing
tickets via the Katy.
W. B. Blaine, Ticket Agt.
A. T. Stuart’s Eooentricitie*.
A story is told illustrating the de-
termination of the late A. T. Stew-
art not to allow any tender consid-
eration or any sympathetic influ-
ence to interfere with the accom-
plishment of his ambition, which
was to build up the greatest busi-
ness house in America. Stewart
was for many years the merchant
price of New York; he exerted an
influence that was felt in eyery nart
of this country and was recognized
abroad. What he achieved was not
more by means of the genius of
shrewdness than by means of the
genius of pertinacity. Stewart cul-
tivated the germ of selfishness that
was in him—cultivated it calculat-
ingly and determinedly, as we see
by this little story that is told of
him.
Uuon entering his store one morn-
ing he sought out the man having
the hiring and discharging of cash
bo vs.
“Mr. Libby,” said he, “who is
that handsome, bright eyeyed little
boy standing by the counter yonder?
“His name is Charley Mason, sir”
answered Mr. Libby, f ‘ Ho is indeed
a handsome little fellow, and he is
as bright and as well-mannered as
he is handsome. He is the most at-
tentive and most promising boy we
have in our employ.”
“Yes, I thought as much” said
Stewart gruffly, “discharge him at
once.”
“Why, Mr. Stewart!” exclaimed
Libby, almost paralyzed with as-
tonishment, “you surely can not
mean it.”
“Discharge him at once, I say!”
repeated Stewart sternly. “I am
getting too much interested in that
boy. I find mvself thinking of him
after I reach my desk and when I
should be busy at work. I have no
ti me and no right to become inter-
ested in anybody—1 must not suffer
any liking to distract me from busi-
ness. Discharge that boy at once."
Well, tbe little fellow bad to
go. Presumably he has grown
to the estate of manhood,
filled all the splendid promises
which were indicated in- his youth.
We hope so. Perhaps this remi-
niscence of his old employer will fall
under Ins eyes. For this is a small
world in which ve live.
And what of A. T. Stewart and
his work? The canny old trades-
man went to his grave unloved and
unwept, Then robbers came and
made way with his dead body. The
enormous business he builded up
has gone to pieces and the vast fort-
une he acquired is scattered. His
genius—ones a mighty influence—
is now simply a tradition and not
wholly a savory one. By Jupiter!
what fun old Father Time does have
getting even with human greatness!
When Voltaire died the doctors
took out his brain to meusure and
weigh it, for that brain had dictated
thought and shaped philosophy for
half a century. A servant found
tho braui lying upon a table. Fauuh!
It was au ugly sight. So the fellow
wrapped the brain in a paper and
cast it into a sewer and dogs came
and devoured it.—Chicago Record.
J
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Crow, J. D. The Temple Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, June 7, 1895, newspaper, June 7, 1895; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585312/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.