Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 19, 1928 Page: 9 of 10
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SHINER GAZETTE, SHINER, TEXAS
m
'-rl
Girls, Provide a Foundation
for Your Future Health
Port Arthur, Texag.—''When I was
41 girl my health got very poor. My
stomach was weak
and I became mel-
ancholy. Some one
advised my father
to give me Dr.
Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery
and the ‘Favorite
Prescription.' He
got three bottles of
each, and I took
them alternately,
and before the six
bottles were gone
t was feeling and looking like a dif-
ferent girl. I have enjoyed fairly
good health ever since."—Mrs. J. F.
Taylor, 620 New Orleans Ave.
Dr. Pierce’s Famous Family reme-
dies are sold at all drug stores, in
tablets, 65 cts., or liquid, Large
Bottles $1.35.
Send No Money. C. O. D.
CABBAGE AND
ONION PLANTS
500, 65c; 1,000, $1.00
Standard Plant Co., Tifton, Ga.
p,so;?,,.h.
CONSTIPATION
A RELIEVED
. . . QUICKLY
Carter's Little Liver Pills
PurtSy Vegetable Loative
move the bowel* free from
pain and unpleasant after
effect*. They relieve the system of constipa-
tion poison* which cause that dull and aching
feeling. Remember they are a doctor's pre-
scription and can beCakenby the entire family.
All Druggists 25c and 75c Red Packages.
CARTER’S ESIPILLS
Now Synthetic Wood
Building products, like certain pat-
ented cereal foods, are now ‘‘shot from
guns.”
A wood fiber synthetic lumber is
manufactured from sawmill waste by
an explosive process which shreds the
■chips into a fluffy mass preparatory to
molding, under great pressure, into
large broad boards, which may be con-
veniently applied as sheathing or for
partitions. It also is used as tops for
card tables and desks and in radio
cabinets.
The “explosion" is the effect of
high-pressure steam. The material is
placed in the “gun,” the steam turned
on and hydraulic mechanism suddenly
shoots it forth.
For Croup What
Would You Do?
Here is a physician’s prescription used in mil-
lions of homes for 35 years whieh relieves croup
•without vomiting in 15 minutes. Also the
■quickest relief known for Coughs, Cold3 and
Whooping Cough. If there are little ones *in
your home, you should never be without a bottle
®f this valuable time-tried remedy, recom-
mended by the best children’s specialists. Ask
your druggist now for Dr. Drake’s Glessco. 60
cents the bottle.
Benefactor Kept Waiting
A gift of £5,000 has been made to
the London Temperance hospital by
a man who wishes to remain anony-
mous.
“It was totally unexpected, and a
great surprise to me,” said the secre-
tary. “The donor was kept waiting to
see me, as I was attending to one or
two other people at the time, and I
did not know what his business was.
At last he sent in a messenger say-
ing he was in a hurry, and when he
came into my room he deposited bear-
er bonds on my desk to the value of
£5,000.
“His name, when he mentioned it,
conveyed nothing to me, and he re-
marked: ‘You don’t know me, and
you don’t want to.’ ”—London Mail.
Too Much Lipstick
Not long ago mother took little
Ruth to a movie. There was a love
scene and it seems the hero had a “die
away” expression on his face after
kissing his sweetheart. Ruth called
out in an excited voice: “What’s the
matter with him, motiier, did he get
too much lipstick?”—Exchange.
COLDS
Grippe and Fin
Any cold may end in grippe or flu.
Take prompt action. Take HILL’S at
once. HILL’S breaks a cold in 24 hours.
Because it does the four necessary
things at once: Stops the cold, checks
the fever, opens the bowels, tones en-
tire system. Colds rarely develop if
HILL’S is on hand to check them at the start.
They stop quickly when HILL’S is taken later.
Be safe! Get HILL’S in the red box. 30 cents.
HILL’S
Cascara - Bromide - Quinine
Stop your suffering—use
'PRIF
OlWWfSNT
Foit-piijaj
Guaranteed
funded. Get the handy tuba with pile
i pipe, 75c; or the tin box, 60*. Ask for
>PAZO OINTMENT
For speedy and effective action Dr. Peery’s
“Dead Shot” has no equaL One dose only
will Clean out worms. 50c. All druggists.
DnSPeery’s
_ Verm if u
At druggists or 372 Pearl Street. New York City
The
Green Cloak
By
YORKE DAVIS
WNU Service,
Copyright, 1928
STORY FROM THE START
Dr. Ronald McAlister, famous
in his -special work, — applied
psychology—employs his leisure
time in the elucidation of crime
mysteries. A> the narrative opens
he is Interested with Assistant
District Attorney Ashton in the
murder, In the small town of
Oak Ridge, of a recluse, Henry
Morgan. The murdered man, his
papers reveal, had been In New
Zealand, where Doctor McAlister
had lived in his youth. Will
Harvey has testified he saw a
woman wearing a green cloak in
the Morgan home the night of
the murder. Doctor Reinhardt,
friend of McAlister, telephones
ho has a queer case in his hospi-
tal and Invites McAlister to see
the patient. Doctor Reinhardt’s
patient proves to be a young
woman, who in unconsciousness
mutters In a language Reinhart
does not understand. McAlister
sees a possible connection be-
tween the murdered New Zea-
lander and the girl.
CHAPTER III—Continued
Evidently Doctor McAlister had no
share In this idea, for he lost interest
In the young man the moment he was
satisfied his identification of him had
been correct. When the train stopped
at Oak Ridge and we followed William
Harvey out of the car, the doctor did
not cast a single glance after his re-
treating figure.
By rare good fortune we found an
auto pulled up beside the station plat-
form waiting for the train, a flapping,
dilapidated, mud-stained, ramshackle
affair, with a driver to match.
After a moment or two of canny
bargaining on the doctor’s part, we
found ourselves jolting along over a
frozen, rutty road toward our destina-
tion.
“There’s the house,” said the driver
at last. “But you’re pretty late for the
funeral, If that’s what you’ve come for.
It must be about over by this time.”
Neither of us had thought of the
funeral, and the sight of a hearse and
a single car, waiting there in the wind-
swept road, gave us, with our errand,
a rather disagreeable sense of Incon-
gruity. That feeling was heightened
when, leaving our bags in the hall, we
were shown by the undertaker into a
large, dim front parlor.
Here we saw death in its most con-
ventional form. A little group of peo-
ple sitting in rows in little folding
chairs, a minister reading the service,
a quartette from the village choir
ready to sing another hymn when he
should have done.
When, ot the end of the service, the
customary opportunity was offered for
a last look at the body which lay
there in its black casket, my com-
panion rose and, nodding to me to fol-
low him, took his place in the little
procession that was filing round the
Coffin.
I could not do it; that act, some-
how, seemed to put the crowning touch
upon our intrusion.
“Oh, I know how you felt about It,”
said my chief when the service was
over, the people gon'e and we were
left alone in the old house—alone, that
Is, with the addition of Mallory. “I’m
glad I haven’t to go through it again,
though I’m glqd I did, even at some
violence to what they call our better
Instincts. I wouldn’t have missed my
look into that face for a good deal.”
“You didn’t recognize” I cried. “He
Isn’t anyone you knew, long ago, out
there in New Zealand!”
“Not individually,” said the doctor
with a smile at my sudden excitement,
at the sudden recession of those “bet-
ter instincts” of mine. “Not individ-
ually, though that I might have was
well within the possibilities. But he
belongs to a type that I knew all too
well. Did it ever occur to you to won-
der why it is that full gray beards
and spectacles are always regarded as
infallible indications of benevolent re-
spectability? But there’s a scar be-
neath that gray beard that was not
come by in any peaceful occupation;
and even without it, the whole con-
struction of the skull and jaw, the
facial angle, the shape of the ears, all
proclaim him a rough customer—the
sort of man who might well have a
past that he was vainly trying to es-
cape from. No, upon the whole, I
am glad that Ashton left us free to
work out this problem without hold-
ing us responsible to him for our re-
sults.”
Our conversation was Interrupted
there by the appearance of Mallory at
the doctor’s elbow. It was rather
amusing to watch his face as he read
the note from Ashton that the doctor
handed him. It was easy to see, from
his suppressed smile of contemptuous
amusement, that the district attorney
had represented us as a couple of
harmless cranks who might safely be
permitted to amuse themselves upon
the scene of crimes as they chose.
“All right,” he said, folding up the
LOte and thrusting it into his pocket.
“Make yourselves at home. Do jcm
plan to spend the night here?"
“Two or three nights, perhaps,” said
the doctor. “We want to do a little
looking about.”
“Well,” said Mallory, with jocular
sarcasm, “if you find the secret of
the old man’s past, or meet up with
that mysterious woman that one of
the witnesses testified about at the in-
quest, why, let me know.”
“You mean to spend the night here
yourself, don’t you?” I asked.
“Well, part of It, perhaps. I’ve got
some looking about to do. But you
needn’t mind me. I’ve got a key and
can let myself in at any time.”
An hour later, after a bountiful but
vilely cooked meal at a little restau-
rant near the railway station, we re-
turned to the house and began our In-
vestigation in earnest
The first room, of course, to attract
our attention was the room where the
murder took place, the study on the
third floor. Across one end of the
room ran a rude set of homemade
shelves occupied, perhaps, by two or
three hundred nondescript volumes. A
very large, much-littered desk stood
in the middle of the larger part of the
room, while in the alcove was a high
deal table of the sort used by draughts-
men. A stool stood before it, and a
swivel chair in front of the desk.
In one of the numerous corners of
the room was an Immense hamper,
which seemed to have served the pur-
pose of a waste-paper basket. The de-
tectives had evidently examined the
I Was Holding One of Them Out in
My Hands and Poring Over It.
contents of it in their search for a
clue to the murdered man’s identity,
but had not thought the contents
worth preserving. There was a litter
of small scraps about it, and that was
all. A rusty oil stove completed the
tale of the furniture.
And then there were his maps. They
were curiously disposed for a man
who made a habit of geography. They
lay about the floor in great rolls. The
one or two I looked at, after my pre-
liminary glance about the apartment,
were of recent date and bore the
stamp of the British board of trade.
I was holding one of them out in my
hands and poring over it, wondering
rather idly, what possible interest this
group of tiny coral reefs could have
had for a man who lived as Henry
Morgan had lived, here in this village
of Oak Ridge, when a sharp exclama-
tion from Doctor McAlister drew my
attention away from it.
He was standing close beside a big
green-shaded lamp and bending over
something which he had just taken
from the top drawer of the desk. I
shivered a little when I saw what it
was, saw that It was a violin string.
The expression of the doctor’s face,
as he turned toward me, betrayed
both indignation and excitement. “The
prosecution of crime still goes on the
basis that telling the truth is an easy
thing to do; that a man does tell the
truth, unless he means to lie. The
man who came up here and found the
body of Henry Morgan testified that
he had been strangled by a noose.
They thought it was true, because
strangulation by a noose is the only
kind they ever heard of. But look at
this.”
He held It out to me, and, my re-
pugnance forgotten, I took it in hand.
Instead of one knot, the string con-
tained two, one near the end, the other
about fifteen inches away. They were
tied just alike, and were knots of the
fixed-loop variety, very like a bowline.
“If there were only a knot at the
end,” said the doctor, “the rest of the
string could have been drawn through
It to form a nooso; but, of course,
with this second knot of equal size
that becomes impossible. The man
was strangled, not by a noose at all,
but by a tourniquet—a little stick—a
lead pencil perhaps—run through the
two loops and twisted.
“Look here!” he cried the next mo-
ment, with rising excitement. “Here’s
the rest of the instrument.”
He held out for my Inspection a
long straight-stemmed briar pipe, and
I was able to see, just at the base of
the bowl, a shiny, circular indenta-
tion. The ghastly clearness of the
demonstration of the murderer’s meth-
od sickened me a little, and I dropped
the pipe rather quickly.
My chief was pacing up and down
the room, talking to himself. “I never
believed in that noose—not really be-
lieved in It.”
“You are undoubtedly right about
It,” said I, “but is the discovery Im-
portant? Does it make any real dif-
ference?”
“That depends on the point of view,”
said he. “To the late Henry Morgan,
I suppose it made no difference at all.
To an ethnologist, it makes all the
difference in the world. The Cau-
casian uses the noose. With him it
has been the instrument of execution,
of murder and of suicide from time
immemorial. But there are other
races that never heard of it. The
aborigines in my part of the world
never did. With them it was always
this.” He caught up the string as he
spoke, and jerked it taut in both
hands. “It’s the instrument of cere-
monial murder. They used to send
widows out of the world this way, un-
til the British government put a stop
to that etiquette.”
Then, and oniy then, did I realize
the importance of the discovery. “And
the girl at the hospital?” I questioned.
“Would those two loops be familiar to
her?”
He nodded gravely. “I’ll tell you
this,” said he, “I’m glad I’m under no
obligation to report to Ashton until I’m
ready.”
Then he did a characteristic thing.
He put the thing back in the drawer
where he had found It, closed the
drawer, straightened up, with a shrug
of his broad shoulders, and said, In
obviously good faith: “Come, let’s be-
gin.”
Rather to my surprise, the doctor
made straight for the waste-paper bas-
ket, growled a little at the “fools” who
had emptied It, and patiently gathered
together the few scraps that were left,
some clinging In the Interstices of the
basket, some littered about the floor
outside.
As I bent over to help him, he held
out an irregular bit of thick white
paper for my inspection. “He was a
queer geographer, sure enough,” was
his comment. “He tore up his maps.
This is part of one. There’s a fact
which might well have struck previous
investigators as curious, but apparent-
ly did not. If he tore them up, it was
because he was through with them.
And if he could get through with them
so that he could be sure he wouldn’t
want them any more, it was because
they were meant to serve him some
single, definite purpose. When they
had so served it, or had failed to serve
it, then he destroyed them to get them
out of the way. That’s logical, isn’t
it?”
“Absolutely, so far as I can see.”
Presently he carried another scrap
over to the draughting table, scruti-
nized its bare surface rather minutely,
and then offered this second morsel of
paper for my inspection.
“Well, that’s one thing he did with
his maps. He pinned them down on
this table of his with thumb-tacks.”
He pulled open a little drawer in
the table, took out first some pencils,
rulers and compasses, and finally a
rectangular contrivance made of wood-
en rods, with flexible joints at the
corners.
“Do you know what this Is?” he
asked. For a wonder I did, and he
did not. That was a situation which
arose but rarely.
“It’s a pantograph,” said I. “It’s
used for copying on an -enlarged or
reduced scale. You can set the scale
to anything you like.”
“That’s what it means, then,” said
the doctor, turning away from the
table, with a nod of satisfaction. “He
spread his maps out here, and when
they weren’t on a large enough scale
to suit him, he drew them up bigger,
and then tore them up. No. that
won’t do. There’s some intervening
process. He needed those charts on a
larger scale than he could get, and he
enlarged them until they suited that
unknown purpose of his. But of that
purpose itself, we’ve found no trace.
We may never find a trace, but If he’s
left a clew to it anywhere, I think we
may hope to find it.
(TO BB CONTINUED.)
Kindness to Animals Trait of Portuguese
The Portuguese are the only Latin
nation that is kind to animals. For
hundreds of years noble Arabian steeds
were raised here and the Portuguese
rider sits well in the saddle by second
nature.
The donkeys here are smaller than
in other Latin countries, and the
largest beast of burden is the ox. In
Portugal this creature is' a strong,
red, well-cared for animal, with wide-
spreading horns. The streets are full
of yokes of oxen pulling carts with
solid wheels bound fast to their axles.
Since the axle is ungreased, a frightful
squeaking announces the approach of
these wagons, which can be heard a
mile away.
Oxen are particularly common In
northern Portugal, where' the yokes
themselves are made of beautifully
carved hardwood decorated with many
colors. The wheels of these wagons,
bearing tremendous burdens, clatter
on the streets of Oporto.
I have never seen a driver maltreat
his animals. In the country the cow-
herds guide their flocks with enormous
bamboo staffs.-^Roda Roda in Uhu,
Berlin (Living Age).
South as Political Unit
The expression “Solid South” was
first used by Col. John S. Mosby in a
letter to the New York Herald advo-
cating the election of Rutherford B.
Hayes in 1876, according to Liberty,
Children of civilized races have
probably alwat’s had rickets, says a
child .^specialist, .
WIRELESS NEARLY
90 YEARS OF AGE
Present Radiation System Pro*
ceded by Two Others.
Chicago.—Radio, once known as
“wireless” underwent a process of
elimination before tbe present radia-
tion system was adopted. This meth-
od was preceded by two others, in
which attempts at sending without
wires were made by conduction and
induction.
The conduction system was discov-
ered by Professor Steinheil, a German
inventor, in 1838. He stumbled upon
it when experimenting with steel rails
in an endeavor to substitute them for
telegraph wires. He found that by
using only one telegraph wire, with
the earth as the return circuit, tele-
graph instruments functioned as well
as with two wires. This method still
is in use.
Steinheil next tried to telegraph
solely through the earth. This ex-
periment Is said to be the first suc-
cessful attempt to telegraph without
wires, and 50 feet were covered.
S. B. Morse, inventor of wire teleg-
raphy and telegraph code, followed
up Steinheil’s experiments and in 1844
transmitted messages across a canal
75 feet wide. This was accomplished
by two metal conductors in each side
of the canal. By the insertion of a
battery between the two underwater
plates a current was carried across
the canal with the water as the con-
ductor. Three miles was the greatest
distance reached.
Professor Dolbear of Tufts college,
Boston, in 1882 invented an induction
transmission device. By this method
an electrical influence exerted by a
charged body or by a magnetic field
is sent to neighboring bodies without
wires. Professor Dolbear was able to
transmit both telegraph and voice.
The radiation method is used today
in both broadcasting and commercial
radio. It comprises a means of dis-
turbing the ether so that a series of
electrical waves are produced. Mar-
coni was a pioneer in this field.
Locomotive Crossed
Missouri River on Ice
White Cloud, Kan.—The first loco-
motive to reach Kansas crossed the
Missouri river under its own steam,
but the stream was frozen over.
This locomotive was owned by what
is known today as the Grand Island
railroad. At that time it was called
the Marysville or Palmetto Roseport
railroad, which was organized in 1857.
In 1860 the company had built four
miles of line from Ehvood, Kan., on
the Missouri river opposite St. Joseph
to Wathena. The company received
at St. Joseph its first rolling stock in
the form of a small locomotive which
arrived over the newly constructed
Hannibal & St. "Joseph railroad.
It was quite a question at first how
the locomotive would be brought over
the river to the new line. There was
no bridge at that time and the owner
of the little ferryboat was not willing
to risk all his invested capital in the
sinking of his vessel in transporting
the engine across. He refused to let
the engine be put on board.
The weather, however, solved the
problem. Being a very severe winter,
the Missouri soon was frozen over
from bank to bank. Over the rails on
the ice the engine was sent under its
own steam, though it is said the en-
gine men were unwilling to take the
risk of staying on board during the
perilous journey and a second man
had to step aboard as the western
shore was reached to bring the engine
to a stop.
Army Bank System
Has Proved Success
Washington.—In the 54 years that
the government through the army has
been acting as a savings bank for en-
listed men, deposits made by them
have reached the total of $65,215,-
243,22, and interest paid on these de-
posits at 4 per cent aggregated $3,-
748,988.19 during the same period.
The deposit system was started in
1872 by congress, which provided that
enlisted men of the army might de-
posit their savings in sums not less
than $5 and that upon deposits of not
less than $50, requiring for a period
of six months or longer, interest would
be paid at the rate of 4 per cent a
year.
These deposits are returned to the
soldier with accumulated interest on
his discharge.
The original purpose of the act was
to provide for soldiers’ savings at a
time when the greater part of the
army was on frontier duty where
banking facilities were not available,
and was successful from the outset
Scotch Fish Board
Guards Herring Beds
Glasgow, Scotland—There are as
good fish in the sea as ever were
caught, but not quite so many herring,
in the opinion of the Scottish fishery
board.
The practice of catching and cur-
ing immature herring for the export
trade has done a great deal toward
reducing the numbers of this fish, the
board has concluded. With a view of
protecting young herring a closed sea-
son is to be decided and the board
will request co-operation of the heads
of the fishing industry.
Many millions of herring have been
caught this season and at times have
retailed in London and other cities
for half a penny each, or about one
for an American cent.
GIRLHOOD TO
MOTHERHOOD
Iowa Woman Found Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound Always Helpful
Vinton, Iowa.—“When I was seven-
teen years old I had to stay at!
xiV ' .~ 1101110 from school.
I finally had to quit
school, I was so
weak. I suffered for
about two years be-
fore I took Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound,
then I picked up
one of your books
and read It. I be-
gan taking themedi-
cine. Now I am a
housekeeper w ft hi
six children, and I have taken It
before each one Was born. I can-
not tell you all the good I have re-
ceived from it. When I am not as well
as can be I take it. I have been doing
this for over thirteen years and it al-
ways helps me. I read all of your little
books I can get and I tell everyone I
know what the Vegetable Compound
does for me.”—Mbs. Frank Sellebs,
510 7th Avenue, Vinton, Iowa.
Many girls in the fourth generation
are learning through their own per-
sonal experiences the beneficial effects
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound. Mothers who took it when they
were young are glad to recommend It
to their daughters'.
For over half a century, women, have
praised this reliable medicine.
The Old Rascal
“I want you to make a correction
in your valuable lit’l paper,” said
Jokin’ Jim Jopples to the editor of
the Clarion the other day. “I’m frank-
ly afraid o’ war and hereafter I wanta
be called a battle-scarred veteran.
More than once—and this is true o’
many a soldier includin’ the bravest—
I should ’a’ been decorated for pallor.”
—Farm and Fireside.
---A vacant mind invites dangerous
inmates.—Hillard.
P
Guard Against “Flu”
With Musterole
Just Rub
Away
Danger
Influenza, Pneu-
monia and Grippe
usually start with
a cold. The mo-
ment you get
those warning
aches rubon good
old Musterole.
Musterole re-
lieves the conges-
tion and stimulates circulation. It has
all the good qualities of the old Mus-
tard plaster without blistering.
First you feel a warm tingle as the
healing ointment penetrates the pores,
then a soothing, cooling sensation and
quick relief. Have Musterole. handy
for emergency use. It may prevent
serious illness.
To Mothers: Musterole is also
made in milder form for
babies and small children.
Ask for Children’s Musterole.
-szHl -5^ iii
j
Better than a mustard plaster
Vegetable Method
Acts Quickly in
Constipation
When the system becomes clogged with
poisons as the result of chronic constipa-
tion, quick and complete action is
tlon, quick and complete action is neces-
sary to avoid serious results. At such
times too many folks resort to strong
ts.” A
the use
Is. The
imes too many folks resort
nineral purgatives or harsh “salts.” A
• way Is thro
of Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills. The
natural bowel action thus established
mineral purga
better and safer way is through th
Wright’s Indii
natural bowel action 1
cleanses the System. At druggists or 372
Pearl St., N. Y. City.
Wrights Pills
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Da-ndruLE-StopsHairFalling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Haul
60c. and $1.00 at. Druggists.
Hiscox Chem. Whs. Patchogne. N. Y.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO—Ideal for use In
connection with Parker’s Ilair Balsam. Makes the
hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug-
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. x.
tibNARD
EAR OIL
DEAffKSS
mm
to##1' MM Druggists
nolU? FOLDER AB0UT’i£d/5K3J”0N REQUEST.
A.O. Leonard, inc.
•70-5WAVE, NEW YORK
&T NeoD
inflamed eyelids or other
eye irritations. You will
find a soothing and safe
remedy in MITCHELL
EYE SALVE.
FT A T ,T. & RUCKED at all
New York City druggists.
Frost Proof Cabbage
and Onion Plants
3uick shipments. All varieties.
500, 65e;' 1,000, $1.00.
Farmers Pl&nt Co., Tifton, Ga.
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Habermacher, Mrs. J. C. & Lane, Ella E. Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 19, 1928, newspaper, January 19, 1928; Shiner, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1148146/m1/9/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Shiner Public Library.