The Temple Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1895 Page: 3 of 8
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5 FEET from CoimdoIm court house
used JCtX Liniment and
ih It day*. J W WELSH, Cfe*
for sale by W. E.WiUIe.2 8-7-1
have several applications for
on north side rail road,
rent your house, see?
J. E. Moore.
l LINIMENT cured my wife of femali
ile wben I though her incurable.
I MOODY, State Lecturer Farmera Alii-
For sale by W. E. Willis- let 6-8
jC LEAR
lgi a Jr ■■■ K'1 -
I £ 5 C O N S T 1FJA T1 0 N
INDIGESTION,DIZZINESS.
’ ftUPTlONS ON THE. SK IN
'autifies ^Complexion
fresh
ISO, row A CASE IT WILL NOT-cue
ble laxative and Nrav* Toma
nggtets or sent by mall. 85a, tOo.
) per package. Samples free.
■A The Favorite TOOTS TCWBII
H. W for the Teeth and Breath, 86c.
l Sweeney, U.8. A., Ban Diego, CaL,
lioh’a Catarrh Remedy la the flrat
el have everfound that would do me
L", Price 50 eta. Sold by Druggists.
Ohurch
_________________ ■ Itlatt
lCureandspeedilyrelleves Coughs,
looping Cough and Bronchitis ana
ioua guarantee. 25cts.
I For Sale by W. E. WILLIS.
FPItCOPAL CHURCH. —Serrlee Every
Sabbath, eaoh month, Sunday school ev-
ery Sunday 8:80, a. m.
I. A. Dtnrujjf, Rector.
B APTIST^CHURCH—Services every Sabbath
11, a m and 7:80, p m. Prayer meeting ever?
Wednesday night. Sunday school every Sun-
ay 9:48. am.
W. R. Max will Paator
MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHMRCH, South Side
—Preaching evory Snnday morning and night
by Dr. J. H. Lntber. Snnday 8cbool at 9:30
FIRST hi. K. CH UliCH SOUTH—Services every
Sunday at 11 a m and 7pm; Sunday School at
1.45 am. Prayer meeting >17:80 Wednesday
evening; 8am’l P. Weight, P. C.
PRESBYTERIAN CHUBH-Services every Son
day 11, am. and I,pm; Prayermeetlng ex-
ery Wednesday at 7, p m; monthly meetingot
Session, flrat Monday of each month 7:15 pm
R. L. Dali, Paator
OHRI8TIAN CHURCH—Services at 11 e m and
7 pm. Prryeimeetlng Wednesday night
Sunday school 9:30 a m>
John Eirgakon. Pastor,
CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN - Snnday
School 10 a.m. J. 8. Hickman, Snp’t.
Preaching 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Christian En-
ieavor 6p.m. Meetings at Wagner’s Hall.
C. 8. Bass, Pastor.
‘OO TH TEMPLE M. E. CHURCH-Servlces
every 8nnday at11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Prayer
meeting every Wednesday at 7:80p.m Snuday
School at 9:45 a. m. G. W. Whit*.
PROF ESS IONAL.
gff'llw Sf
Qr. king,
What Nerve Berries
have done for others
tthey will do
for you.
DAY.
OF 16TH DAY.
IE N Eatily, Quickly
r Permanently Restored, sot
jaltive core for all Weaknesses, Nervousness,
lllty, and all their train of evils resulting
ariy errors and later excesses; the result
‘ tlebnfit, worry, eta Develops
s and itrfailk to the sexasl or*
Stops unnatural looses or sslabUy
Iona caused by youthTul errors or ex-
ve use of tobarro. opium and liquor
h lead to cooaamptlon and lssaoolty.
rase shows Immediate Improvement. Accent
nltatlon. Insist upon having the genuine
iA Barriac no other. Conven-
"85 DCs 11“Oy lent to carry in vest
Price, 41.00 per box. six boxes, one full
aent,46.00. Guaranteed to cure any essae.
t kept by your druggist we will send them
11, upon receipt of price, in plain wrap-
Pamphlet free. Address all mall orders to
ICAH MEDICAL. CO., ClssrlnsssU, A
For sale by W. E. Willis.
Physician 6> Surgeon,
Honrs 10 to 18, a. m. A 8to;6,*p. m.
Office over Methvin Bros. Store
Rogers & Barton,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS-
Have moved their office to second
story of the Masonic building, over
Harris’ drug store, corner 12th St.
and Square.
Temple, - - Texas
E T. WALKER, M. D.
Local Surgeon fl.K.&T.Ry.
Lady Assistant in Office.
Wortham New Brick,
Ave. C, bet. 12th & 14th Sts.
Iff o. cox,
Cta&tdst Railroad
[Barth,
mta Fe Route.
j TEMPLE, - - TEXAS.
I Special attention given to mercantile .collec-
I tiona. Real Estate and Corporate Law, Refers
j without permicslon to any bank in the city.
{Teachers and others going to the National
locational Association meeting at Denver
if July, should remember that the Santa
|Te offers as low rates as anybody else, with
itter service.
j 8pecial inducements to small or large
artiea
j Tickets on sale July 3, 4, 5 and 6, limited
|o return July 12,18, 14 or 15, except that
acbers and others wishing to remain long-
rln Colorado, can obtain extension of limit
t either Denver, Colorado Springs, Manltan
Ir Pueblo, prior to July 16. TitkeU thus
1 eposited will be available for return pass-
age any time prior to and including Septem-
lst 1805.
Privilege of attending summer school at
olorado Springs, on return trip,
i Low rate excursions into the mountains
: meeting is over.
! For descriptive pamphlets, address
Wr. 8. KEF.FAN, G. P. A.
Galveston, Tex.
|it Picturesque Line
Solor&do-
Houses and lots on installments.
J. E. Moore.
SHILO’S CURE, the great congh and croup
cure, is in great demand. Pocket size contains
25 doses on 25 eta; Children love lit: For sale
by W. E, Willis. karl 6-9-eow
Dissolution Notice.
The copartnership formerly exist-
ing between T. E. Morgan and R.
N. Uselton under the firm name of
Morgan & Uselton, was by mutual
consent dissolyed April 8, 1895, T.
E. Morgan retiring. Mr. Uselton
will continue the business at the old
stand, assume ail responsibilities ot
the old firm and collect all accounts
due the same. T. E. Morgan,
4-12-4t. R. N. Uselton.
P. P. P.
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Wakes
Warvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up
■j the weak and debilitated, gives
strength to weakened nerves, expels
diseases, giving the patient health and
happiness where sickness, gloomy
feelings and lassitude first prevailed.
For primary, secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu-
rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and
In all blood and skin diseases, like
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas,
eczema—we may Bay, without fear of
contradiction, that P. P. P. is the best
blood purifier In the world, and makes
positive, speedy and permanent cures
In all cases.
Ladles whose systems are poisoned
and whose blood is In an impure condi-
tion, due to menatrual irregularities,
are peculiarly benefited by the won-
derful tonic and blood cleansing prop-
erties of P.P. P.-Prickly Ash, Poke
Boot and Potassium.
Sprinombld, Mo., Aug. 14th, 1893,
—I ean speak la the highest terms of
yourmedicluo from my own personal
knowledge. 1 was affected with heart
Urs, tried every * , ____
out finding relief. I have only taken
one Dottle of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully sny It has done me more
good than anything I have ever taken.
I oan recommend yonr medicine to all
.Offerer, of the above SaeneAe.Hy>
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
AND OLD SOHES
CATARRH, MALARIA.
KIDNEY TROUBLES
anil DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas-
sium, the greatest blood purifier on
earth.
Aberdeen, O., 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 done me more good than three
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs.
Bend three bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully yours
JAB. M. iiBWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, O.
Copt. S. D. Johnston.
To all whom it may concern: I here-
by testify to tho wonderful properties
or P. P. P. for eruptions or the skin. 1
, a Acred for several yoarswith.au un-
aightly and disagreeable eruption on
my face. I tried every known reme-
dy bo. In vain,until P. P. P. was used,
and am now entirely curod.
(Signed by) J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah, Ga.
ftfaln Cancer Cured.
Tettimony from the Mayor of Sequin,Tex.
Sequin, Tex. , January 14,1893.
Messrs. Lippman Bros.. Savannah,
Ga.: Oentlemen—I have tried your P.
A
means so much more than
you imagine—serious and
fatal diseases result from
trifling ailments neglected.1
Don’t play with Nature’s
greatest gift—health.
If you are feeling
out of sorts, weak
and generally ex-
hausted, nervous,,
have no appetite
and can't work, (
begin at oncetak- ^
meaicinc,wn,cn is
Brown’s Iron Bit-
ters. A lew bot-,
ties cure—benefit
comes from the,
very first dose—If
won’t itain yonr
teeth, and it’s
pleasant to take.
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments
Women’s complaints.
Get only the genuine—it has crossed red
lines on the wrapper. All others are sub-
stitutes. On receipt of two ac. stamps we
will send set of Ten Beautiful World’s
Fair View* and book—free.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD.
J. F. FLANIKEN, Oenaville,
J. J. BOOKER, Temple, Tex.
BRIAF? PIPE
GIVEN AWAY
UTH EVfty
‘ ONE
POUND
bale
OF
■P
DUKES
MIXTURE
for 3-£>cent's
Every pipe stamped
dukes Mixture or <^>
2 oz. Packages 5 ♦
Ride on The
Santa Fe
Route.
Red Express
The New Night Train on the
SANTA FE
Pullman Buffett Sleepers,
Free Reclining Chair Cars.
The Quickest Time between
North and South Texas.
A Solid Vestibuled train between
Galveston and St. Lo:>is
Alt :r 5 days Return to
P. P. for a disease of the skin, usually
known ss skin cancer,of thirty years’
standing, and found great relief; 1C
puriflestlie blood and romovosalf Ir-
ritation from the seat of the disease
and prevents any spreading of the
aores. I have taken flveor six bottles
and feel confident that another coarse
will effect a care. It has also relieved
me from Indigestion and stomaob
trouble*. Yours truly.
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Attorney at Law.
Bool on Blood Diseases Moiled Free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LIPPMIAN BROS.
PROPRIETORS.
Uppmn’i Block, tovanaab, CMC
W. L. Douglas
$3_SHOErl??s?.°K,
'3. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALF.
?4.*3.m Fine Calf JiKANCJUioa
♦ 3AP POLICE, 3 soles.
I
f boys'SchoolShoei
•ladies-
WSBUSSEta,
BRO C KTON^MASS.
Over Ono Million People wear the
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They give the best value for the money.
They equal custom Shoes In style and At.
Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed.
The prices are uniform,—stamped on sole.
From $i to $3 saved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can. Sold by
For Sale by"ED VIENO
Temple, Texas.
‘Ooin’i'FinanoUl School.”
The gold bug brethren are in deep
dispair over “Coin’s Financial
School.” They cannot answer the
facts and arguments that Coin sets
forth, and so they are protesting
against the framework on which the
facts and arguments are strung. It
is all very funny.
A man in Georgia writes to Col.
H.H.Kohlsaat of the Chicago Times-
Herald, to know if Coin gave any
lectures in that city. Col, Kohlsaat
takes advantage of the opportunity
to declare bitterly, even indignantly
that no such lectureB were ever giv-
en, and he goes on to complain that
the author of the book has given to
the late James W. Scott a son that
he never possessed.
This, of course, is terrible, but it
is not all. Horace White, of the
New York Evening Post, having
undertaken to reply to “Coin’s Fi-
nancial School,” began by writing to
the gold bugs whose names are men-
tioned in the volume if they had at-
tended the lectures. Horace White
never doubted that the lectures
were held, but he doubted very
much whether Lyman Gage, Prof.
Laughlin and other gold bugs could
be drawn into a public oral discus-
sion. These gentlemen promptly
wrote and told Horace they never
attended any such lectures.
We see very plainly what the
country is coming to. The next
man that writes an arithmetic, and
uses names and persons in giving
life to his problems, will find him-
self in trouble. Some Horace White
will write to find out whether the
transactions that are to be solved
really occurred, and if they did not
woe to the author of the arithmetic!
His book will be denounced as fic-
tion!
We shudder when we reflect what
the consequences would have been
if Horace White and Col. Kohlsaat
had been in good health when Arch-
bishop Whately wrote his “Historic
Doubts Relative to the Existence of
Napoleon Bonaparte.” Undoubted-
ly there would have been troble in
the air.
Meanwhile, get hold of a copy of
“Coin’s Financial School” and read
it. It disposes of all the gold bug
arguments.--Atlanta Constitution.
(From Onr Regular Correspondent.)
Fifty miners went out on a strike at
the Choctaw coal mines at Savanna, I.
T., a day or two ago, on account of a
misunderstanding over the screening
of coal.
The upper house of the Prussian diet
has referred to a special committee the
proposal of Count von Mir bach for an
international conference on the cur
rency question.
The marriageof Lord William Berea-
ford to the widowed duchess of Marl-
borough, formerly Mrs. Louise E. flam-
mersley of New York, will take place
in London shortly.
Cubans recently arrived at Tampa,
Fie., state that when Maceo captured
the convoy there were 1,300 Spaniards
killed and 170 wounded, against 80 Cu-
bans killed and wounded.
At Merrill, Wis., Mrs. John Coley
and her 3-vear-old child were burned
to death by being enveloped by the
flames from a pot of pitch which the
woman was boiling for gum.
The school board of St. Louis recent-
ly decided that unvaccinated scholars
would not be admitted to the publio
schools, and, upon an appeal, the court
of appeals sustained the board.
Mr. M. Leavitt, proprietor of the
Denver theather, Col., has filed a suit
of 912,000 damage against Mrs. Lang-
try for not fulfilling a contract to ap-
pear in his theater three year ago.
Between March 10 and 28 in the prov-
ince of Podolia, Russia, there were 11
cases of cholera and 6 deaths. From
March 10 to 16 there were 56 cases of
cholera and 4 deaths in the province of
Volhynia.
It is reported that the Masso broth-
ers, commanding the insurgents at Hol-
guin, Cuba, had gained a signal vic-
tory on March 29. defeating the Span-
ish troops, killing 26, wounding 132,
ind capturing 12.
Five transports having infantry and
eavalry on board were hurried away
from Shimoneska on the day previous
to the official declaration of the armis-
tiae. This would indicate that the
Japanese military were still active.
As the Santa Fe passenger train was
passing through Cross, Ok., one night
recently, some person threw several
stones through the car windows, from
which the eye one of the passengers
was nearly put out by pieces of glass.
Governor Stone of Missouri has ap-
proved a house bill recently passed bv
the Missouri legislature, under which
train robbing is made a capital offense
should the jury decide to inflict so seri-
ous a penalty. The penalty ranges
from hanging to imprisonment in the
penitentiary.
At Cushing, Ok., one day recently,
Chas. Wilson, Chas. Moore and .Jack
Sims, cowboys, started in to take the
town, and after smashing everything
in a saloon they commenced a raid in
another part of that town. The peo-
ple soon rallied and killed one of the
raiders and captured the other two.
The spirit of war rose high at .Jack-
sonville, Fla., at a big meeting held in
that town one night recently in behalf
of the Cuban cause. Speeches were
made by prominent Cubans and their
American sympathisers, and it was re-
solved to push the war against Spain
and Spanish rule to the bitter end.
Washington, D. C. May 3.
Members of the admfn’stration
who are to take the road for the
purpose of talking finance, have
been, it is said, instructed by Presi-
dent Cleveland not to talk gold
standard, but to confine themselves
to fighting the free coinage of silver
and advocating a “sound currency.”
This does not mean that President
Cleveland has abandoned his single
gold standard ideas, but that the
cold reception given to Secretary
Morton’s open advocacy of a single
gold standard has made him cau-
tious. The whole power of the ad-
ministration is to be used to pre-
vent the free coinage men capturing
the next democratic national con-
vention. But such conservative
democrats as senator Jones, of Ark.
wno is now in Washington, are pre-
dicting that the next democratic
convention will declare in favor of
the free and unlimited coinage of
silver, and that the republican con-
vention will adopt a plank favoring
international bimetallism. If these
predictions turn out to. be correct,
where will Mr. Cleveland stand in
the next campaign?
Carl Browne turned up in Wash-
ington this week to celebrate the
anniversary of the attempt ofCoxey’s
army of the commonweal to hold a
meeting on the capitol stops last
year. He is as talkative as ever, but
he is otherwise a very different
looking man from Coxey’s lieuten-
ant. Instead of the leather suit,
slouch hat and flannel shirt, which
were then the most notable articles
in his apparel, he now wears a black
frock coat, striped trousers, well
blacked shoes and a shiny silk hat,
and looks like the politician that he.
really is. He says he expects to be
sent to jail for criminal libel in the
case which is to be tried at Canton,
Ohio, the first of next month.
In an open letter to President
Cleveland, published here this week,
Senator Stewart arraigns the ad-
ministration for allowing both its
foreign and its financial policy to be
dominated by Great Britain. He
says ironically in that open letter:
“It now appears that your wise and
patriotic statesmanship is not con-
fined to the limits of a sound British
financial policy for the people of the
United States, but includes your
cordial co-operation in the policy of
conquest and dominion for tho
mother country.”
“Your success in eliminating from
the constitution the insolent assump-
tion of an iddependent financial pol-
icy for the United States inspires a
reasonable hope that you may be
able in the near future, not only to
render obsolete that othe.’ prepos-
terous assumption found in the pre-
tended authority, in the aforesaid
insubordinate instrument, to raise,
revenues by duties on imports, but
also to remove every other unnatur-
al obstruction to the legitimate au-
thority of Great Brittain to manage
and control our domestic affairs
from the same magnanimous and
disinterested motives that she now
manages and controls our foreign
affairs.” * * “Do not be discour-
aged by the crazy clamor of un-
thinking cranks for an independent
financial policy for an independent
foreign policy for tho United States
but continue to regard such un-
reasonable contentions as resulting
from narrow prejudice, engendered
by such rebels, fanatics and anarch-
ists as Washington, Jefferson, Mail-
son, Monroe. Jackson, Lincoln, and
the deluded followers.”
Nobody seems to know just whore
the administration “is at” in that
England-Nicaragna business. Sena-
tor Morgan, of Ala., who is chair-
man of the senate committee on
foreign relations, the members of
which it 1ms been the custom of all
administrations to consult, said in
a public interview,bristling through-
out with stalwart. Americans, that
he did not know what the adminis-
tration had done or what it intend
ed to do, but lie made it very plain
that he had no doubts about what it
ought to do. A lively time may be
expected when congress calls for the
correspondence relating to this af-
fair, as it is certain to do soon after
the assembling of the next session,
and unless that correspondence is
different from what it is supposed
to be, President Cleveland will find
the next congress nun h more disa-
greeable than the last one. which
he complained so much about.
Mrs. Lei and Stanford was in
Washington this week to confer
with the attorney general concern-
ing the suit which 1the government
has brought against the estate of
| her husband, the late Senator Stan-
ford. She wants t
suit expedited, as it if <
the estate, and the attorney gener-
al promised her he would push it
along as fast as he could. This suit
is brought under the laws of Cali-
fornia, which makes each stockhold-
er of a corporation liable for his
proportion of its debts, in anticipa-
tion of this failure of the Central
Pacific railroad, in which the Stan-
ford estate owns $15,000,000 of
stock, to pay $60,000,000 it owes the
government.
W. E. Werkheiser, formerly agent
of the Katy at this point, has pur-
chased half interest in the gin, mill-
ing and fire business of E. B. Great-
house. The firm name will be E. B,
Greathouse & Co. In addition to
their present business they will
erect a large storage warehouse for
handling all kinds of grain and hay,
seeds, baling ties, grain sacks, etc.
The Star Tin Shop will do your
tin work and sell you a cistern
cheaper than you can get it else-
where. Hawkins & White.
Some fine Jersey cows and a fine
mule. J E. Moore.
IF YOU NEED a blood medicine XIX Sarsa-
parilla U surely the beat. Price 75 ceuta. For
sale by W. E. Wtllia.
I have some excellent feeding lots
near Temple, on fair terms,
J, E, Moore.
SHILO'S CURE tne gieat cough and crotftt
enre, is in great demand. Pocket size contains
25 doses only 25 eta; children love It. For sale
by W. E. Willis. karl 0-9-eow
For whooping cough Chamber-
lains cough remedy is excellent. By
using it freely the disease Is depriv-
ed of all dangerous consequences.
There is no danger in giving the rem-
edy to babies. 35 and 50cent bottles
tor sale by W. E. Willis.
I CONSIDER XIX the grandest liniment for
aches and pains I ever saw. DR J T, ANTONY
Strawu, Tex. For sale by W, E. VVllUa. 2-7-2
KARL’S CLOVER ROOT will purify your
blood and clear your complexion; It 1b guarnn
teed to dothis, is It not worth yonr time to try
it? For srle by W. E. Willis, karl tl-9-eow
Money to Loan.
Mechanics and others wishing to
build, but having wo money to com-
plete their buildings, can be ac-
commodated at reasonable terms
by E. A. Visskr.
Office of Carey Lombard Lumber Co.
XIX LINIMENT cured me of a Dad case ef
flux. A II HOONE, Ex-Att’y. Gen. Navasota
Texas. For sale by W. E. Willis. 1st 6-2*
A lady at Tooley’s, La. was very
sick with bilious colic when T. C.
Tisler gave her a bottle of Chamber-
lains colic, cholera and diarrhoea
remedy. She was well in forty
minutes after taking the first dose.
For sale by W. E. Willis.
Have some handsome building lots
inside and outside at living prices
and terms J. E. Moore.
A Great Offer.
The “twice a week edition of the
New York World, formerly the
weekly, has proved a phenomenal
success. It is a semi-weekly of six
pages, mailed Tuesdays and Fridays,
eight columns to the page; forty-
eight columns each issue. It 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 samplecopies
address the World, N. Y.
Arrangements have been made by
which we can furnish this paper and
the twice-u-week New York World
all for $2.25 a year. Take advantage
of this offer and get your own local
paper and the twice a-week World
at this special rate.
Lots on installments , a large pair
of mules and wagon lor sale or trade.
J. E. Moore.
XIX gave more relief lrom weak back than
anything 1 over tiseu. JOITN JACOBS, Cle-
burne, Tex. For attlo by W. K, Willis 2-7-2
Ex-Confederate Reunion.
At Houston, Tex. On May 20th
the Katy will set out at their depot
here one or more of the fine chair
cars so that all who contemplate at-
tending can, at their convenience,
secure seats and be assured of hav-
ing a comfortable and pleasant trip
to Houston without change of cars.
A special train at 10 a. m. of tho
20th will pick up these cars and.
reach Houston about 5:30 p. m. We
will give our personal attention to
these matters and assure all who
patronize our line that everything
promised will be complied with.
Fare $5.00 for round trip. For fur-
ther particulars call on or address
W. B. Blaine, Agt.
1
.......
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Crow & Arnold. The Temple Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1895, newspaper, May 10, 1895; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585354/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.