The Meridian Tribune. (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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The Meridian Tribune.
GREAT TRADE PROPAGANDA.
THE TRIBUNE PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.
Entered at the postoffice Meridian, Texas, ah
second-class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR
LEVS A. DUNLAP, Editor and Mgr.
EVENTS OF EVERYWHERE.
Texas skating rinks scored two
broken arms for Thursday.
An incipient fire at the Confederate
home damaged the kitchen to the
amount of about $200.
About fifty bales of cotton were sold
in Hillsboro from wagons one day last
week at an average price of 10.55c.
Garth Thompson, a negro, convict-
cd of the murder of Wm. Brame, was
hanged at Madisonville, Ky., Friday.
The plague has reappeared at Syd-
ney, N. S. W. Two cases were report-
ted Thursday and three more were
discovered in the same block of houses
Owing to the results of investiga-
tions, four third and three fourth-
classmen have resigned from Anna-
polis.
The Chicago fire department has
increased in strength by the addition
of 139 men, and the wages of firemen
and policemen were raised by the
council finance committee recently.
From past experience, the shippers
a of fruits and vegetables realize that
the old way of shipping in two and
four basket crates is not as profitable
as shipping in bushel baskets.
In a collision at South Omaha be-
tween North and Southbound street
cars, one man was killed and seven
others injured, six of whom were se-
verely injured.
The Democrats of Tacoma re-nom-
inated George P. Wright for mayor.
The platform favors municipal own-
ership, restriction of the social evil
and the suppression of gambling.
James Peters, the railroad man who
was shot accidentally by Buck Gar-
rett, Chief of Police of Ardmore, I.
T., died, and the body was shipped to
Newton, Kan., for burial.
%
Henry Brown, of Tulsa, I. T., 89
years of age, Friday afternoon cut his
throat with a razor from ear to ear
and will die. He was found soon af-
ter, sweltering in blood. The old man
was possessed of considerable wealth.
He leaves an aged widow..
Rev. William D. Shea, one of the
oldest and best known ministers of
the Melodist Church in the South,
died at his home at Atlanta, Ga., 77
years of age. Mr. Shea, who in early
life was a resident of Roswell, Ga.,
was an attendant at the wedding of
President Roosevelt’s mother.
Announcement is made of the sale
to the Long-Bell Lumber Company of
Kansas City of all the holdings of
the Bradley-Ramsey Lumber Company,
including two mills, a planer and a
chemical plant, a line of tugs and bar-
ges, 65,000 acres of pine untouched
and 44,000 acres of pine partly cut
over.
Waco: The executive board of the
Texas Federation of Women’s Clubs
met. here Friday and transacted a
great deal of business. Arrangements
were made for the coming year and
plans were formed for the excursion
of club women of Texas to the biennial
meeting of the general federation, to
take place next May at St. Paul, Minn.
The executive board completed its
work at night and adjourned.
An official inspection car with elec-
triet power has been received for use
on the Trinity and Brazos Valley road.
John D. Rockefeller, Sr., has re-
signed from the board of trustees of
the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, New
York City.
The House Committee on Interstate
Commerce has agreed to vote Friday
on the 36 hour cattle-in-transit bill.
The bill will doubtless be reported
favorably, but there is apt to be a
minority report against it.
St. Vincent’s Academy, Shreveport,
established thirty years ago, and one
of the most widely known Catholic in-
stitutions in the South, was destroyed
by fire Friday afternoon. Loss $60,-
000; insurance $12,500.
That the Katy management fears
the culmination of the coal miners’
strike is shown by the fact that the
road is refusing to accept orders for
commercial coal except for slack and
• few low grades.
The Fort Worth Credit Men’s As-
sociation at its annual meeting pass-
ed resolutions against the proposed
repeal of the bankruptcy law and for i
the amendments recommended by |
the National Association of Credit
Men.
It Is President Pryor.
Col. Ike T. Pryor of San Antonio Is Elected
President of Texas Cattlemen's Association.
GREAT TRUNK LINE.
Dallas, March 21.—Resolutions were%
adopted by the Texas Cattle Raisers’
convention yesterday condemning the
live stock exchanges and commission
houses for advancing the charges on
handling live stock at the markets.
The resolutions provoked a protest
from representatives of some of the
commission men, but were adopted
with but one or two dissenting votes
The special order of business was
the election of officers, but adjourn-
ment was taken before this had been
finished. Col. Ike T. Pryor of San An-
tonio, first vice-president of the asso-
ciation, was elected to the presidency.
Attempts had been made to develop
strong opposition to Mr. Pryor because
he is connected with the commission
business, but this met with signal fail
ure.
The name of Col. C. C. Slaughter of
Dallas was proposed, but he declined
to permit his name to be placed before
the convention, and nearly all of the
insurgents fell into line for Pryor. The
vote was made unanimous.
The work of the convention yester-
day was confined to one session and
the afternoon and night were given
over to entertainments prepared by
the local committee. The crowds in
attendance during the morning were
much larger than heretofore and at
times there was not sufficient seating
capacity on the first floor of the Opera
House.
As a substitute for a per capita as-
sessment of $1 on the membership for
the financial assistance of the Ameri-
can Live Stock Association, which had
been offered Tuesday, a motion was
adopted providing that the annual as-
sessment of 2 3-4c on each head of
cattle owned by the association mem-
bers be increased to 3c per head. The
executive committee was then author-
ized to contribute $500 to the Ameri-
can Live Stock Association.
MINERS’ AGITATION CONTINUES.
Another Meeting with Prospect of
a Bolt.
Indianapolis. Ind., March 20.—That
there will be a second joint confer-
ence of the coal operators and miners
of the central competitive district,
comprising the States of Ohio, Indi-
ana, Illinois, Western Pennsylvania,
was definitely determined this after-
noon when the operators of the four
States met in convention and adopted
a resolution setting forth their willing-
ness to meet the representatives of
the United Mine Workers.
Subsequent arrangements between
J. H. Winder, the newly elected chair-
man of the operators, and President
John Mitchell of the mine workers fix-
ed the first session of the joint con-
ference for tomorrow morning at 10
o’clock. Following the retirement of F.
L. Robbins, president of the Pittsburg
Coal Company, as chairman of, the
operators, and the election of J. H
Winder of Ohio as his successor, a
resolution was adopted providing that
the operators of the four States should
elect their own spokesmen and that
there be no official representations of
the four States collectively, either in
joint convention or joint scale commit-
tee.
When seen tonight F. L. Robbins
refused to make a statement regard-
ing his reasons for relinquishing the
leadership of the operators. His suc-
cessor, Mr. Winder, was equally reti-
cent, and neither would discuss the
attitude he will assume on the floor of
the joint conference.
Katy to Shorten Route.
San Antonio: The Missouri, Kansas
and Texas Railroad expects to be run-
ning into Austin over the lines of the
International and Great Northern by
April 1. This date has been set by
officials of that system as that for the
commencement of travel over what
has been known as the Austin cut-off.
This cut-off obviates the drop to
Smithville and shortens the route of
that train by eighty-two miles.
Killing in Limestone County.
Hillsboro: During the early part of
Saturday night at Thompson's gin, in
Limestone County, about five miles
south of Hubbard City, a man named
Pointon, a blacksmith, was shot and
killed, receiving four wounds from
discharges from a pistol, either one
of which, according to the physician
who attended him. would have proven
fatal. The shooting was claimed
have been done in self-defense.
to
Hanging Would Be Too Mild.
El Paso: D. S. Pipes, an American
of the City of Mexico, is the victim
of one of the worst and most peculiar
acts of vandalism recorded. He re-
cently ordered a car load of fine Hol-
stein cows from the United States. At
Saltillo, on the Mexican Central, while
the man in charge of the bovines was
away, some one entered the car and
cut off the teats of thirty-six out of the
thirty-eight cows.
To Run Through Western Texas to
the Gulf.
Fort Worth: The stockholders of the
Colorado, Texas and Mexico railway
held their first meeting at Mangum,
Ok., and elected officers and a board
of directors.
The road was projected by Colonel
Morris R. Locke and if plans are car-
ried out will run from Cheyenne, Wyo.
to Aransas Pass and Eagle Pass, Tex.
The company was incorporated a few
days ago in Oklahoma for $75,000,000.
Construction work is in progress. En-
gineers are in the field mapping out
the route and grade from Mangum to
Olustee, Greer County, and to Chil-
licothe, Tex., and work on this portion
of the line, it is planned, will be push-
ed rapidly until the road is completed
to Merkel.
The road as planned will connect
with the Rock Island at Mangum and
extend southward to Olustee and Chil-
licothe, thence through the counties
of Foard, Knox, Haskell and Jones in
Texas, to Merkel, Taylor County, 235
miles distant from Mangum. At Mer-
kel the line will connect with the Tex-
as and Pacific and will cross the Den-
ver at Chillicothe.
When completed it will reach Llano
and trains will be running from that
point over two lines south, one to
Eagle Pass and the other to Aransas
Pass. It is the intention of the build-
ers to have that portion of the road
between Mangum and Merkel comple-
ted with trains in operation by Sept. 1.
Texas Senators Disagree.
Washington: The Texas delegation
is exercised over the indications of a
bitter warfare reported to have broken
out between Senators Bailey and Cul
berson over the difference of the rate
regulation.
Senator Bailey some time ago an-
nounced an amendment taking from
the federal courts the power to sus-
pend rates fixed by the commission
and this was followed by a speech by
Senator Culberson dissenting from
Bailey’s view and arguing the uncon-
stitutionality of such an amendment.
Senator Bailey’s speech Monday de-
voted to hammering Senator Culber-
son’s position and establishing by a
line of decisions the power of congress
to pass a law thus limiting the power
of the federal courts
Senator Bailey is said to bitterly
resent Senator Culberson’s speech
against the proposition to restrict fed-
eral courts and his speech mentioned
strongly reflected his bitterness over
the situation.
Senator Culberson did not attend
the session at which Senator Bailey
made this speech.
Public Land Sale.
Austin: J. J. Terrell, State Land
Commissioner, is having compiled a
statement of the number of acres of
public land that have been sold during
the past six months ending March 1.
Since Sept. 1 about 9,000,000 acres of
these lands have been placed upon the
market. On Sept. 1, 6,000,000 acres
came on the market in one lot. The
statment which is now being prepar-
ed of the sales of land during the past
six months is upon the request of
Governor Lanham, who will probably
make reference to it in his message
to the Legislature at the forthcoming
special session.
Fruit Hard Hit.
Tyler: There was a hard freeze
Monday night, the temperature going
as low as 22 degrees. The prevailing
opinion is that peaches, apples, pears,
plums and strawberries are badly dam-
aged, but as to the exact extent of
injury, there is a diversity of opinion.
Some think they are almost totally
killed, others say 50 per cent is a con-
servative estimate. All agree they can
better judge the extent later.
The World’s Best Mastodon.
New York: J. Piermont Morgan has
given to the American Museum of Nat-
ural History the Warren Mastodon,
found near Newburg, N. Y., in 1860,
which is considered the finest speci-
men known to be in existence. With
this gift also goes the rest of the
Warren collection of bones of extinct
animals. The mastodon will be set up
in the museum as soon as it can be
brought from Boston.
Womens’ Clubs Awards Scholarship.
Palestine: The educational commit-
tee of the State Federation of Wom-
en’s clubs of Texas, chosen by a unan-
imous vote Miss Fannie May McLeod
of this city as the recipient of the
State University scholarship offered homeless. Hundreds are fighting the
by the club. The honor is worthily
bestowed, and the many friends of
Miss McLeod will be glad to know
the committee has awarded her the
scholarship over a score of applicants.
Trade Boomers Will Not Await Com-
pletion of Canal Before Work.
New Orleans, March 20.—Governors
of twenty-seven different states, may-
ors and boards of trade of 2000 differ-
ent towns and cities and editors of
3,000 different newspapers in the wide
territory bounded by the Rockies, the
Alleghenies, the Great Lakes and the
Gulf, have been invited to come to
New Orleans April 5, 6 and 7, to start
in motion a great trade propaganda
among the Latin countries of Central
and South America, and take time by
the forelock in view of the trade ex-
pansion to follow the opening of the
Panama canal.
Not until the canal is completed will
they wait, but, stimulated by the ac-
tivity brought about by the concentra-
tion of work on the Isthmus of Pana-
ma, it is proposed to form at once a
TEXAS RAILWAY EARNINGS.
Mileage, Operating Expenses and
Fixed Expenses.
The fololwing statement by the
chairman of the Railroad Commission
is a clear and forcible presentation of
railway conditions in the State, and is
indeed worthy a most careful and un-
prejudiced analysis and consideration
by all who may desire to deal fairly
with the subject:
“When we take into consideration
the many things that a Railroad Com-
mission must consider in making a
freight rate on the largest tonnage-
producing commodity in the State, and
the comparatively small amount of
tonnage they have in the aggregate
to haul, and the unfortunate absence
of any great variety of kinds of com-
modities to haul, it will be seen how
difficult it is to make a radical reduc-
tion of the freight rates on the prin-
cipal revenue-producing commodities
in this State; if we desire the roads
to keep up steam and render better
service than they have been doing for
the last twelve months.
“The fact is our last annual report
shows that the entire tonnage hauled
by all the roads in Texas for the year
ending June 30, 1905 was but 30,653,-
070 tons. Of this, lumber produced
5,750,103 tons and six commodities, in-
cluding lumber, produced 17,020,953
tons, which amounted to more than
one-half of the entire tonnage of the
State.
“The cry is coming up from all parts
of the State for better roads, better
and faster service, better depot facil-
ities and more freight cars, while the
earnings of the roads all told for the
twelve months ending June 30, 1905,
over operating expenses was only $18,-
345,629.14, and out of that the roads
paid interest, taxes, permanent im-
provements and rents, in all $19,961,-
400.88, leaving a deficit of $1,615,-
771.74.
“And when we take into considera-
tion the fact that we have recently re-
duced the freight rates on grain, cot-
ton, refrigerating tariff, rough logs,
blocks, lumber for manufacturing pur-
poses, etc., fruit and vegetables, crates,
Tornado Destroys Mississippi Town.
New Orleans, La.: Telegrams from
Hattieesburg, Miss., Monday night tell
of a teriffic tornado which wiped out
a large, portion of the town of Brook-
lyn, near Hattiesburg. It laid waste
all the property for a distance of six-
teen miles south of the town. There
are but few wires left up in the en-
tire town and it is difficult to secure
particulars. The loss of life is believ-
ed to be heavy, as the path of the
tornado cut across one of the richest
sections of Mississippi, which has
Coal Flurry Affects Texas.
Terrell: A coal famine exists in
Terrell. Wood and coal dealers
throughout the city are entirely out
of coal and say they are unable to get
shipments. The result is that many
are caught by the present cold spell
without fuel. It is claimed the cause
is due to the prospect of a general coal
strike in the East. Coal dealers say
they cannot get shipmnets delivered
when ordered.
Snowslide Isolates 600 Mines.
Ouray, Colo.: Six hundred miners
employed in the various mines within
a radius of twenty miles from Ouray
have been cut off from all communica-
tions by a snowslide. It is feared as
many as twenty miners have lost
their lives in the slides, but the exact
number will not be known for days. As
many as twenty-five mines are com-
pletely isolated. The damage may
reach $1,000,000.
A Washington Town in Danger.
Seattle, Wash.: A recent dispatch
says: Northwood, four miles north of
Lyndon, in Whatcom County, has been
destroyed by forest fires. The North-
wood lumber and shingle mill was to-
tally destroyed and many families are
fire and the Ballinghem fire depart-
ment is asked to aid the threatened
city of Lyndon and the surrounding Witte intends to leave Russia and
farms to subdue the conflagration.
permanent organization for the pur-
pose of developing and magnifying the
trade relations between the states of
the valleys of the Mississippi, the Mis-
souri and the Ohio, and the countries
of the south, and sell to the Latin
Americans those American products
and manufactures which are now sup-
plied principally by Germany and
Great Britain. Those states which
have been asked to participate are:
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Missouri, Mich-
igan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Minne-
sota, North and South Dakota, Kan-
sas, Nebraska, Iowa, Oklahoma, Colo-
rado, Utah, Montana, Wyoming, Texas,
Indian Territory, Arkansas,Tennessee,
Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia,
North and South Carolina, Georgia, Al-
abama, Florida, Mississippi and Lou-
isiana, and it is anticipated that an
attendance by men of national and in-
ternational reputation from all the
state—both in business and public
will be had.
boxes, etc., amounting in the aggre-
gate to millions of dollars, and when
we know the further fact that under
the stock and bond law of this State
every railroad in Texas is bonded to
the full limit allowed by law, and that
these railroad companies have no oth-
er means by which they can secure
money to improve their roads but their
earnings, we do not think it is to the
interest of the people of Texas by any
acts of ours to so reduce their reve-
nues that they cannot improve their
roads and render better service to the
people.”
In the light of this statement it is
indeed difficult to understand why it
was that the rates on cotton and lum-
ber have been reduced. The reduc-
tions so made have not been, and will
not be, of benefit either to the pro-
ducer of cotton or the consumer of
lumber. It may be stated upon un-
doubted authority that, after the cot-
ton rates had been reduced by the
Commission on the roads, the steam-
ship companies increased their rates,
and that the roads have no interest
whatever in them.
When it is considered that the roads
are tied to the soil and expend by very
far the larger portion of their earn-
ings within the State, and employ
more than 40,000 wage-earners, who
are citizens of the State, and in so
many ways contribute to its prosper-
ity, the intelligent and unprejudiced
mind cannot but feel that the steam-
ships, but few of which, if any, fly the
American flag or are owned and man-
ned by American citizens, have been
benefited by the reduction of the rates
on cotton at the expense of the roads
without any advantage whatever to the
producer.
As to lumber, no one will be reckless
enough to insist that its cost to the
consumer has been or will be in the
least reduced in consequence of the
lowering of the rate for its transpor-
tation.
The statement quoted is indeed
worthy the most careful analysis and
consideration. As to no other subject
can their appeal be more appropriately
made—Come, and let us reason to-
gether.
JOSEPH D. SAYERS.
been built up by the Gulf and Ship Is-
land Railroad. Later reports say that
the town of Brooklyn has been com-
pletely destroyed, not a single house
being left standing. The tornado
struck the town about 6 o’clock and
was seen by many of the people before
it struck the village.
Lyman Gage, former Secretary of
the Treasury, has confirmed the re-
port that he would in a few weeks
retire as president of the United States
Trust company.
Storing Coal Everywhere.
Chicago, Ill.: Everywhere through-
out Michigan, the railroads and man-
ufacturers continue to amass great
quantities of soft coal. In Saginaw, the
center of the bituminous industry of
the State, the Pere Marquette has 7,-
000 tons stored in a lot and will in-
crease the pile to 60,000 tons by April
1. In Bay City the Michigan Central
has 25,000 tons stored and the Sagi-
naw Valley companies are turning out
150 car loads daily.
Negro Lynched in Tennessee.
Chattanooga: Ed Johnson, a negro,
was taken from jail by a mob and
hanged to the county bridge over the
Tennessee River. The rope broke
and the mob quickly riddled him with
bullets. Sheriff Shipp and the jailer
were locked in the bathroom while
the mob secured the prisoner. There
was no disorder. Johnson is the negro
who was granted an appeal by
United States Supreme Court.
the
Premier Witte Tired Out.
St. Petersburg: It is rumored in of-
ficial circles that a session of the
Council of the Empire Premier Witte
tendered his resignation and suggest-
ed that Privy Councillor Koksoff, form-
er Minester of Finance, be appointed and when they inquire what brought
as his successor. Count Witte says it about, I answer ‘Postum Food Cof-
that he is seriously ill with heart dis- fee, and nothing else in the world,
ease, having had an attack recently. Name given by Postum Co., Battle
If his resignation is accepted Count
have the disease treated.
Would Buy Aerial Cruisers.
The right of the minister of war to
buy aerial cruisers is questioned by
the London Daily News, though it ad-
mits that they are not within the prov-
ince of the admirality either. He sug-
gests the organization of a new de
partment, the aeralty.
The only bald-headed man who can
hope to have his hair restored is the
one who advertises for his lost wig, of-
fering a liberal reward.
HAD HEART PAINS
A Critical Case of Rheumatism Cured
By Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
.While Mr. W. S. Geisel, of No. 125
East Coates street, Moberly, Mo., was
steadily working at his trade in a foun-
dry at that place, he became the victim
of an attack of rheumatism, and his ex-
perience is that of thousands who are
compelled to work in similar surround-
ings. He describes his situation as fol-
lows :
“I had been at work for a long time
in a foundry where I was exposed to
dampness. First my feet began to hurt
and to swell, then my knees and my
shoulder joints began to be affected in
the same way. Finally ! could not walk
without great difficulty and suffering
and had to stop work altogether. My
appetite was feeble and I grew very pale
and weak. I began to have pains about
my heart and it fluttered a great deal.
I became greatly alarmed about my con-
dition. My mother knew about the vir-
tues of Dr.Williams’ Pink Pills, as they
had given her back her health when she
was nearly wasting to death, and when
she found that they were good for rheu-
matism too, she began to give them to
me about a month after I was attacked.
That was in the early part of March,
1903, and by June they had driven away
the pains aud swelling and had restored
my appetite and color. Then I felt
strong enough to take up a line of out-
door work and now, in October, I re-
gard myself as entirely well and I am
about to go into a foundry again at St.
Louis.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills also cure
other diseases springing from im-
pure blood or disordered nerves, such
as sciatica, locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis and all forms of weakness in
male or female. They may be had at
all druggists or directly from the Dr,
Williams Medicine Company, Scheneo
tady, N. Y.
Would Play for P2,000,000.
Whn Andrew Carnegie first spoke
of taking up golf he was advised by-
Baillie MacKenzie, of Edinburg, to lay
out a golf course at Skibo castle. "It
you take to golf,” said the baillie,
“you will add ten years to your life."
“Do you say so?” said Mr. Carnegie.
“If you can add ten years to my life
I will make you a present of two mil-
lions.” “Well,” replied the canny mag-
istrate, “I cannot exactly do that, but
I’ll play you for the two millions over
your own green.” This handsome ofi
fer was not accepted.
Won by Looking Seedy.
Finis J. Garrett, the new congress
man from the Ninth Tennessee dis.
trict, seemed to have but a forlorn
hope when he entered the race against
Rice A. Pierce, who has been in con-
gress fourteen years. But he took the
stump, arrayed in a decidedly rusty
suit of clothes, on the single issue that
Mr. Pierce had had enough and that
the good things of life should be
passed around. The voters of the dis-
trict agreed with this, their sympa
thies being with the seedy looking but
evidently brainy youth, and Garret#
won out. . I
Illness and recovery means a certain
measure of sacrifice of life’s capital-
mental and physical strength.
GRAND TO LIVE.
And the Last Laugh Is Always the
Best.
“Six months ago I would have
laughed at the idea that there could
be anything better for a table bever-
age than coffee,” writes an Ohio wom-
an—“now I laugh to know there is.”
“Since childhood I drank coffee as
freely as any other member of the
family. The result was a puny, sick-
ly girl, and as I grew into womanhood
I did not gain in health, but was af-
flicted with heart trouble, a weak and
disordered stomach, wrecked nerves
and a general breaking down, till last
winter, at the age of 38 I seemed to-
be on the verge of consumption. My
friends greeted me with ‘How bad you
look! What a terrible color!’ and this
was not very comforting.
“The doctors and patent medicines
did me absolutely no good. I
thoroughly discouraged.
“Then I gave up coffee and
was
com-
menced Postum Food Coffee. At first
I didn’t like it, but after a few trials
and following the directions exactly, it
was grand. It was refreshing and
satisfying. In a couple of weeks I
noticed a great change. I became
stronger, my brain grew clearer, I was
not troubled with forgetfulness as in
coffee times, my power of endurance
was more than doubled. The heart
trouble and indigestion disappeared
and my nerves became steady and,
strong.
“I began to take an interest in
things about me. Housework and
home-making became a pleasure. My
friends have marveled at the change
Creek, Mich.
There’s a reason. Read the little
book, “The Road to Wellville,” in
pkgs.
Upcoming Pages
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dunlap, Levi A. The Meridian Tribune. (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, March 23, 1906, newspaper, March 23, 1906; Meridian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1629630/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Meridian Public Library.