Gonzales Reform. (Gonzales, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 9, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
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/
GONZALES REFORM, GONZALES, TEXAS
REMEMBER
When
At^lour
Drag Store
Mr. Robert H. Norris, No. 1338 Hen-
dry St., North Berkeley, Cal., writes:
"We have never had any other medi-
cine but Peruna in our home since we
have been married. I suffered with
kidney and bladder trouble, but two
months treatment with Peruna made
one a well and strong man. My wife
ielt weak and was easily tired and
was also troubled with various pains,
but since she took Peruna she is well
and Strong-."
PARKER'S
HASR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit.
Helps to ei'adicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair^
60e. and $1.00 at Druggists.
DROPSY TF5^A-TED'usually £ives«
fuick
1 relief, soon removes swelling
& short breath, often gives entir^fe relief
' in 15 to 25 days. Trial treatment s«/nt Free
, Dr. THOMAS E. GREEN. Success/r to
Dr. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
BOTH VERSATILE AND^TRONG
Young English Author Especially Gift-
ed With Talent Along many Lines
Other Than Wi/iting.
Eldrid Reynolds, th/ young English
woman who is the author of the novel
"Whispering Dust," ^belongs to an old
Yorkshire faniily, a^id numbers among
her ancestors ii/iizabeth Pry, the
prison reformer, /the poet Bloomfield
and James Wayd and George More-
land, both notapd as painters. Miss
Reynolds speii/t her childhood on the
wide, heather/covered Yorkshire moors
and the wilcy Cornish coast. The pas-
sion for sj/ace, freedom and the im-
mensities Jwhich she voices in "Whis-
pering Dyst" is doubtless the result of
her earl/v environment.
The W)ook itself is the result of a
"winteiy on, the Mediterranean and in
®gyp/. hut the heroine, who after
thivtpf years of cramping duties as "a
iiSLflpe" longs to accomplish something,
* by no means be identified with
!e author. Miss Reynolds Las accom-
plished a great deal in less than thirty
fyears. She created stories before she
tKiuld read; wrote, acted and produced
plays for home and school before she
reached her teens; published her first
story at sixteen and her first novel,
"Red of the Rock," at twenty. She
has a decided talent for drawing and
singing and her favorite recreations
show that she can be by no means a
dreamer. Among them are riding,
sailing, fishing, dancing, winter sports,
caravaning, amateur theatricals, pho-
tography, painting, drawing and sing-
ing.
MAKES ECZEMA VANISH
Resinol Stops Itching and Burning In*
. , _stantly.
There is immediate relief for skins
itching, • burning and disfigured by
eczema, ringworm, or other torment-
ing skin trouble, in a warm bath with
Resinol Soap and a 6imple application
of Resinol Ointment. The soothing,
healing Resinol balsams sink right
into the skin, stop itching instantly,
and soon clear away all trace of erup-
tion, eveh iti severe and stubborn
cases wheFe other treatments have
had no effect. After that, the regular
use of Resinol Soap is usually enough
to keep th£ skin clear and healthy.
Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap
have t>een. prescribed by doctors for
the past nineteen years, and sold by
all druggists.—Adv.
Temporarily Without Reason.
Parent—What is your reason for
wishing to marry my daughter?
Young •Man-*—I have no reason, sir;
I am in lov^
Appropriate Ejaculation.
"I have been digging for water on
my place."
"Well, well, well!"
II NEWS 1ft
OF HOME AND ABRO/AD OF INTER-
EST TO EVERYBODY.
AN EPITOME Q/ LATE DOINGS
Of the Entire V&/eek That Is Worth
While of/Mention and of
Interest to All.
WASHINGTON NE VS.
The Papama canal toll exemption
controversy has reached the simmer-
ing stag/i in the senate pending con-
sideration of the repeal bill and pro-
posed Compromises by the committee
on in/veroceanic canals this week.
TWtere are sore spots with some of
th^ cities contesting for designation
as/ reserve bank centers over the re-
wt of the organization committee
Lade public Friday, and it was inti-
mated Saturday that the matter would
receive an airing on the senate floor.
Senator John W. Weeks of Massa-
chusetts, member of the currency and
bank committee, issued a statement
censuring the committee for some of
its selections, and says that the com-
mittee's work bears out the criticisms
made when the bill was under discus-
sion.
Pensions for widows and minor chil-
dren of the officers and men who
served in the Spanish war, the Philip-
pine insurrection and the boxer up-
rising in China, would be authorized
by a bill which passed the house
Thursday by a vote of 276 to 54. The
bill would grant $12 monthly to the
widow of an honorably discharged sol-
dier or sailor and $2 monthly for each
child under 16 years old, provide^
that the widow shall have married the
soldier prio,r to the passage of the bill.
Disregarding the leadership oi
Champ Clark, Floor Leader Under-
wood, Republican Leader Mann and
Progressive Leader Murdock, the
house of representatives Tuesday up-
held the hands of President Wilson
in the Panama canal toll controversy
by adopting the Sims bill to repeal
the exemption on coastwise shipping
by a vote of 247 to 162, a majority
of 85. \
Senator Sheppard of Texas Tues-
day offered an amendmeht to the
rivers and harbors bill for an increase
of $200,000 for Brazos river improve*
ment.
Speaker Champ Clark's stirring
speech in the house Tuesday, closing
the argument for the opponents of the
Cijinal tolls exemption repeal bill, was
one of the most dramatic features of
tijiis extraordinary contest. The speak-
er said: "Mr. Speaker, there is no
personal issue between the president
of the United States and myself.
There has not been at any time. J
trust there never will be. I have at
no time uttered one word of criticism
of the president. At no time, so far as
I am concerned and believe, has the
president said one single word of criti-
cism of me. In the nature of things, a
man who is worthy to hold a high
public post in the service of his coun-
try must believe that other public ser-
vants are actuated by the same high,
courageous and patriotic motives by
which he believes himself to be
moved."
The president sent the following
postoffice nominations to the senate
Monday: Texas—Frank K. Sterett,
Albany; Horton L. Robertson, Archer
City; E. B. McDougal, Kemp; W. H.
Reeves, Lometa; W. H. Rand, Sulphur
Springs.
Folks who say the right thing at the
right time are as popular as they are
scarce.
i
Backache Warns You
Backache is one of Nature's warnings
of kidney weakness. Kidney disease
kills thousands every year.
Don't neglect a bad back. If your back
is lame—if it hurts to stoop or lift—if
there is irregularity of the secretions—
suspect your kidneys. If you suffer head-
aches, dizziness and are tired, nervous
and worn-out, you have further proof.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, a fine rem-
edy for bad backs and weak kidneys.
AN OKLAHOMA CASE
John T. Jone«. 21S
8. Pine St., Paula
Vall«y, Okla., says:
"I wai confined to
bed for days with
kidney trouble. I
had terrible palna
through my back
and rot dlxzy and
exhausted. The doo-
tor prescribed for
me, but nothing
helped me. I had all
most given up hopr
wlhen a friend
brougljt me a hox ot
Doan's Kidney Pills.
In three days they
relieved me and four
boxes made me well.
I am today in thj
best of health."
G*t Doan's at Any Ston, SOe a Box
DOAN'S V.llV
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
(YtarcTdfc
STATE AND DOMESTIC NEWS.
Exports of cotton sent to foreign
countries from the port of Galveston
during March exceeded the exports of
the staple for the "same month last
year by 123,887 bales and by $8,233,-
086 in value.
William J. Burns, the detective, Sat-
urday stated that his report on the in-
vestigation of the Leo "M. Frank case
at Atlanta, Ga., had been made to the
condemned man's attorneys. While
not saying that the murderer of Mary
Phagan was or was not the man con-
demned to death, Burns intimated that
the evidence of his investigation had
developed would be such as to cause
the supreme court to give it due at-
tention and that Frank would not hang
on April 17.
Historic St. Augustine, Fla., "the old-
est city in the United States, Thurs-
day was swept by fire, which left in
its wake the serious injury of two
winter visitors, the destruction of rec-
ords and curios dating back to the
days of Spanish rule in the sixteenth
century and a property loss estimated
at $400,000.
A total of 537 people, made up of
nineteen different nationalities., were
landed at the port of Galveston dur-
ing March and were handled by of-
ficials of the United States immigra-
tion service. These people brought
with them from their homes in vari-
ous parts of the world cash to the
extent of $8,019.
The licenses of thirty-two reciprocal
fire insurance companies were re-
voked Friday at Jefferson City, Mo.,
by C. G. Revelle, superintendent of
insurance. This action was taken
after the state supreme court had
ruled that the law making it obliga-
tory on the insurance superintendent
to license reciprocal companies among
men engaged in like industries was
unconstitutional.
Five cargoes of lumber, measuring
approximately 3,039,047 feet, and Shav-
ing a value of $77,143, were cleared
at Galveston Friday far foreign iportie
j The acceptance of the appointment
las dean of the school of journalism of
the University of Texas by Lieutenant
Governor Will H. Mayes was Wednes-
day announced by the board of re-
gents of the university at Austin.
Ayoya Hatori, former member of
the Japanese house of commons and
one of the most widely known men of
his race in America, was found dead
Wednesday at San Francisco, Cal.
■ On the eve of a miners' holiday-—
the anniversary of an eight-hour day
in the state—50,000 Ohio miners Tues-
day quit work for an indefinite time.
Mines were closed in accordance with
orders issued Monday by coal opera-
tors.
The formal consolidation of the
Wichita Falls, the Wichita Falls and
Southern, the Wichita Falls and North-
western and the Wichita Falls and
Wellington railroads with the Mis-
souri, Kansas and Texas will take
place April 4. This is in accordance
with the agreement between the State
of Texas arwd the Missouri, Kansas
and Texas entered into when) the
state's suits against the KatyVwere
withdrawn as the result of ai com-
promise. Under the terms ofiCe set-
tlement the Missouri, Kansas and Tex-
as has obligated itself to spend $.6,000,-
000 on improvements in Texas; within
six years.
A case decided Monday at Austin
by the industrial accident board was
that of a workman in Dallas had
been injured and was privileged under
the workmen's compensation ait to
weekly payments for 300, we?ks of
$4.50, aggregating $1,350, and $432 ac-
crued claims, or a total of $1,782.
Members of the board said an
effort had been made by a lawyer to
settle the claim by having the work-
man-accept $850.
The road bond election which was
held at McDade, Texas, this week was
defeated.
John Nicholas Brown, Jr., a 14-year-
old grandson of Nicholas Brown, after
whom Brown University was named,
becomes the "richest boy in the
world" under a supreme court decis-
ion handed down Saturday in New
York. The decision unravels a legal
tangle that had tied up a large portion
of the $25,000,000 estate left by John
Carter Brown, son of Nicholas Brown.
Finishing touches are being put on
the new half million dollar union
depot and general office building of
the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe at
Galveston, Texas.
A fortune of $365,000 await"
Dalrymple, aged 23. of Pc^,
heny, Pa., who disappeared fr ,
seven years ago. Relatives 1 °
ed a countrywide search. th<
has been heard of Dalrymple
disappeared. The fortune
him by his father, an
whofaied recently. ^
Protesting that the interstat<
merce commission orders prohibiting
the granting of joint rates and other
concessions by interstate railroads is
costing so-called tap line railroads
$1,500,000 a year, attorneys for these
interests Monday at Washington filed
a brief ill the supreme court 'urging
that the orders be set aside.
veith
me
ung
com-
FOREIGN NEWS.
Major General Thomas H. Ba'rry ar-
rived at Manila Saturday, tie will
assume command of the Philippine di-
vision relieving Major General J.
Franklin Bell, who will sail pn the
15th for the United States by tsvay of
Siberia and Europe.
Torreon fell completely into the
hands of the rebels at 10:20 Thursday
night. The news first was annbunced
to the world when the bugler ii front
of Carranza's residence at Juarez,
Mexico, blew the staccato ndtes of
victory. The pean, Carranza sajid, was
sounded at Juarez even before it was
heard in Torreon, Villa delaying out
of compliment to his chief. The news
excitedly announcing victory afjter the
bloodiest series of battles known to
modern Mexico said that Villa cap-
tured a large number of prisoners.
John Lind, former governor of Min-
nesota and for the last eight months
the personal representative in Mexico
of the president of the United States,
sailed from Vera Cruz for Washing-
ton Saturday aboard the presidential
yacht Mayflower.
Emile Vedrines, a brother of Jules
Vedrines, famous French aviator, was
killed in a fall while making a flight
in his monoplane over the aviation
field at Rheims, France, Wednesday.
The Mexican government Tuesday
obtained 5,000,000 pesos of the 50,-
000,000 peso loan just arranged from
the banks at Mexico City.
Pierre Leon Testulat and Clement
Avigny were killed when their aero-
plane collapsed in midair near Rheims,
France, Wednesday.
A new type of aeroplane, consisting
of seven planes arranged in a semi-
circle to give complete stability, was
tried Wednesday in France for the
first time and gave good results.
The Spanish steamer Bonila, carry-
ing 900,000 pesos with which to pay
the federal garrison at Guaymks, was
captured Saturday by constitutional-
ists off Topolobampo, Mexico.
A large section of a mountain near
Brive, France, has become detached
by seismic disturbances and is sliding
down into a valley, sweeping over
everything in its path. Alreadyja num-
ber of farms and cottages have been
blotted out.
General Venustiano Carranza, first
chief of the revolution, was welcomed
to Juarez Sunday. In the last few
weeks the general has riddeii horse-
back for 500 miles and in the last two
months he has traveled 2,000 ijiiles in
the same way.
RESERVE BANK FOR TEXAS
DALLAS, TEXAS, THE LUCKY CITY
TO CAPTURE PRIZE—RESERVE
BANK FOR SOUTHWEST.
TWELVE INSIifUIIONS NAMED
Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleve-
land, Richmond, Va.: Atlanta, Chi-
cago, St. Louis, Minneapolis,
Kansas City, Dallas and San
Francisco Cities Named.
Washington.—Notwithstanding the
keen campaign .waged by thirty-seven
cities throughout the United States to
be designated as a regional reserve
center under the new currency law,
the announcement of twelve selected
places made by the reserve bank
organization committee Thursday
brought forward but little complaint,
Of these is the fact that Pittsburg is
linked with Cleveland, and Philadel-
phia is given a bank.
The situation in that section of the
country" was tightly drawn, but in
making its decision the committee
reached what it regards as a satis-
factory solution. Hearings were held
in eighteen of the leading cities be-
tween the East and West coasts and
the lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. An
official statement issued by the com-
mittee Thursday advised that among
the many factors governing the com-
mittee in making the selections were
the ability of the member banks
within the district to provide the
minimum capital of $4,000,000 re-
quired for a. national reserve bank on
the basis of 6 per cent of the capital
stock and surplus of member banks
within the district.
Business Conditions Considered.
Another factor considered was the
commercial, industrial and financial
connections existing in each district
and the relations between the various
portions of the district and the city
selected. The probable ability of the
reserve bank to meet the legitimate
demands of business, whether normal
or abnormal, in accordance with the
spirit and provisions of the law was
also considered.
Geographical situations, iir a gen-
eral sense, transportation lines and the
facilities for rapid communication bs-
tween the center to be selected and
other portions of the district were also
considered. With this went consid-
eration of the population, area and
prevalent business activities of the
district from the standpoint of agricul-
ture, manufacturing, mining and com-
mercial industries, its record of
growth and development in the past,
and futu?fe prospects. Branches Of the
federal regervQ banks will be located
and established by the reserve banks
through the reserve board. The or-
ganization committee has no Dart in
it, and announces that such materials
as it has gathered bearing on that
feature of the law will be delivered to
the board when named.
Texas District Purely Southwestern.
The Texas district is distinctively
of a Southwestern cast, and brings to-
gether business territory that has for
years had a community of interest.
In addition to the entire State of Tex-
as it embraces practically the south-
ern half of New Mexico, all of the
southwestern portion of Oklahoma,
lying below Oklahoma City, Muskogee
and Shawnee. The northern half of
Oklahoma goes with Kansas City, .a,
designation the business and banking
interests of that state earnestly de-
sired. Added to the Texas district is
the western portion of Louisiana, and
a tier of southern counties in Ari-
zona, which ar§ directly in touch with
Texas through El Paso by rail and
general business comity.
Oyster Beds to Be Surveyed.
Washington.—The senate Tuesday
passed Senator Sheppard's bill appro-
priating $10,000 with which the - sec-
retary of commerce is to make a sur-
vey of the natural oyster beds, bars
and rocks and barren bottoms con-
tiguous thereto in waters along the
coast of Texas.
Joe Durfee Must Hang.
Austin. Tex.y—Unless the governor
interferes, Joe Durfee, a negro, will
hang at Angleton, Brazoria County,
for the murder of Mrs. J. M. Seitz,
who was attacked in an alley at An-
gleton and stabbed to death last fall.
The court of criminal appeals Wed-
nesday overruled a motion for rehear-
ing in Durfee's case.
School Apportionment Is Made.
Austin, Tex. — Superintendent of
Public Instruction Doughty Wednes-
day announced the April school ap-
portionment to be 75c per capita, or
$786,428. Up to date $6.25 per capita
has been apportioned, leaving 7oc per
capita due. The apportionment is 50c
per capita above that at this time last
year.
Rube Waddell Is Dead.
San Antonio, Tex.—George Edward
Waddell, known to the baseball world
as Rube Waddell, has lost in the
heroic game for his life, which he had
been playing for the last several
months. He died Wednesday. He
was one of the greatest of pitchers.
French Torpedo Boat Sunk.
Toulon, France.—The French tor
pedo hoat No. 358 struck a rock neai
Cape Lardier Wednesaaj' and sank
The crew was rescued.
V ALCOHOL—3 PER CENT
AVegefable Preparation for As-
similating fhe Food and Regula -
ting the 5 to mac hs and Bowels of
Infants/Child kln
Promote s Diges fton,Cheerfut~
ness and Rest Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narc otic
/Zrttpe of Old OrSAMVEimCffE/f
J*nmpktn £*€<d -
sflx Senna -*■
ftechelU Sat fa -
dnise Seed -
/^ppetvnini -
jffitor&estexUScdik. -
Hbr/rt Seed - •
dan/ted Suyctr
Winftrpreer ' f/<avcr.
A perfect Remedy forConstapa-
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms ,Convufsions, Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
CASTORIA
3Tor Infants and Children.
The Kind foe Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Facsimile Signature of
iffJT
The Centaur Company,
NEW YOFfK:
For Over
At6 tndnths old
35 Oosi.% JJCents
Guaranteed under the Food flfw
Kxact Copy of Wrapper.
Million a Night for Fun.
A million dollars a night. That's
what a proprietor of a Broadway hotel
in New York figures that the natives
and visitors spend for revel" and pleas-
ure. It sounds fanciful, true. But
here's how he spends the million:
Dinners, $125,000: suppers and wine,
$125,000; theaters, $175,000; taxicabs,
$100,000; hotels, $175,000; cafes, flow-
ers and other incidentals, $300,000.
"If there isn't a npillion spent in the
Broadway district in a night," he
adds, "what is left wouldn't enable a
man to have a steam yacht and a
country home."
Thirty fears
ilSTtl!
thb okktaur company, new york city.
©RANDMA USED SAGE TEA
TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR
She Made Up a Mfxtwre of Sage Tea
and Sulphur to Bring Back Color,
f Gloss, Thickness. *
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching*
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome. Nowadays,
by asking at any gtore |or "Wyeth'a
Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you
will get a large bottle of this famous
old recipe for about 50 cents.
Don't stay gray! Try it! No one
can possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as it does it so naturally
and evenly. You dampen a sponge or
soft brush with it ' and draw this
through your hair, taking ono small
strand at a time; by morning the gray
hair disappears, and after another ap-
plication or two, your hair become#
beautifully dark, thick and glossy. Ady.
Haw-Haw!
City Guy—What kind of a dog do
you call that?
Farmer—That's a huntin' setter.
City Guy—Wbaddeya mean, huntiEi'
setter?
Farmer—He hunts bones, and then
sets and eats 'em.—Yale Record.
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains—Neuralgia,
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts,
Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic
Anodyne. Price 25c.—Adv.
Largest English Cathedral.
The largest cathedral in England is
that of York, the area of which is
63,800 square feet, St. Paul's being the
second largest, with an area of 59,700
square feet.
Why Suffer Frm Headaches^
Neuralgia, iSiemafism
Hunt's Lightning! Oil quickly relieves
the pain. The Hurting and Aching stop
almost instantly. A truly -wonderful remedy
for those who suffer. It is astonishing how
the pain fades away the moipent Hnnt's:
I>l<|h(nin|| Oil comes in contact with it„.
So many people are praising it, that vou.
can no longer doubt. For Cuts, Burns,,
Bruises and Sprains it is simply fine. All
dealers sell Hunt's Lightning Oil in.
25 and 50 cent bottles or by mail f'romt
A. B. Richards iedicine So, <
Shtrman Ttx&s
JVIake the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver ia
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com;
pei a lazy liver to^ "
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, In-
digestion.
Sick
Headache,'
Diatr*se After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRIOR.
Genuine must bear Signature
FREE TOALLSUFFEREJRS
Carter's
ITTLE
IYER
PILLS.
these rfifteni-.es and wonderful cm
TWerapWN
Sf you feel 'out of borts' 'run down* 'got
bufry.n from iidnby, bladder, nbryousi ihskxhe*.
cttroujc weaknkub, ulcers, 8kin eruptions, pllkk
write for FREE cloth bound medical book ox
these tilBeaheg aud ^wonderful_cures effected by
' No.ifto2N©.a
and decide* for
— - — . . . • mm M youraelf if it in
the remedy for your own ailment. Absolutely FREE.
No -follow circulars. No obligations. Dir. !.*< : kp.c
Mbi>. Co.. Haverstock Rd.. Hampstead, London.
wast to prove therapion will curifi ypc.
Combs Made of Cotton
Send mi- Sfty «ent stamp book for nine Inch comb.
IT it breaks, ir< use you get another free. Ateni--.
wanted. THOS.J. HOCKBK, Lan>]>!i»ax, l>i.
SORE I
EYES I
Salve
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 15-1914.
'VITAL- FORCE'
Disease germs are on every hand. They are in the very air
we breathe. A system run down" is a prey for them One
must have vital force to withstand them. Vital force depends
on digestion—on whether or not food nourishes—on the
quality of blood coursing through the body.
BR. PIERCE'S
Golden Medical Discovery
Strengthens the weak stomach. Gives — * " "
sluggish liver. Feeds the starved ncrvea.
goofi digestion. Enlivens ths
Again full health and strength
re heart to Damn like an #»norm«
— . r— ——--..vuuw.o,. XHW "ui neaiu
return. A general upbuilding enables the heart to pump like an engine
running in 01L The vital force is once more established to full power.
Year in and year out for over forty years this great health-restoring
remedy has been spreading throughout the entire world-because of its
ability to make the sick well and the weak strong. Don't despair of
being your old self again. Give this vegetable remedy a trial—Today
—Now. You will soon feel "like new again." Sold in liquid or taHet form by
Druggists or tnal box for 50c by mail. Write Dr. R. V. Pierce Buffalo, N Y
Dr. Pierce's
elotla
eree'a^reat 1QQ8 page •Ke&cal Adviser .«•
bound, sent for 31 bUhum.
TONIC
your
sent
Louisville
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Arno, Carl. Gonzales Reform. (Gonzales, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 9, 1914, newspaper, April 9, 1914; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth404011/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .