Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 119, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 30, 1913 Page: 2 of 4
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HjOO
DENTON. TEXAS, DECEMBER 30,
STYLES IN HANDCUFFS.
TAPPED THE WIRES.
Back
HE PASSED IT ON
A ROYAL INSULT,
YOU DON’T KNVW
through the columns of the le*s ot hl* innocent client.
value of
who
(2 00
(4.00
Before she was married to
was a school teacher, and the
she exercised in the classroom
been lost in her last year of
E»t©b.
1877
pense he advertised in New York, Bos-
ton and Philadelphia, and the balls
were thronged until Joyce Heth died.—
National Magazine. ?
her husband's acquittal, but in his in
nocence.
him she
strength
has ’not
trial.
pense
many
In all stylea,
prim. Also
oven
sides. It never
with the gas
By buying of our bore
therefore, our common.
The Beet Security.
What security is there best suited to
“the average man” possessing (1) safe-
ty. (2) stability, (3) profit and (4) con-
vertibility? Traveling in a circle, we
come back to our original point of de-
parture-real estate. First mortgage
This photograph of a peaceful scene
in Tampico was taken before the fight
between the. Federate and the Consti-
tutionalists when Admiral Fletcher had
and shell* and while the troops of
Carranza were repulsed in the action of
Sunday, Dec. 14, it was expected that
they would return any time with re-
inforcements to take the place.
tlva Halliday."—London Standard.
to protect the Americans and other
foreigners by directing that they be
taken aboard .the warships of Uncle
Sam in the Harbor. Since then the
town has been torn to pieces by shot
Watches, Gold Jewelry,
Silverware, Cut Glass and
Novelties.
(The rate for announcements in Dally
•nd Weekly Record and Chronicle, to
ran from insertion till after proma-
ry, is 115, cash with order for first In-
sertion. Precinct offices 17.50.)
(All announcements In this column
are subject to action of the democratic
primary.)
For County
FRED
< S. M.
Flush the Kidneys at once when
hurts or Bladder bothers.
No investment can pay
ds than money put in ad-
e in this paper, and
ler It has no rival.
and hire
'or them
t demand
PRESIDENT WILSON DID
NOT SEE NIECE OPEN
1.N HER NEW PLAY
A Comb In the Claw.
Many birds possess a useful comb in
the claw of tbe middle toe of the foot,
This has been noticed in owls, night-
jars, herons, bitterns, cormorants, gan-
nets, etc. It baa *jeen explained as a
means of holding the prey securely.
Tbe comb is sometimes replaced by a
curved Made with teeth, which run
along the inner side of tbe claw. Such
a blade is found In razorbills, wild
ducks, gulls, starlings and many other
birds. Where a comb is required the
inner edge of this blade becomes dl-
Years later, when the prince, now
Doing Him a Favor.
Perturbed Diner-What on
the matter with you this evening, wait-
er? First you give rue the tteh and
now after tbe fish you give me tbe
soup.' Waiter (confidentially)—Well, to
tell tbe truth, sir, it was *lgh time you
'ad that fish.—London Sketch
Youngatera thrive
on freah-air-baked
cookiea
Children must eatJOfteDer thau
grown folks; their fast-growing
little bodies demand it. But it
is highly important to give them
foods that are easily digested.
Fresh-air baked cookies atid
bread will not only "agres" with
them perfectly, but win satisfy
their craving for "something
good" as well. Foods baked
this way are utterly wholesome,
healthful and delicious.
should make you resolve to have your
property Insured at once and start in
right for 1914. Don't procrastinate or
forget your good resolution to have
your home insured NOW. Yon may
not have anything to insure if you de-
fer it. See or phone us at once.
Do you road the ass mat appear
each day? Many people do and
they get good pay tor reading then.
They always find something they
want for leas money than th»y would
have to pav elsewhere. Read ths
Couldn’t Get to Rehearsal.
An actor, being unable to find work
on the stage and needing his meals,
finally obtained the promise of a con-
ductor’s job on tbe street car lines.
“When do I report?"
But the very article yon
been looking for Is advertised
Some of the progressive store ads la
today's Issue. Read the ads. Toe
wll f nd it interesting and adds to
your pocket book In man’ instsaeee
it has been in
has surprised
Mrs. Howe is
the stage with
IF WE BUY OF OUR MEuCHANTS.
If we nuy at home our merchants
w ll be more prosperous and will
help to make the city prosperous
They can afford to better the con-
ditions of their stores
more people to work
Where much labor Is
there we find a grow ng common
ity. People from invfghboring
towns, knowing that our town af-
fr.’ds much labor, will naturally lo-
cate here,
men bants,
ity will not only become mors pros
perous but will also grow in pop-
ulation.
good. This year when she
sought an engagement with
under the name of Margaret
Tully says he knew nothing
lation to the President till
permission when rehearsals
their height to go to Washington for
the wedding. She had to tell then.
Had the President attended a per-
formance of the play in New York,
Philadelphia, or Baltimore, wh'brc'it
might have been produced, as weLL^s
in Canada, it would have beenatre-
mendous advertisement. However, it
has been suggested that Mr. Tully-
wanted to be quite sure his new play-
er could make good before he risked
her appearance before a crowd that
would follow the President.
proved, income producing real estate be final. Mrs. Becker showed by every
in a large-city with a large margin of action that she has faith not only in
safety and an absolute first Hen return-
Wilson and: an<1 6 per ceDt o° the Invest-
she had to ' ment are to my mind tbe ideal Invest-
New 1 ment for “the average man” and In-
deed for all others, A century or two
ago real estate first mortgages were
the only safe investment. The first
mortgage real estate bond is simply
tbe modern form of tbe real estate
mortgage, equally safe and far more
convenient and convertible. If one can-
not or does not wish to own real estate
be may at least own bonds based on it
—8. W. Straus in Leslie’s.
Australian Names.
Mark Twain, native of a country
whose place names won the admira-
tion of Robert L. Stevenson, wns him-
self delighted by the place names of
Australia. As amusement for a hot
day be collected a list of eighty-«ne.
including such soul satisfying polysyl-
lables as Mnrriwillumba. Yarnnyackah.
Kondoparinga nnd Jnmberoo. and put
sixty-six of them into a intern of forty-
eight lines. “These are good words for
poetry," he says. ' But the best word
In that list and tbe most musical and
gurgly is * Woolloomoolloo.” — Loudon
Chronicle.
Correcting a Quotation.
In his book. “A Wanderer In Flor-
ence," E. V. Lucas furnishes a new
reading for that quotation about the
leaves on tbe brooks of Vallombrosa.
though be credits It to a cousin across
the pond. Mr. 'Lucas visited Vallom-
brosa and. describing tbe extortionate
rates of tbe hotels tbpre, tells the
story: A departing American was
eying his bill with a rueful glance as
we were leaving. “Milton bad It
I,wrong." he said to me, with the free-
masonry of tbe plucked, for I knew
In Easy Going Trinidad.
The hotel in Trinidud is tbe antitbe-
sis of tbe bustle of the |>ort and tbe de-
lirium of the drive. An old darky in
faded livery. “Methuselah," totters out
and looks at you. Coolly clad figures in
rocking chairs on tbe porch meditative-
ly absorb their drinks without even
doing that After a time a clerk ap-
pears and you sign tbe register. A
while later a black boy comes and lifts
your luggage from the motor. After a
little longer. Interval the manager has
reached the point of taking you for a
long, slow, rambling walk, wbich leads
at length to tbe room that is reserved.
It is a huge chamber, half as large as
a tennis court A wicker couch, two
big cane arm chain, two tables, a gi-
gantic bed and a chest of drawers con-
stitute the furniture. The doors, the
window shades and tbe walls for two
feet down from the ceiling are lattice
work, open to all the w^nds that blow.
A door in front opens into the garden
facing the savanna. In the courtyard
behind tame white aigrets step daintily
among tbe palms, and a parrot and
toucan screech to each other from ad-
joining cages. On one side is a row of
sheds containing huge bathtubs.—
From “Tbe Path of tbe Conquista-
dores," by Lincoln Bates, Jr.
A Cardboard Planet, Z
One remarkable achievement of Sir
William Herschel was in connection
with tbe planet Raturn. He bad ar-
ranged to erect his telescope at Wind-
sor castle to enable Queen Charlotte
and tbe ladles of the court to see tbe
wonders of tbe ringed planet, but on
the evening arranged for tbe observa-
tion great banks of clouds covered the
sky. However, he explained that that
would not matter, and after tbe instru-
ment had been carefully directed tbe
queen and ber attendants looked
through it and saw tbe great planet
ESTATE
Gas Range
The Range that hakes
with Fresh air”
Mrs. Becker, wife of the police lieu
tenant of New York
murder of Herman
gambler killed more
was an interested
Court of Appeals in _________
tai of the state, when the questioh'of
a new trial for her husband was un-
der consideration.
The Court of Appeals is the highest
court of the st&te, and its decision on
the question of the legality and regu-
larity of the decisions of Supreme
Court Justice Goff, the trial judge be-
to keep the kidneys
blood pure, thereby
kidney complications
zy is absolutely
y. feathery. It
y. ing bowl and
cooked through.
// Housewives who use K C never have “bed luck* t
// Try K C eair rtefc. Your grocer will refund your
// not pleased in every way.
I fl 111 iniuiwwwww
charged with the
Rosenthal, the
than a year ago,
spectator at the
Albany, the capi-
SALTS IS FINE FOR
KIDNEYS, QUIT HEAT
SCHMIDT JURY STILL OUT
Associated Press Disnatch.
NEW YORK, Dec. 30—The Hans
Schmidt jury is still out without reach-
ing a verdict.
W. T. Bailey & Co.
Old Phone 54. New Phone ISO
injure
lithia-water drink which al
meat-eaters should take now
clean
avoiding
adv.)
Judge:
M. BOTTORFF
BRADLEY
For County Clerk:
A. P. BLANKENSHIP
W. R. (Walter) ORR
For County Attorney:
H. R. WILSON (Re-Election)
B For Tax Collector:
H. V. HENNEN (R-Election)
For SherMh
PAT GALLIGHER
J1.M GOODE
CHAS. M. SIMMONS.
S. O. HUDSON.
The Statistical Fiend,
We all know tbe bore that begins a
sentence. "StattsMca show.’' He can
tell you bow the daily flow of beer in
St Louis compares with the amount
of Mississippi water that passes tbe
city in twenty-four hours. He can
state tbe tonnage of all ocean grey-
hounds, bulldogs, Pomeranians and
curs of low degree. He knows bow
many men were slain in battles from
that of Abancay or Abonkir to that of
Zurich or Zeiichow. He speaks as one
having authority* and even those who
run at bls approach shake the head
solemnly: “If old Augur says so it
must be so.” What a relief it Is to find
Sir William Ramsay admitting that tbe
most accurate of statistics may lie!
Some time ago the statement was
made ttat 50 per cent bf the total ab-
stainers In a regiment stationed in In-
dia had died within a year. It turned
out that the wbol<« number was two,
and one, while taking his morning
walk, had been eaten by a tiger.—
Philip Hale in Boston Herald.
meat
Hush-
Meat
uric acid which clogs the kld-
they sluggishly filter or
part <>f the waste and |
then you get
rheumatism, head-1
, nervousness, con-I
sleeplessness, hlad-
from sluggish kid-
(By W. Holt Harris.)
ipaper is no stronger than its
advertisement and an ad
e no better than the goods it
l The buying publie is only
1 in facts, and exaggerations
e eliminated from all advertis-
. The person who takes time
the ads of a paper seeks only
ws. He has no desire for fie-
fs Interested only in Sound
arguments. To prepare con-
ids the writer must believe in
The Savage Club’s Founder.
Sir John Hare to a diverting speech
at the Savage club told this reminis-
cence:
Of Andrew Halliday, the founder of
this club, perhaps 1 may be forgiven
if I tell you a little anecdote, which
may or may not be known to you. An-
drew Halliday was an author, not a
very distinguished author, but an ex-
tremely nice, charming fellow. At din-
ner one night at the club a stranger
was present, and Harry Leigh asked
who was tbe gentleman at tbe head of
the table. “That is Colonel Duff."
"Oh!” "Yes, that is Halliday's brotb-
"I thought his name was Halli-
“He took the name of Halliday
as a nom de plume.” “Oh! I see poul-
you will be a shopkeeper,” his choice I tire Duff, comparative Duffer, superia-
was made at once. He remained nl
ways faithful to true bohemian princi-
ples. fully understanding the
leisure. ,
MONTREAL, oec. 30—The opening
of "Omar, the Tentmaker," with Mrs.
George Howe of Columbia, S. G., a
niece of President Wilson
portant part,
in New York
rehearsal thi
theatregoers,
said to have gone
the good wishes of the President, it
seemed that she might have induced
him to attend the first performance
had the premier been in a city near
Washington. Yet the producer, Rich-
ard W. Tully, for some reason now
unknown, decided to bring the com-
pany all the way to Canada for its
initial production.
This is all the more surprising be-
cause Mrs. Howe—who, by the way,
plays under the stage name of Mar-
garet Vale—was a guest at the recent
wedding” of Miss Jessie
Francis B. Sayre. In fact
stop rehearsals of the pla
York for two days to give her time to
attend the wedding.
Mrs. Howe played a small part with '
Mme Nazimove last year, and she made '
began she!
Mr. Tully I
Vale. Mr. i
of her re-I
she asked
were at
Th- death of Col. Henry Exall is a
severe loss to Texas. Almost his en-
tire time, the past few years, has been
devoted to an altruistic cause, better
and more scientific farming. He bad
no axe to grind, albeit in the beginning
there were those who put that charge
against him; he sought no office nor
any politiea^influence. He sought only
jO-j. to do good for the general good, and
he spent his time and money untiringly
and unselfishly to further an end
fraught with much present good and
greater future possibilities for Texas
and lhe Southwest. If It was a hobby,
it was a deserving one and from which
all profited. His energy, matchless en-
thusiasm and personal magnetism were
given unsparingly to educate the peo-
ple of Texas to the importance of his
propaganda, and as much appreciated
as his work has been among those
who have kept in touch with it, it will
fall to the future io give full recogni-
tion to JUst how Important and how
UFt beneficial-hte work was.
Many expressions .of appreciation
have come from those who were anxi-
ous to read tbe new currency bill,
which we published in full yesterday
Two important matters of legislation
have been passed into laws during thp
present Administration. First the tariff
bill st the special session; and then
the currency bill at the regular. We
have gone to some trouble and expense
to publish bath these measures—of so
vital importance to the country at
large—that otir readers may know at
first hand their contents. We have
been repaid for hoth trouble,and ex-
by the expressed appreciation of
of our readers.
TS VALUE OF SUGGESTION
(By W. Holt Harris.)
Humanity is a slave to its wants, and
Himes at the expense of !W needs.
».;a rule, desire, ralher thaiT actual I
presity, governs buying. Create a king, tried to divorce his wife. Brough-
|Dt and-the needs will take case of am as her defender so vehemently sus-
rmselves, is a saying trite and, true, talned ber muse that she triumphed,
jdit contains more, truth than fiction. The kings uuuie was not mentioned
SL a,TayS durtn« tbe trial. though the nation
wiIN* of sumXttonm<,nTheremtnh^ ef! knew tbat be WM secret,y the prosecu-
Mive way of placing the suggestions1^ Brougham Jh b,s sppecb declawd
your business before the buying that be ^aw in tbe distance tbe name-
Ths Old Time "Twistore" Were in-
struments of Torture.
It is In tbe Aeneid that we find the
first reference to tbe handcuff. Vergil
informs us that Proteus was, by means
of such a device, fettered and rendered
helpless by Aristaeus.
It Is of record that abont 400 years
before tbe Christian era an army of
victorious Greeks came upon several
chariots of Carthaginians , which,
among other thtogs, contained a large
number of handcuffs.
Our term "handcuff” is derived from
the Anglo-Saxon "handcop." In the
Saxon days these handcops were used
in the case of nobles, while “footcops”
were reserved for kings. The terms em-
ployed In the fourteenth century were
"aback bolt" and "swivel manacle.”
and the specimens thereof which have
come down to us show that the instni
ments were as cumbersome as their
names
Only two kinds of handcuffs were em-
ployed previously to the nineteenth
century. One, the flexible, was very
similar to that now in use, and the oth
er, which was called “the figure
eight," was utilized tn restrain violent
prisoners. This "figure eight” was
greatly dreaded, since severe pain was
occasioned the fettered person did he
attempt to move a limb.
There used to be a form of handcuff,
now happily abolished, called tbe
“twister ” This consisted of a chain
with handles at each end. This <b>iin
wasqilaced about the wrists; the han-
dles were brought together and twisted
until a firm grip was obtained. The
least struggle on the part of the un-
fortunate captive resulted In the great
est suffering, for the chains bit deeply
into his flesh. A similar form of hand
cuff was that called by the French “la
llgote.”
In some parts of Europe there is still
used an exceedingly primitive form of
handcuff. It consists of a V-sbaped
piece of metal, wherein tbe wrists are
inserted, the often ends being drawn to-
gether by means of a cross hook,
which, however, must be maintained
taut during the whole time the captive
is held
The most Ingenius and effective of all
handcuffs is that used in the United
States and, indeed, adopted by the po-
lice of most civilized countries. It is
much lighter nnd much less clumsy
than the old flexible handcuff and is
not painful to the wearer —Harper's
Weekly.
Ths Intelligent Bohemian Life.
Corot, the French landscape painter,
was a model of consistent bohemian-
ism of the beet kind. When bis father
said. “You shall have £80 a year, your ' er.”
plate a| my table and be a painter or ; day.
£^4 /Mktfk + IF esto aa
Brougham Sided His Time and
Repaid George IV.
With all of his knowledge and talent
Lord Brougham was eccentric and slov-
enly in his personal habits. While he
was a young and comparatively un-
known barrister he was asked to a din-
ner at which the prince regent pre-
sided. Mr. Brougham’s bands needed
washing. The regent's keen eyes rest
ed on them. He beckoned to a waiter
and gave him an order which the man
heard with a scared face, and then
going out he speedily returned with a
ower full of water, soap and a towel.
He carried them to Brougham, pre-
senting them with the prince regent’s
compliments. The barrister Instantly
withdrew and never afterward referred
Ho Doos, He Does.
A man tells a girl he wo.'ld give all
be has to tbe world to make her hap- vlded into teeth. Young
MRS. BECKER ATTENDS
ARGUMENT FOR HER
HUSBAND’S LIFE
quoting with terrific effect Milton
words:
The other shape.
If shape it might be called
stood as night.
Fierce as ten furfee, terrible as hell.
And ehook a dreadful dart; what seem'd
his head
The likeness of a kingly crown had on.
George IV. felt seriously this savage
attack. The nation sided with the
queen, and her defender had paid his
debt with interest
No man or woman who eats
regularly can make a mistake by
ing the kidneys occasionally,
forms
ney pores
strain only
poisons from the blood
sick. Nearly all
aches, liver troubl
stipation, dizziness,
der disorders come
neys.
The moment you feel a dull ache n
the kidneys <>r your back hurts, or if
the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of
sediment, irregular of passage or at-
tended by a sensation of scalding, get
about four ounces of Jad Salts from any
reliable pharmacy and take
spoonful in a glass of
breakfast fur a few
revS will then act
salts is made from
and terrion juice
and ha
flush
them to i
acids in
irritation
Diplomat Saved Himself by a
Quick Witted Ruse.
The passing of tbe court fool as an
institution did not mean that kings had
ceased to take pleasure in the sort of
nonsense that the jesters had been
licensed to perpetrate. King Frederick
William I. of Prussia was an incor-
rigible joker and greatly enjoyed test-
ing the cleverness of his ministers and
advisers by planning embarrassing
situations, from which they could ex-
tricate themselves only by the exercise
of the quickest wit. However, “Das
Buch Fiff Alle" declares that the king
was almost as ready to enjoy lite own
discomfiture as that of his intended
victim.
One day at a small dinner the king,
happening to be iu the mood to play a
prank, chose as his victim one of hte
ministers seated at his left. After a
moment's thought his majesty leaned
toward the courtier on his right and.
giving him a gentle slap on the chw-k.
said, “Pass it.”
As the tap was passed from guest
to guest round the table, tbe king's In-
tentions ixs-ame apparent. The min-
ister at Frederick William’s left would
either have to commit lese majeste by
slapping hte sovereign or admit him-
self beaten aud be the laughing stock
of the table.
Although tbe company was already
in a gale of merriment at his expense,
the minister was not at all ready to
acknowledge a defeat. Just as the
blow was passed to him he let a knife
fall clattering to the floor between the
king and himself. Immediately a serv
ant sprang forward, picked the knife
up and banded It to the minister, but
what was the lackey's astonishment to
receive. Instead of a word of thanks,
a tap on the cheek. The minister by
his wit had saved the situation without
violating the rules of the game. The
king was the first to join in tbe laugh
ter and applause that greeted tbe min
ister’s cleverness.
ANS THE
STATING OF FACTS
NOTICE.
It is the desire of the Circulation De-
•TtMonf of the Record and Chronicle
» have the Daily deliverer regularly
ad promptly to. every subscriber. If
ay subscriber fail* to receive a copy
ad will notify the office before 9
dock the following morning, a paper
111 be sent out.
Barnum’s First Show Venture.
P. T. Barnum launched hia career in
the show business by exhibiting a re-
markable negro woman, believed to be
160 years old and said to have been a
nurse to George Washington. An old
bill of i.ale was exhibited, properly
dated, concerning Joyce Heth, then
aged fifty-four years, and evidence was
also furnished that she was nurse to
George Washington. Everything seem-
ed so straightforward to tbe yonng
man tiiat he was eager to become tbe
proprietor of this novel exhibition,
which he purchased for $1,000, $500 of
which be paid down, selling out his in-
terest in the grocery business, and lhe
other $500 he borrowed. He saw that
the thing to do was to iqake people
ini. ■ talk and become curious and excited
in Montreal rather than ’ over rare spectacles. Regardless of ex-
where
s fall,
Since
on
Good Housewife Had a Pretty
Koon Nooo For Newa.
People who would normally think it
a disgrace to eavesdrop or spy on their
neighbors seem utterly without con-
science when tbe telephone la in ques-
tion and will rush to the instrument
every time the bells ring, whether it is
their call or not
As an evidence of tbe extreme to
which it can be carried I well remem-
ber a case where for some unknown
reason the bells beyond one of the sta-
tions seemed In constant trouble. One
time they would operate perfectly, five
minutes later they would ring so faint-
ly that it was hard to distinguish the
call. Tbe manager was on the verge of
prostration, as be had gone over the
line a dozen times, trimmed every tree
that could possibly have been in the
way, adjusted bells—in fact, done ev-
erything he could think of.
In despair he came to me and told me
his troubles. I suggested that we drive
out to the last “good” station and, to
his surprise, asked him if he dared
walk In without rapping. He said he
could, and the two of us entered very
unexpectedly, the telephone being to
the kitchen at the back of the bouse.
The picture we found was, to say the
least, amusing. The good housewife in
ber craze not to miss anything had ac-
tually rigged up a clamp to hold the
receiver on the back of a rocking chair
and spent her leisure time in comfort-
ably listening to every word that went
over the line. She had even gone so
far as to devise a method of opening
the primary circuit on her own instru-
ment so t^at the batteries would not
run down.
This is an extreme case, but shows
how far some folks can go. The rem-
edy: Just plain common decency and
honestya bylaw authorizing the man-
ager to take out any telephone whose
user is guilty of such dishonest}- and
a manager with backbone enough to do
his duty.—Farm and Fireside.
alts is inexpensive and
makes a delightful effervescent :
regular!
and then '
and the
serious
tabte-
water bef are
and your kid-
This famous
acid of grapes
mhined with lithia
been used for generations to
clogged kidneys and stimulate
activity, also to neutralize the
urine so it no longer
i, thus ending bladder
“Th© Linz Prloes are th©*Lowest1*
“The Linz Qualities th© Highest”
UNZ
BROS.
The exclusive feature of this
range is the Estate Patented
Ventilated Bake Oven. Fresh sir,
taken from outside the range, is
heated and circulated evenly and
uniformly throughout the
—top, bottom and
comes in contact
flames.
Estate Ranges
sizes, finishes and
a full line of Estate Natural Gas
Heating Stoves—as good for heat-
ing as are Estate Ranges for
cooking.
Come in and see this range-
let us explain In detail the
new fresh-air way of baking
and roasting.
Batton & McCrary
We.tO.kSt.
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 119, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 30, 1913, newspaper, December 30, 1913; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1213525/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.