The Trans Pecos News. (Sanderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 22, 1905 Page: 3 of 6
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K
fe-.
HI
Sing!
Heart of mine,
ftod let tbe Modreus
iBusic of % voice
fill all the world iwtb Xighf.
Sing and rejoice!
For nztiiySUseBlorcL
love toft dispelled
(fee ttougirt of oigb!.
itnd Messed topes upsprtoj,
like fragrant flowers
fiwfte awakened $«L
anftfcgmftoeffvi
JttftetmrtofGod.
(toreisnofleaft,
for We and lm
Are His dominion
ited every breath
Of bohf aspirafum
2^1
a
tut draws owe spirits
'ill M His; and we
ftetisen indeed*
Or mortality
V
ftnaik
—TJ»* MilMtlHt
Good Friday Superstitions
It is pretty safe to assert that hu- | the idea of a lesson in penitential
man conduct is controlled more by
unwritten laws and ancient custom
than by the statutes, of the existence
of which many are made aware for
the first time when, having unwitting-
ly transgressed them, they are caUod
upon to suffer the consequence pun-
ishment.
How otherwise is to he explained
the conscientious keeping up of quaint
observances which are required
neither by written law nor apparent
reason?
These customs are, as a rule, as-
sociated with red letter days of tha
ecclesiastical calendar, and Good Fri-
day has its share of this old-fashion-
ed devotion. With some women in
the English midlands there is a p>
tent belief that on the great fast-day
of the year it is wholly impious t6
do the family washing or scrubbing,
though to bake or sew is perfectly
permissible employment. And though
to enter upon an understanding on
ordinary Friday is, as a rule, looked
upon as a step of ill-omen, yet the
beginning of the year’s work in the
garden is with many among the
working classes religiously reserved
for Good Friday, and in propitious
spring weather it Is a very agreeable
sight to see the men at their health-
ful “spade work”—to borrow a phrase
from current politicial rhetoric—in
their limited urban garden plots, or
more open suburban allotments. The
day could hardly be better spent by
men confined to factories or ware-
houses in their quest of a livelihood,
and, as it is the first week day in the
year that they get free from their
ordinary avocations, its consecration
to garden work is in some measure
explained. But it is just possible that
.the custom is a survival of the belief
that prevailed in old monastic times
when Calvary clover, the blood-spot-
ted little plant with a seed pot case
which, when pulled out, resembles a
miniature crown of thorns, was sup-
posed not to grow unless sown od
Good Friday. Or is it due to a be-
lief that the beneficent influence of
the holy day extends no less to ma
terial than to spiritual matters, as is
confessed in some parts of the coun-
try, where the good folk say that
cross buns made on that day never
become mouldy, and that a Good Fri-
day baked loaf hung in the kitchen
averts ill-luck, and crumbs grated
from it as required are an excellent
remedy for numerous ailments?
A Cornish custom indissolubly con-
nects the gathering of limpets, cockles
and winkles with Good Friday, and
the practice of flocking to the water
to gather the shellfish on that day,
once general throughout the country,
is still observed in some of its out-
of-the-way corners. But the origin of
this quaint custom is far to seek, as
is that of playing marbles, with which
innocent pastime both boys and men
in certain Sussex villages feel in duty
bound to acknowledge the advent of
Good Friday, while at the seaboard of
the same county—at Brighton, be it
known—the day was for long hailed
as “Long-Rope-Day” from the strange
custom kept up until within quite re-
cent years of the fishing fraternity
amusing themselves throughout the
day by numbers of them—grown-up
people—skipping together at one long
rope.
What ancient aspects of Good Fri-
day’s great lesson such customs w.*re
Intended to perpetuate it is difficult
to discover, and the most patient and
prolonged antiquarian and eeclesiolo-
glcal investigation to this end would
probably prove futile. At first blush
humility associates itself with th°
now obsolete Good Friday custom of
washing the tomb of one Molly Grime
at Glentham in Lincolnshire, which
was aforetime regularly carried out,
but the association has its mercenary
aspect in the fact that a neighboring
property was charged with the pay
ment of Is each to the washers. The
practice has been abandoned since
1832, and it is said that the appear-
ance of the tomb and the name of the
occupant now present no incongruity.
That “hot-cross buns” should be
eaten on Good Friday is certainly not
a statutory obligation, yet half the
civilized. *vorld feel it a bounden duty
to include the bun in the menu for
that day. The Christian significance
of the cross is ample warrant for the
custom to many.
Easter.
If there be one season when fine
weather is desired by the masses more
than another, that season must surely
be Eastertide. The fitful spring sun-
shine has brightened many days since
March set in: but, for all that, it is
most unreasonable to depend upon the
weather from one day to another at
this time of the year. Seasonable
weather just now is popularly sup-
posed to be a succession of rain and
sunshine, usually accompanied by a
cutting east wind. April was called
Octer-monah—the month of the east
wind—and as our Easter Sunday falls
any time during the month succeed
mg the 21st of March, we may be
pretty well sure that we shall have
the wind, whether it is tempered by
the welcome sun or not. It may in
terest my readers to know that it was
formerly a common belief that the sun
danced on Easter Day, Centuries ago
a poet sang—
“But Oh! she dances ruch a way.
No sun upon an Easter Day
Is half so line a sight.'*
Ideas for Easter.
“Girls, roses, and pearls are all sis-
ters,” says the poet. Curiously enough,
all three lose their beauty as time
rolls on. A very pretty custom, which
had its origin about two years ago in
society circles, was for lovers to pre-
sent their fiancees on Easter Sunday
morning with pearls, set in some orna
ment or other, and a hothouse rose.
In many parts of Ireland Good Fri-
day Eve is regarded as a time of pe-
culiar danger. “Good people are then
supposed to exercise their malicious
powers for the only time during the
year; and those possessing an “evil
eye” are likewise supposed to be in
exceptionally good form for working
mischief. A nurse who ventures out
with a child is considered a monster,
and the girls who meet their lovers
that evening will never get married.
Some people do an act of meanness
' in one, direction and try to square
things*by generosity somewhere else,
2
BABY’S AWFUL ECZEMA.
Face Like Raw Beef—Thought She
Would Lose Her Ear—Healed
Without a Blemish—Moth-
er Thanks Cuticura.
“My little girl had eczema very bad .
When she was ten months old. I
thought, she would lose her right ear.
It had turned black, and her face was
like a piece of raw meat, and very
sore. It would bleed when I washed
her, and I had to keep cloths on it
day and night. There was not a clear
spot on her face when I began using
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and now
it is completely healed, without scar
or blemish, which is more than I had
hoped for. (Signed) Mrs. Rose Ether,
291 Eckford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.”
Easter
No woman needs the ballot to en-
force her rights; slu can do it with j
tears and a handkerchief.
Th-- world ix full of joy tn-dnv,
T'hr sian' and swi-s!.
And earth and sky. in bright svrwi.
< ’onic rlosi- :: nraisi- to meet,
Tit.- Palmy a Jr oac-sses soft.
Hv holiest Impulse led.
Anti lot mg taai. at,.* playing oil.
For Cliiist is tist-U fiotn tin da*-i
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE.
A powder. It cures painful,smarting, nerv-
ous feet and ingrowing nails. It's the
greatest comfort discovery of the age.
Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for
sweating feet. Sold by all druggists, 25c.
Trial package FREE. Address A. S.
Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
pn
The lilies thrill with meaning
_ Rem. rnt.ei iny Him who died
l pon tile cross 'mid a ttgyj crowd.
Forgiving as IP- died;
And all the llow. is in robes that, glow.
Their sweetest incense shed,
I his day the greatest here below.
For Christ is rP n from the dead.
Out souls are swept on waves of prayer
Hi yunil the farthest sk.\ .
Where «Soil's great love holds tts in car®.
And hears the f> eldest ery;
I.et all whir worship Jesus' nam*-,
Be by the messafp I,1.
He died tor us iu woe and shame.
Hut now is risen front the dead.
We, too. have, risen from the dead.
Our souls thrown off their chains.
No more by sin's enticements fed.
Still pilgrims on the plains;
We wait in hope the hlis ;lul hour.
For death has lost its sting:
\\ e 11 meet in heaven’s radiant bower
Our Lord, our Savior, and our King.
—Hamilton Jay.
7
Dakota is an Indian word meaning
confederated. It. was the name of a
division of the Siottan stock of North
American Indians, composed of the |
Dakota proper and the Assintboine.
The Present Rate Law.
The duties of the present Interstate
Commerce Commission are to correct
all discriminations in railroad rates.
If it finds that an unjust rate is in
effect, the railroad is notified. If it
aeclines to change it, the Commission
can bring suit in Court and if the
Court decides in favor of the Com-
missioners’ finding, the railroad must
obey, or its officers may be brought up
for contempt of court and summarily
aealt with.
The Children
The Popuan native village consta-
ble, with ten shillings a year and two
uniforms, is the cheapest policeman
Australia has to pay.
Longfellow said, “Ah. what would
the world be to us if the children were
no more?” for in their hearts “are the
birds and the sunshine,” in their
thoughts “the brooklet’s flow.” In
Florence there stands in the museum
one of the best sermons in stone the
world has ever enjoyed. “Frozen mu-
sic” indeed are these exquisite “Sing-
ing Children" of D»lla Robbia.
Just off the Via Proconselo, in Flor-
ence, that city called most appropriate-
ly the “Lily of the Arno,” is a narrow
street wherein is located the Bargelio
This building Is a veritable casket en-
closing priceless treasures; a very
sermon in stone, this mass of carving,
this play of light and sunshine ovei
the old columns and courts. Standing
here since before the memory of man.
history tells us it was erected for the
chief magistrate of Florence and was
renovated in 1373.
Pass through the court to the stair-
way and loggia where Dante walked.
Here we come to the superb Hall of
the Judges, and find that for which
we seek—the “Singing Children” of
Luca Della Robbia. These exquisite
carvings were executed for the organ-
loft of the cathedral. The choristers
how rest in this magnificent hall. The
figures of these animated children are
tin interesting study, separately or in
_ groups. The merry faces; the dancing
If you are troubled with insomnia^*odies:: the eager fingers holdin& the
- - •- f y^f’yfhoir books or instruments of music;
the parted lips singing praises to the
Lord.
Miserable Conditions
Of body and mind, always result from
a torpid liver, which leads to bile
poisons being absorbed into the blood,
and poisoning all the nerves and tis-
sues. This dreadful state, some of the
symptoms of which are headache, bit-
ter taste, nausea, lack of appetite,
yellow complexion, constipation, etc.,
can be quickly cured by taking Dr.
Caldwell’s (laxative) Syrup Pepsin.
It relieves the strain on your liver,
relaxes the tightened bowels, purifies
the blood, strengthens the stomach,
and makes it as clean as a whistle.
The result is perfect health, and free-
dom from pain and discomfort. Try
it. Sold by all drugg'sts at 50c and
$1.00. Money back if it fails.
go to sleep and forget It.
Why It Is the Best
Is because made by an entirely differ-
ent process. Defiance Starch is un-
like any other, better and one-third
more for 10 cents.
A man is never quite sure whether
a woman is sorry or glad when she
cries.
Many Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's
Home,New York, Cure Feverishness,Head-
ache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Dis-
orders,Break up Colds and Destroy Worms.
At all Druggists',25c. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Game She Didn’t Like.
A little girl, the daughter of a min-
ister, was up later than usual one
night, and for the first time in her life
was present at family prayers. Dur-
ing the reading of the Bible she was
very quiet, but when her father knelt
down to pray she went up to him, and,
touching him on the shoulder, said:
“Pa, I don’t like to play at this game.”
Marriage usually makes a man out
of a love-sick youth. He stops writ-
ing poetry after the knot is tied.
The Effect of Sleeping In Cars
Is the contracting of cold, which often
results seriously to the lungs. Never
neglect a cold, but take in time Tay-
lor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullein—nature’s great cough
medicine.
Serene In the rapturous throne:.
Dnmovwl by the titslt of the song.
With eyes unimpassioned and slow.
Among the dead angels, the deathless
(Children) stand listening breathless
To sounds that ascend from below—
From the spirits on earth that adore,
Frcm the souls that entreat and implore
In the fervor and passion of prayer;
From th- hearts that are broken with
losses.
And weary with dragging the crosses
Too heavy for mortals to bear.
The creator of these exquisite carv-
ings was Luca Della Robbia, born in
138S in Florence. The world rolls on,
leaving behind a wide track of his-
tory. Here in the peaceful city, the
quietly flowing river, the beautiful
Arno, rolls murmuringly by this treas
ure-house on this narrow street, this
home of the “Singing Children.” With-
in, near the blue arch of heaven, the
singing and dancing and playing giris
and boys lift up their silent timbrels,
as they have been doing during these
centuries, as if in Easter rejoicing.
The world rolls on, up the slopes of
progression, and the world of art fills
with pictures of beautiful children,
good to look upon. Madonnas and
the Christ child, playing children and
singing children, mirthful children and
sorrowful children. Truly, what would
this world be without children!
Picture Eggs.
Dyed eggs can be prettily etched
i with a penknife by any one that
' knows how to draw. Rabbits, chick-
j ens, faces, fairies—there is no end to
to get out of it as a man on his way
to the races.
At druggists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 a the list of things that may be scratch-
bottle. ed upon the hard colored surface
. vvjtj1 a g]iarp point. A fortunate little
When a girl gets engaged she is j girl of Philadelphia once owned an
J?.S. al1 ri*u' solng ; egg upon which the whole Easter
story of the bunny had been illus-
trated by penknife etchings. You
know the Germans believe that Bunny
lays the coiered eggs we have at Eas
tertime.
Easter eggs may also be prettily
decorated, even if there is no one near
clever with brush, pencil or pen-
knife. Copy the design desired for
reproduction from bcok or magazine
using a piece of tracing paper. After
the egg has been boiled hard, cover
it with the latter, under which has
Important to Mothers.
Hxaxnlao carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children,
and see that it
Bear* the
Signature of
la Use Tor Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always bought.
The Little Moravians.
A beautiful old custom in the Mo-
ravian church, both in Europe and
America, is to rise very early on East-
er morning and go to the “God’s
Acre” of the church, there to await the
rising sun. “God’s Acre.” you know,
is a beautiful name for the cemetery,
which always used ho he beside the
church. Here beside the long rows
and rows of the silent dead the people
—children as well as adults—watch
for the.rising sun. tit* embo-rn >>;
and of the resurrection. As the sun
rises, flooding the sky with light and
the earth with warmth and
the watchers greet it !*y s::t:
i of Nte beautiful an 1 cur;<>u:
that are an especial inh
these people.
The married man can get a much
warmer welcome by taking home a
box of chocolates than he can by tak- j l>een PIac‘i(1 a P*“ce of carbon paper.
ing home a box of good cigars, and
the chocolates don’t cost one tenth as
much.—Somerville Journal
“How’s Your Appetite?”
Does this weather make you want
to set down and stay set? Does your
food disgust you? If so, you need
Simmon’s Sarsaparilla, it. picks you
up, keeps you up. and the grocery
bill tells about your appetite.
Money talks, especially when a man
is using a long-distance telephone.
e!a I ness.
;ing sonm
old hymns
Htao-e of
asete., 16x20 Bt!9t Crayon 98ct*. Send yonr
ptj ii.i an i :*n it an<l we wttl link- * to*** Itu-t i r*y>i,
Saiithwettrrn Artist.' Association. Dallas, leu
are 25,000 pores ou the ban is
a man.
such as stenographers use in copying
letters, care being taken that the
i black side of the carbon paper is
j against the egg. Trace the faces or
the egg. guided by the lines drawn
upon it. Even hair may be furnished
! by pasting white wool, the frayed ends
! >f a rope or horsehair upon the eggs.
| Neckwear appropriate to the character
should he cut from paper and pasted
on the end of the egg.
Eggshell Boats.
An exciting Easter regatta may be
held by marking half shells with any
name that shall please the owner
thereof, and setting it, afloat in a tub
of water. Start them al! together, and
see which child can blow the bobbing
!:r !•• boat Item* t! fir-'
Immortality
The miracle of the rejuvenating
spring had been witnessed by many
thousand generations before men
dared claim as a certainty the great
hope which its parable inculcated —
before the human soul dared boldly
believe that it was itself as deathless
as the germ of life slumbering over
winter in the buried seed.
Since the Conqueror of Death, by
j the triumph which the world is to-day
celebrating, certified the validity of*
that belief, the season in which Na-
ture annually illustrates the appoint-
ed victory of life over death has be-
come the most significant of all festi-
vals. At Christmas the world is glad
as children are glad—with the uncon-
sidered glee of youth. At Eastertide
it rejoices as men rejoice in the pres-
ence of deliverance from fear—with
recollected voices and bosoms girt
with thankfulness.
The austerity of the earth and sky
prepares to yield to the conquering
•sweetness of spring. Already the
winds caress w-ith an unfamiliar soft-
ness, the earth beguiles with a dimly
green prophecy ot vernal loveliness.
Nature is timidly yearning heaven-
ward. But the hymn of awakening
life is not mere telluric nor aerial—it
sings out in the souls of men who
have considered the mystery of life
and its persistency under the sod ami
through the chill of winter’s appar-
ent death. To such Easter Day—set
in the midst of a season which wit-
nesses, as far as anything earthly can
witness, to the verity of a spiritual
fact; coinciding with the ancient fes-
tivals which celebrated the immemor-
ial human hope of immortality, dimly
adumbrated in the dramaturgy of
Greek, Scandinavian and Aryan; but
consecrated newly to the rising from
the tomb of the Man of Galilee—to
such Easter Day stands for the chief-
est affirmation of religion, the most
consoling and heartening thought that
mind and heart are justified in enter
taining. That life does not shudder
and perish at the grave; that beyond
it somewhere in the warmth of God's
sun and in the benignity of His near-
er presence human spirits shall still
have part in the joy.-of life, refined,
ethereali/.ed, made holy—neither phil-
osophy nor religion has another teach-
ing so solemnly precious as this.
Games to Be Played With Eggs.
“Egg football” will be found to be
an entertaining way to pass an after-
noon when several children are gath-
ered together. First a small hole must
be pricked in both ends of the egg-
shell and the contents blown out of it;
gently and steadily so as not to break
the shell. This, of course, cannot be
done if the egg has been boiled. Th.*n
a long table is marked out with white
lines, gridiron fashion. The goal posts
are erected at the table ends, made
of crossed pieces of wood if the occa-
sion be a formal one—two books
standing five incites apart will sene
admirably for an impromptu game.
Choosing sides, the children try to
send the egg between the goal posts
by blowing it across the table, the
scoring to be counted by the number
of lines the egg passes. It will be
wise to establish a quick-handed mem-
ber of the party at each end of the
field to stop the egg in case it is
blown off the table, otherwise the
game is likely to come to a sudden
end.
[VERY ONE ASKS HIM
HOW HE GOT SID OF HIS 0BSTIWATE
MUS0ULAB RHEUMATISM.
llr. .Ton*"! Tell* of tho Way by Which ft*
Treated Himself Successfully
When Doctors Failed.
Six physicians, all of them good, one of
them a specialist, had done their best
for Mr. Jones at different times during
three years, and still bo suffered fear-
fully from the tortures of rheumatism.
The rheumatism that had been dor-
mant in his system, was suddenly
brought to an acute stago by exposure
while he was drawing ice in February,
1901. From that time ou for a period
of more than three years he was a con-
stant sufferer. He tried many kinds of
treatment, but the rheumatism wouldn’t
badge. When regular doctors failed,
and one- remedy after another proved
useless, many said: ‘-I should think he
would give it up and save his money.”
Of his condition at this time, Mr.
Jones says : “ My rheumatism started
in my right thigh, but in time it ap-
peared in every muscle of my body. I
lost the use of my left arm en-
tirely and nearly lost the use of my
right one. My feet were badly affected,
especially the bottoms of the heels.
When my right side was affected there
was swelling, but the left side didn’t
swell when the disease settled there.
Tha internal organs didn’t seem to be
involved at all. Tho trouble was all iu
the muscles and the nerves.”
Among the few who still encouraged
Mr. Jones to think that a cure might
yet be found was a frieud who had rea-
son for great confidence in Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills, and acting on her
advice he bought a box of them in Sep-
tember, 1904. The story of what fol-
lowed is brief, but nothing could be
more satisfactory.
" When I was on the third box,” says
Mr. Jones, “ I could realize a change for
the better. I felt sure then that Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pilla were the right
medicine for my case. I kept on with
them for several weeka longer and now
I am entirely well, and everybody is
asking what I took.”
Mr. William Jones lives at Oxford,
Mich. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills effect
wonderful cures in rheumatism, because
they work directly on the blood which is
the seat of the disease. They are sold
by every druggist.
The Fontainebleau silver sand gets
its name from the district where
found, Fontainebleau, near Paris, and
from its purity, which makes It suit
able for the manufacture of the finest
glass.
Poverty and Education.
Poverty is a great bar to education,
but would not be if both the child
and the parent were alive to the real
value of an education. If education
cannot be acquired in one way It can
in another. The trouble is that the
judgment of the child is too immature
to prove a safe guide, and the parent
leaves everything to the child.
New and Profitable Occupation.
A shorthand writer in Berlin at-
tends the funerals of prominent per-
sons and takes down verbatim the ad-
dresses of the officiating clergymen.
He prepares highly-ornamented copies
of these and sells them to the friends
of the eulogized dead. He is doing
a profitable trade.
Street Cars in London.
There is no trouble in London over
whether a street car will stop or
where It will stop. At certain points
along the streets are posts painted
white. The cars "stop at these posts.
They do not run past them or slow
down when they reach them—they
stop.
More Moderate Language Wanted.
A man recently began swearing in
an Atchison saloon. “Look here,”
the proprietor said, “you will have to
cut out that profanity. Suppose a
lady were to come In after a drink;
how would your swearing sound?"—
Kansas City Star.
HONEST CONFESSION.
An Egg Radish.
Radishes <Io not grow from eggs,
you say. Oh. yes they do, at Eas’er
lime. Take a red egg and paste upon
the large end some leaves made of
tissue paper that has been crumpled
in the hand. Care should first he tak-
en to cut tlu* paper into the shape of
a leaf. Take a small piece of worsted
or cotton, dyed the same color as the
egg, and paste it on the small end of
the egg, twirling the worsted round '
and round in the fingers to make the '
long end of the vegetable.
Milton’s Tribute to Good Books.
A good book is the precious life- |
Wood of a master spirit, embalmed
and treasured up on purpose to a
l!fc. beyond life.—Milton.
Th** grave Is the common treasury J
to which we must all he taxes.— ■
Burke. I
A Doctor's Talk on Food.
, There are no fairer set of men on
earth than the doctors, and when they
, find they have been in error they are
i usually apt to make honest and man-
ly confession of the fact.
, A case in point is that of an emi-
i nent practitioner, one of the good
old school, who lives in Texas. His
plain, unvarnished tale needs no
dressing up;
“I had always had an Intense preju-
dice, which I can now see was un-
warrantable and unreasonable, against
all muchly advertised foods. Hence,
I never read a line of the many ‘ads.’
of Grape-Nuts, nor tested the food till
last winter.
“While in Corpus Christ! for my
health, and visiting my youngest son,
who has four of the ruddiest, health-
iest little boys I ever saw. I ate my
first dish of Grape-Nuts food for
supper with my little grand-
sons.' I became exceedingly fond
of it and have eaten a pack-
age of it every week since, and find It
& delicious, refreshing and strengthen-
ing food, leaving no ill effects whatever,
causing no eructations (with which I
was formerly murh troubled), no
sense of fullness, nausea, nor distress
of stomach in any way.
“There is no other food that agrees
with me so well, or sits as lightly or
pleasantly upon my stomach as this
does. I am stronger and more active
since I began the use of Grape-Nuts
than I have been for 10 years, and am
no longer troubled with nausea and
indigestion.” Name given by Postum
Co.. Battle Creek, Mich.
There's a reason.
Look in each pkg. for the famous
little book, “The Road to Wellville."
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Folsom, A. T. The Trans Pecos News. (Sanderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 22, 1905, newspaper, April 22, 1905; Sanderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1112717/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .