The Sonora Sun. (Sonora, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 47, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 26, 1907 Page: 7 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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i
—
4 INDIA.
ith Was Car-
.Hyderabad.
whether the
pouted or im-
i the Civil and
tilting an exe-
a Pathan who
-In-law, as Is
•ed mail’s rela-
sister of the ^
ath. W
xecutlon there
ts a band of
>afy twigs, foi-
the city Arab
nonets. Then
eased in new
a new halter
new ropes at-
The ends of
by policemen,
i for the con-
mt in this case
at he had to be
fatal spot the
0 kneel down,
handed over
the execution-
whom, seizing ^
stood in front
there held the
ns behind. The
Ing a broad,
1 a razor, in a
id prancing up
ied three times
) authorizes the
r of the city po-
replied: “The
armed with a
the condemned
Ing him to start
le Instant those
aid themselves
actions as in a
vith the result
c was stretched;
ply of the chief
oner's blade de-
le on the neck,
mpletely.
the Navy.
ers the United
icted for his phy-
is mental ability,
because the sea-
iil there are few
ase among them,
ly few eonsump-
ra. But thp navy
do arrangements
iccording to the
>ds.
is the sailors call
• Is given instruc-
Pensacola, Fla.,
im for consump-
rs Guy F. O’Don-
rie, who was for-
the sanitarium,
s nothing more
ip. It consists of
as tents built on
i. The sides can
sred, as weather
Here (he patients
lom of the camp,
oors, taking long
louthern sunshine, A
deep in the open wP
form the principal
iry little medicine
City Star.
Under Glass.
ipes for the table
i, and under glass,
n rustic spot that
flourishes, but in
itropolitan suburb
r Brussels. Here
;ion of glass—noth-
a wide vista. The
the shows of the
trs and sightseers
rers of table fruit
he subject extends
■ dessert stand will
ied to learn that it 4
hothouse, but from w
e great fruiterers
he Riviera, Vienna,
iurg, and, mirable
York, receive the
ar supplies. Every
if chests of choice
packed, are de-
nited States alone.,
laert is a minimum
id on the vine, with
for packing. The
re those that weigh
I Amenities.
T. Maher, a well-
man of Taunton,
lisfortune to break
s attended by Dr.
ho hnd Dr. Joseph
t him In setting the
n undertaker and a
Mr. Maher’s, mado
him to ieat the leg
t to the Maher resi-
•rtaking wagon. Dr.
■re, and a few min-
ge came in.
gentlemen,'' ho said,
mt coining In this
r like to enter my
then I see an under-
lie door. How is it
ay ward?”
r. Hayward, 'T never
ir's team at my pa-
ds Do It.
k had just finished
inge, his thornless
elcss potato.
[i going to originate
asked him.
campaign,” replied
DEVICE FOR BINDING FODDER.
Can Be Made at Home and la Easily
Operated.
| A. H. Denison, Kansas, writes In
one of our exchanges and suggests a
plan for binding fodder. He uses a
lever between two small uprights A
and B, as shown in illustration. The
loose fodder is pressed into the open-
ing between A and B and by down-
safrar"
TAKING CARE OF TOOLS.
They 8!iould Be Under Shelter and In
Their Place*.
HEREDITARY TENDENCIES
OF WELL-BRED COLTS
One of the greatest needs on the ____________
farm is for a system by which the 9
tools may be tukca care of. I heard Whue Not Born Diseased, They Are More Liable to Develop
a farmer the other day make the
remark that he hud a seed tirill that
he had used for JO years and that it
would not have lusted 10 years if it
had not been kept In the shed. That
illustrates the difference in the ways
of keeping tools. One farmer will
leave his tools out in the sun and
rain, and in 10 years an expensive
tool is ruined. Another will use tli<
greatest of care about ills tools, and
in 30 years the same kind of a too'
will be good for still more use.
I find that It is not always expen
bIvo to build a tool shed if one can-
not afford a tool house, writes a cor-
Unsoundness of Either Parent.
In breeding animals certain diseases
are termed “herdltary” in that ex-
perience has proved that the sire or
dam affected with anyone of such dis-
eases is liable to transmit or convey
to the offspring a tendency, suscepti-
bility or predisposition to contract or
develop a like disease. The foal of
unsound parentage inay not come into
the world diseased, but it inherits a
predisposition to disease which will
be likely to appear as an actuality
In 1 when the animal, at any age or stage
to influ-
The Fodder Binder.
' word movement of lever is pressed
into a small compass. The band is
then readily adjusted. The whole de-
vice is supported by the square piece
C, so that it may be moved from
place to place. We do not know to
what extent this will prove entirely
practical, hut it is possible that it will
suggest a useful idea to some of our
r< nders.
respondent of Farmer’s Review.
the building of two of my out-lvilld of its existence, is exposed
ings a barn and a shop for general onces, circumstances or conditions fa-
work, I bad them placed so that the vorable to the development or cause
back of the shop made a right angle of such a disease. <(
I’lth the back of the barn. In those For example the colt from a “heavy
-1 sides no windows were needed, tnaro does not come into the world
id this left two sides already con- afflicted with “heaves” but it inherits
struct ed for my tool shed. Then all the gluttonous appetite characteristic
I had to do was to extend a roof from af animals affected with this disease
the shop and barn and 1 had a good and, in addition, a possible weakness
shed for my large tools. The smaller af the digestive organs and lungs due
tools are taken care of in my work to like weakness of those organs in
shop I the affected parent,. If a horse, with
I find that the best plan for taking j such a herdltary predisposition is al-
KEEPING ACCOUNTS.
How One Farmer Figures Out
Profit on His Cows.
the
The ever-recurring bookkeeping-
bugbear brings to mind a recent in-
terview with one of the largest farm-
ers in the east, who is a bright man
and a large wholesale baker, Thomas
Kelley. He said: As a business man
I have learned that the books must be
kept right if the proprietor i3 cncour-
I ^fcaged and not discouraged, and is led
I to venture into the business still more
extensively. The rule applies as well
to farming as to other business.
In operating my four large farms, I
charge them with only the wages,
with things bought and with the other
real expenses, and never with things
the farm produces. If, for instance, 1
debit the farm with Us own hay that
is used, I really charge the hay twice
because the wages paid help have pro-
duced that hay just as much as the
■wages set the fence posts and do the
work.
No man Is right if he figures that
the hay sold is worth a stated sum
and hence milk is produced at. such a
cost. If I wronged my farms that way
in my bookkeeping I would appear to
be losing money every year and 1
would soon dispose of my country
property, for to carry on a business
one is not skillful enough to conduct
profitably, is not reasonable.
This winter I shall keep 130 cows,
^-feeding 300 tons of bay. If I figure
^Blhat. bay at its market value I find
^^that my milk costs me more than I
can buy it for in the open market, but
don’t do so. Neither do I figure in the
wear &nd tear on the stock. I merely
charge a cow’s actual shrinkage in
value between the time I buy her and
her selling price. This is an actual,
not an imaginary transaction. If 1
hire help and am so lacking in skill
that I do not raise what hay, stalks,
grain, etc., I require and have to buy
them, I must charge up the things
bought, of course, just as I credit my
milk, eggs and potatoes. I am not
satisfied with a cow unless I can clear
an actual profit on her every day, even
If it Is not more than five cents, and
the manure.
care of small tools and of parts of
large tools is to have a great many
pegs and hooks on the side of the
shop. The tools are then always in
sight and if one always puts the same
tools in the same places it is not a
difficult matter to find them when
wanted. A tool that, cannot, he found
when wanted is about the same as no
tool.
One of the greatest troubles on the
farm Is to compel the hired men to
put the horse tools In the shed. One
farmer that I know says he never
allows a man to unhitch his horse3
from a machine till it is at the door
of the shed. Then it is an easy mat-
ter to put it in. This seems a little
bit tyrannical, but with some men it
is about the only way of getting the
things looked after.
No matter how much care is taken
with the machinery In the way of pro-
viding a shed for it, I find that it must
have careful attention on the part of
the owner to make sure that the nuts
are kept tight on all the wheel ma-
chines. One of the most vexatious
things about tlio care of farm ma-
chines is the tendencies for the bolts
to work off and get lost. The working
off of a single nut on the end of a bolt
may put the machine out of use for
hours and perhaps days. The nuts
work off because they are not looked
after. I wish some one would invent
some system of making It Impossible
for nuts to work off.
There is another thing that should
be kept in mind and that is if the
bolts are permitted to be loose the
machinery will wear out rapidly, as
the play between parts is very de;
structive to the several parts. I do
not believe that any kind of a tool
will last very many years unless the
bolts and nuts are kept tight when
the machine is being used.
FOR HANDLING MANURE.
lowed to eat all the coarse, bulky, tn-
nutrltlous or dusty hay or fodder it
cares for and, at the same time, is
made to work hard, whllo its organs
are distended abnormally, it will he
likely in time to develop heaves.
A horse not born with the predispo-
sition referred to may, possibly be ex-
posed to exactly the same conditions
yet not develop heaves. “One is
taken and the oilier left.” In a stable
containing a large number of horses
one or two may develop heaves while
the others escape, although fed and
worked in the same way. We should
avoid producing horses having such
such as colt distemper (strangles),
influenza, or weakness from worms
or malarial environment may bring it
into evidence. It is only by breeding
from stallions and mares having per-
fectly sound eyes that we can reason-
ably expect to produce horses free
from heiditary predisposition to eye
disease and therefore unlikely to suf-
fer from such disease.
Carry out this idea as regards all
other diseases set down as hereditary.
The “spavined” sire or dam does not
necessarily produce offspring actually
affected with spavin but susceptibility
to tlie troublo is inherited or there is
a weakness of the hock Joint, or a cer-
tain imperfoct formation of the hind
log and hock that induces spavin
when the parts are exposed to any
undue strain. So Is it with “bog
spavin” and "curb" and thoro’pin;”
with “ringbones," and sideboties;"
with navicular disease” and "chorea.”
The actual diseases are not trans-
mitted but the offspring of sire or
dam affected with a hereditary dis-
ease is rendered liable to contract the
same disease under conditions favor-
ing its development.
It Is as necessary, therefore, that
tho brood mares should be sound as
that the soundness of the breeding
stallions should be made imperative.
Indeed we never can expect to have
sound breeding stock whllo either side
of tho breeding equation is unsound
It takes “like" to produce “like,” as
a general proposition, and when tho
mares are unsound tho sound stal-
lions will be unable to offset the un-
soundness.
Tho stallion owner could, if he
£/m
n
EXAMINING A HORSE.
How One May Judge of the Animal’s
Soundness.
These are the Instructions of a
noted horseinuu published by the
Prairie Farmer.
The first tiling for a prospective
purchaser to do In examining a horse
for soundness is to walk up in front
of him and see that he has a bright,
cheerful eye. Then step around at
once side and look through the eyes
to see if any defect Is noticeable from
that point of view. Sometimes there
Is a cataract or scar upon the ball
or pupil that is visible only from the
side. The cataract, in Its earlier
stages,, will apear like a small white
spot on tho pupil In Its earlier stage.
Next look in tho mouth to deter-
mine age; also to soe that, the teeth
shut together evenly. Avoid an an-
BALANCING THE HORSE.
How the Shoeing Must
Done.
Be Exactly
ITEMS.
The man or boy who can not control
his children, horse or dog by his voice
alono, without having his hands on
them, Is not a good trainer; and if he
loses his temper his influence is gone.
The American Agriculturist reports
a shortage in the western hay crop,
according to canvass, of something
like 8.000,000 tons under last year’s
yield. In the east the crop was on the
whole a little above the average, and
It is likely that prices will he better
also.
Scarcely any other grain lias shown
the adantabillty of corn. A native of
the warm, moist parts of South Amer-
ica, it has gradually fought Its way
into the colder and dryer regions,
until there are few sections in which
it can not be profitably grown. Its
adaptability Is shown in the fact that
in the far north the plant is iow and
spreading, but maturing its ears all
the same.—Farm Journal. .
Put Cart Body on Drag For Use on
the Snow.
To get out manure in winter, when
there is a moderate amount of snow
upon the ground, try this plan, sug-
gests Farm Journal: Set the cart
body on the “drag,” or stone boat, as
suggested in the cut. The load can
be spread in the field with great ease,
Cart Body on Drag.
because it is down so low; and load-
ing at the barn is also easy for a sim-
ilar reason. If there is a manure
shed to which the manure is wheeled
daily, empty the barrow Into the cart.
When this is full, haul to the fields.
i
41
tern;
liflly
Names and Location of External Parts
of Horse.
3, muzzle; 2, face; a, forehead; 4. poll;
6, crest; 8, cheek; 7, lower Jaw; 8, throat;
9, neck; 10, withers; 11, point of shoulder;
12, breast; 18, elbow; 14. forearm; 18, knee;
18, cannon or shank; 17, fetlock; 18, pas-
n; 19, coronet; 20, foot; 21, girth; 22,
y; 28, tlank; 21, hack; 28, loin; 28,
haunch or hip; 27. croup; 28, dock; 29,
thigh or quarter; 80, tower thigh or gas-
kin; 31, hock; 82, heel.
Imnl that Is either under-shot or over-
shot, as horBcmon express it, tlie lat-
ter frequently being called a parrot
mouth.
While in front of the horse look
straight down at his front legs to
see if there are any Punches, knee-
cups or splints.
A splint is located anywhere be-
tween the knee and the ankle, and
is found only on tho front legs, it
takes the form of a bony substance
on the inside of the leg. It seldom
causes lameness unless near a joint,
hut it is liable to give trouble and Is
to be avoided in making a purchase.
Rook over the body of the horse
to see that there are no ruptures,
then examine for soundness of wind.
It is not always possible to anold
mistakes in this direction. Watch the
flank for unnatural or jerking action.
Sometimes a horse with heaves shows
A great many people don’t know
what a man means when he saye he
wants “that horse balanced up so that
he can travel." Balancing a horse
means a whole lot. He must be bal-
anced as perfectly as a pair of mer-
chant's scales. If the blacksmith, as
a borseshoer. would take care to get
the inside of the foot the same height
as the outside, and get the shoe the
right length, there is no trouble. Home
smiths, says the Montreal Herald, will
put on a shoe one-half inch too short,
and if the animal goes lame he doesn't
know wliat's the matter. Some horses
will wear a shorter shoe than others
because of the difference In the de-
grees in the shape of the hoof. Some
want a long toe and some a short
one. Therefore there will be a dif-
ference of 40 to 47 degrees, and on a
short toe you will find that the horse
will stand straighten that is, tho up-
per pastern Joint will come more di-
rectly over tho foot. With a long
toe yon will find that the upper past-
ern Joint will drop back more or less.
An easy way to get the length of the
shoe you want is to take a square and
pi,-we It on the floor. Ret the tongue
of the square come to the center of
tho pastern Joint and then see how
many incites you have front the toe
to tho heel, if you follow this rule
you will huve fewer lame horses.
Another authority asks these perti-
nent questions: Does the horse's hoof
fully cover the entire lower border of
tho wall, or is It too narrow or fitted
so full on the inside that it lias given
riso to Interfering, or has the shoe
been nailed on crooked, or lias it bo-
como loose and Hhlfted? Is it too
short or so wide at tho ends of the
branches as not to support the but-
tresses of the hoof? Does the shoo
correspond with the form of tho hoof?
Are the nails distributed so as to in-
terfere as little as possible with the
expansion of the quarters? Are there
too many? Aro they too large? These
are points tho horse owner should as-
certain in order that any faults ob-
served may bo corrected.
GREAT DEMAND FOR EWES.
Higher
Prices Being Realized for
Good Stock.
Night Work on the Farm.
Night, work on the farm Is not to be
tolerated. The old plan of working
from four o'clock in the morning till
nine o’clock at night was responsible
for creating a disgust for farm work,
and both the boy and the girl shared
this disgust. On many farutB now no
work is done after six o’clock p. m ,
and this is right. There Is no reason
why hours should be longer on the
farm than In the city. But on the
.farm more time needs to be taken at
noon so that the morning and evening
“chores” will come further apart. We
doubt, however, if the “eight-hour
day" ever becomes the rule on the
farm, especially on the farm that Is
devoted to some extent to the raising
of live stock. Farm animals refuse to
Government Model Farm*.
James J. Hill, president of the Great
Northern railway, believes that model
farms should be established In every
agricultural county of the United
States, under control of the several
state governments, or of the national
government, or of the two conjointly
Such fat ms, he argues, would radiate
intelligence, activity and reform in
tillage, with the possibility of doubling
the farm product of the country
Might It not be worth while," he
argues, “to expend the sum that such
a system would cost, even though li
should be necessary to postpone for
another year the building of a battle
ship or a couple of cruisers?” A sig
nifleant declaration by Mr. Hill U thal
such a scheme should be kept out ol
the clutches of the spoils system.
Effect of Straw Plowed In.
Where straw Is cut tip and plowed
into the soil, it materially helps th«
soil, if the soil is deficient in potaa
slum. The truth of this has been
forced on people that have tried the
application of straw on land of this
character. The resultant growth ol
grain, however, will be disappointing,
as the straw will give enough potas-
sium to help out the formation of the
stalk of the grain but not enough to
gtr« ihe best results in the way of a
harvest. The same result will occur
adapt their ueeds to the eight hour | if too little of a deficient manurial
lei
plan.
1 element be applied.
"LIKE PRODUCES LIKE.”
Two views of hind leg of Wi*consln-bred mare showing ringbones, bone
spavin and other bony excrescences. Subject was the progeny of an
old, crippled mare; at three years developed a bone epavin which was
“fired;” at four years developed ringbones and’ at five years bony
growths formed on back of leg and animal having become useless was
destroyed.
a hereditary predisposition as this
so that it is wise to retire from
breeding all stallions or mares af-
flicted with diseases such as “roar-
ing,” "broken wind,” "asthma" or
“heaves.”
Many farmers have erroneously
been informed that “wolf teeth" cause
eye troublo In horses. Tho "wolf
teeth” usnally are discovered about
the time the colt commences to de-
velop “periodic ophthalmia” or “moon
blindness” and are blamed for the
trouble. There Is not a vestige In this
belief. The "wolf teeth” are lnsigfl-
cant, rudimentary teeth (relics of the
seventh molars of the prehistoric
horse) and may be shed by the time
the horse Is seven or eight years old.
They have no connection with the
sudden appearance of eye disease, but
the latter Is due to herdltary predispo-
sition acquired from affected parents
or ancestry and aggravated Into actual
disease by irritation and Inflamma-
tion or unsanitary surroundings and
Influences.
The eye trouble usually appears
when the colt is "rising three” and Is
aggravated into existence by the cut-
ting through of IS molar teeth and the
shedding of 12 molars. If the heredi-
tary predisposition to control eye dis-
ease Is absent the tooth-cutting irri-
tation and Inflammation do not affect
the eyes but, if the predisposition is
present, dentition Irritation, the de-
bilitating affects of some disease.
would, he the most potent power for
good in this direction. Having a pure-
bred, sound stallion it would bo great-
ly to his advantage to allow his horse
to serve only mares that he consid-
ers perfectly suitable. At present he
feels Inclined to accommodate any
owner of mares knowing that the
“scrub” or grade stallion will be used
if be refuses to allow his horse to
servo, and. for this reason, many a
fine stallion falls to make a Rixtd
name as a breeder because the foals
he sires front unsound and unsuitable
mares are of poor quality and there-
fore criticised by Interested persons
who desire to Injure his reputation.
It would bo well for our horse breed-
ing Industry could every stallion own-
er see his way clear to reject any
mare that is either unsound or unsuit-
able and could such discrimination
become general It would*quickly tend
to Improve horse stock.
DR. A. B. ALEXANDER.
Turnips for Sheep.—Probably tur-
nips are more desirable than any
other succulent food for all kinds of
sheep. The animals aro very fond of
them and also relish mangels near
spring time. Sugar beets are gen-
erally quite satisfactory.
Forcing Tomatoes.—Ohio growers
have decided that It la not profitable
to grow a crop of tomatoes in mid-
winter tinder glass, in northern lati-
tudes. Prices are not high enough.
only in tlio nostrils when not ex-
ercising. The breathing should be
regular, anything of a labored char-,
acter is suspicious.
Next take a position directly oppo-
site the hind quarters and look for
curb, ringbone and thorough pin. A
curb Is known by an enlargement of
the back part of the hock joint. A
ringbone Is a bony enlargement Just
about the hoof and may appear upon
either front of hind legs.
A spavin comes on the inside of the
log below the hock joint, a hard bony
substnnee more or less perceptible. A
thoroughpln Is located directly in the
hock joint, and is known by a small
puff in the skin on opposite sides. By
pressing tho linger over tho spot on
the outside It may ho felt on the In-
side of the leg, and vice versa. In
later Htages It becomes hardened.
To one familiar with handling
horses it Is not even necessnry to pass
the band over the different parts to
detect these evidences of uiiHoiindnoss,
although the Inexperienced may find
it a help to do so.
Rook for shoe boil on the elbow,
or upper extremity of the front leg.
These are really blemishes rather than
unsotindnesH, the same being true of
wind puffs found just above the
ankles.
Above all be sure the feet are per-
fect. The saying, “No foot no horse,'
is a true one.
Be sure there are no quarter cracks
In the hoof. Ret the heel be fairly
high and the foot well cupped, which
means that It should have a concave
under surface. A black hoof is consid-
ered harder than a wtiite one, although
there ut-e many white hoofs which
wear well.
Rastly, take a position behind the
animal and notice hla hips. They
should be exuctly alike In outline.
Sec that the tall Is carried straight.
Like the shoe boil and the wind puff
this Is only a blemish hut detracts
somewhat from the animal's value
commercially. For the same reaaon
note the way he walks.
After all these instructions have
been followed out go back to the head
and look hint over on the other side.
There are many little tricks or
characteristics certain horses have, as
well as peculiarities of disposition,
which can only be discovered by use.
The above, however, will enable the
beyer to detect actual soundness if
It exists
The Pig Bath.
Oa swine breeder has tried the ex-
periment of constructing a bath for
his h4tgs, and claims they like it. He
says that Ihe trouble Is that all the
pigs went to get Into the bath at the
same time. The bath Is used so often
that It keeps the skins of the hogs and
trig* always clean .
Never In the history of the sheep
business at Chicago has the demand
for breeding ewes been as strong as
tills year and never before were so
many shipped out. says Chicago Rive-
stock World. Buyers who aro not able
to get as many as they wanted here
have gone to the range country and
bought them direct from tlie ranch-
men. Under the pressure of such a
keen demuud values have advanced
very noticeably and stand at a re-
markably high level. That fact is not
a discouraging feature, however, for u
good ewe at present prices produces
a lamb equal to her own value and
will #ield enough wool to pay for her
keep. On this basis ewes are a good
investment and many people are be-
ginning to recognize It. The fact that
more ewes are being bought hy the
farmers in the corn belt does not sig
nlfy that there will lie a surplus of
sheep raised, for the more they buy
the more the crop on tho range is cut
down. It is Just a matter of trans
ferrlng ownership. With the range
crop being marketed closer than usual
and the demand for mutton increasing,
the probabilities are that prices will
be as high next year as they are now.
CURE FOR HEAD TO88ERS.
Adjustment of a
Nose I*
Strap Across
Effective.
I have a handy device for keepliiR
the horse from throwing his head up
and down which works successfully,
writes a correspondent of Prairie
Farmer.
I first take a small strap, something
like a hamc strap, only I use a buckle
on both ends. I put thlH strap across
tho nose and buckle to each side of
The Strap In Place.
the bridle Just above the ring* of tho
bit. It is then drawn tight enough so
as to press against the horse’s nose.
In the cut the strap Is illustrated as
attaching to the rings of the bridle
bit. This will work all right provid-
ing the horse is not too tender bitted.
How On* Farmer Feeds.
I feed hay and no straw, using my
straw for bedding and working it Into
the manure, says a correspondent of
Farm aud Home. I do not buy any
grain to feed, as I raise what I want.
My grain ration Is wheat and oats, and
peas and oats. I have It ground and
it makes good feed for ail kinds of
stock. I feed all my stock, except
working team, two feeds a day. 1 feed
turnips first in the morning, then hay;
water at night, then feed meal and
then hay. I have fed this way for two
years and 1 think my stock do belter
than with threo feeds. I feed wnat
hay tha cattle will eat up clean, an4
tour quarts of meal at a feed.
..r.-JMklSaJ
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Woodruff, D. B. The Sonora Sun. (Sonora, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 47, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 26, 1907, newspaper, January 26, 1907; Sonora, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth979358/m1/7/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Sutton+County%22: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .