Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 90, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 14, 1891 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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BURSON-CO., Publishers.
J. W.
A
MY CROWN.
I!
Real Estate.
SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 14, 1891.
J. S. BROWN
3
COMPANY.
Importers and Wholesale Dealers in
ZET.A.IRGD'W’.A-’R/IEl
Real Estate and Loan Agents,
ALSO REPRESENTATIVES OF
IS
Tiiey
S’
AXJStTXTC
OU CAN BUY
e
ESTATE
REAL
GALVB8TON, TEXAS.
4!TRUNK*
f
A. M. WASSAM.
Latest
I
King Momus
J .W. BYRNES
IMPORTER AND R3FINER OF
Meet
Center bet. Market & Mechantc.
J
STORES AND OFFICES'FITTED UP.
and
PUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS.
The Most Popular, Pleasant and
Effectual Remedy for
Gentlemen, Come and
Him.
J. M. BROWN,
Pres’t.
Imported and Domestic Table aud
Pocket Cutlery.
J. 8. BROWN,
Vice Pres’t.
I
j
15c
25<
50<-
F C
LOBENSTEIN
SCO.
gJT
Dealers and Importers of Ship Chandlers’
Goods generally, Manilla, Sisal and Cot-
ton Rope. Contractors for Sails, Awn-
ings, Tents, Etc,
our establishment an entire new JOS FRINTING plant,
and will, within the next few days, be prepared to do Job Printing in all
Our Presses are
C. IS. REE & CO.,
PROPRIETORS.
MANUFACTURERS OF ALL
KINDS OF
MACHINES, STEAM ENGINES
. AND
Brass and Iron Castings.
Repairing Done on Short Notice.
COR. 33d & W INNIE STS.,
GALVESTON, TEX.
ASPHALTUM
--AND--
DURING MARDI GRAS WILL
MAKE HEADQUARTERS
AT
GAMBRINUS HALL,
The Guest of the Old Reliable
SADDLERY,
SADDLERY HARDWARE,
Farm Implements, Wagons, Bug-
gies and Carts, Blacksmiths’
and Wheelwrights’ Materials.
J. R. DAVIKS. E. B. ROOD, Atty.
WASSAM, DAVIES & ROOD,
Estate Agents
Office: First Floor Tremont Hotel.
RENTS COLLECTED FOE EVERYBODY.
Nicely Finished, Iron-Bottomed, at
$2 50, $3.50, $5.00 ffiEJSSal
No charge for delivering or painting
name on same, at
R. H. JOHN’S TRUNK FACTORY,
MARKET STREET, BETWEEN 22d AND TREMONT.
Builders’ Equipments,
TFOCH’S
R ONSUPTION
*>ure
}/>
V
PROF. E. H. KRUGER,
HAMBURG SYRUP!
J. W. BURSON-CO..
AGENTS.
‘I
J
E|g|r
Coal Tar Distiller.
■■gmeuiug
— interfere with the squadron when every
OFFICIAL CITY NEWSPAPER
THE LOMBARD INVESTMENT COMPHNT.
Office: Upstairs Over Sunny South Building.
BILLY BUSCHER,
PROPRIETOR.
LEE IRON WORKS, JOHN A. CAPLEN,
The Real Estate Agent,
OFFERS YOU THIS WEEK
Ten Choice Lots in Caplen’s First Ad-
dition to Galveston at $100 and $150
per Lot.
A Good Bargain in a House and One
Lot in the Eastern part of the city.
Several Large Tracts of Land fronting
on the Bay.
Several Choice 10 and 20-Acre Tracts
at Gardentown.
W. 8. Griffin. Fred. W. Fickett, Att’y at Law
Griffin & fiekett,
Real Estate Agents,
Mechanic Street, bet. 22d and 23d, Under
Washington Hotel, GALVESTON, Tex.
Are prepared to accommodate all purchasers,
small or large.
West Sid© SSnd Street Bet. Strand and Mechanic.
O. M. SHERMAN, President. A. 0. DICKSON, Sec’y and Treas.
Galveston and Wichita Real Estate Co.
FREYBE BUILDING, OPPOSITE TREMONT HOTEL.
List Your Property for Sale or Rent With Us.
Your Dentist Has Moved.
To the thousands.of people who have
patronized me during the past three
years, and to all who may in future fa-
vor me with a call, I would state that on
and after the first of February I will oc-
cupy pleasant corner rooms over Pres-
ton’s drug store, corner Twenty-second
and Market streets (entrance on Twenty-
second street), and I would be glad to
meet all my old and as many new pa-
tients as chose to favor me with a trial.
* M. 0. Perkins.
aMi
■W
1111118111
Rlffl t
Shop: Postoffice street, between 21st and22d
streets. Residence: Corner Winnie and 35th
streets, Galveston, Texas.
All kinds of Jobbing promptly attended to.
Hem Job Printing Office.
T^1BdNE
LEA,
me until yester-
.A*..-’
Oh, poetry is only a jangle of rhyme,
And there’s very cold comfort in art,
And music can live in the basest of souls—
They are none of them worth one heart.
The emerald is radiant, the diamond aglow,
And the opal will never pale,
And the pearl—but what are all jewels of earth
To a heart that will never-fail?
It's all very well to be wealthy and wise;
It’s all very well to be free;
But the strong, true love of a steadfast heart
May the good God give to me 1
You may have your crowns that are crusted with
gems,
Your poetry, music and art,
And the world may go by—I shall never sigh,
If it leaves me one faithful heart.
—Ella Higginson in West Shore.
■
If you are in search of a situation,
make your want known through the
columns of Evening Tribune.
I
1
^ifWASTES +H5 -AMMUNITION.
V cAOVERTlSINCU
Properly’ LMctiARCtb
CONTRACTOR FOR BORING
ARTESIAN WELLS.
Office—161 Avenue H. P. O. Box 403. Factorj
Ave. A, bet. 18th and 19th Sts.
GALVESTON, • TEXAS
GEO. J. GARTIIAR,
Carpenter & Builder.
I
P. S. WREJM,
NOTARY PUBLIC and CONVEYANCER.
Deeds, lieleases, Mortgages, Powers of Attorney, etc., written up,
and all Notarial work promptly attended to.
EXAMINATION OF TITLES AND CONTINUATION OF ABSTRACTS WILL
HAVE SPECIAL ATTENTIONS
Agent for the Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association.
^^p~The patronage of everybody respectfully solicited.
OFFICE- WASHINGTON HOTEL BUILDING, NORTHEAST CORNER
TREM0NT AND MECHANIC STBEETS.
A. J. OWEN. C> G' CLIBT0KD-
OWEN S CLIFFORD
H. W. ELAGGE. F- O. BERTRAND. D. R. BEATTY.
BLHGGG. BGRTRHND & CO,
I^eal Estate P^eptj,
2212 Mechanic, bet, 22d and 23rd, GALVESTON, TEXAS.-
JSTZHTW OH’H’ICEl.
SlIE>X>TTE>RT», SKXRVIEV «& Co.
Roal Estate Agents,
Have moved their office from Strand to the Northwest Corner of Tremont and Church,
where they will be pleased to give prices, etc., and any information regarding Galveston real
estate.
SCOTT COMPANY,
Real Estate Agents,
506 TREMONT ST. GALVESTON, TEX.,
Call attention to their large and varied list of Business, Residence and Acreage Property,
Investois will find it to their interest to see us before buying elsewhere,
NO MATTER WHAT THEY AVANT.
J. A. LABAUTHE. CHAS. A. SCHKOEDEB.
SCHROEDER & LABARTHE,'
Roal ■ tstata ■ Agonis?
126 Mechanic Street. f
Evening Tribune is a member of the
following press associations, whose re-
ports it receives daily:
ASSOCIATED PRESS.
TEXAS AFTERNOON PRESS.
SOUTHERN PRESS BURKAU.
Loaureile Oil.
Prevents tendency to wrinkles or age-
ing of the skin. Prevents withering of
the skin or drying up of the flesh. Na-
ture’s wonder for preserving youth and
freshness. ?1, large bottles, at drug-
gists. 5
You will save from.25 cents to 50 cents
on every dollar in buying jour violins,
guitars, banjos, zithers, flutes, accor-
dions. and all kind of musical instru-
ments from C. Janke & Co.,
Tremont st., bet. Market and Mechanic.
Is it coating too much to supply your
table? Possibly.you could live just as
well and save money if you bought your
groceries and. supplies of Schneider Bros.
Market street, between Twenty-third and
Twenty-fourth streets. *
Mardi Gras is a thing of the past, but
Clem’s is the Resort of the Day. East
side of Twenty-first street, between 2d
and 3d avenues. *
At Justus Zahn.
Successor to Rose & Zahn, the best
cabinet photos are still made.
Organist and Teacher of Music
(PIANO, ORGAN AND SINGING).
Organist First Baptist Church
Synagogue.
PUPILS RECEIVED ANY TIME.
Address: S. W. Cor. Postofflce & 18tt•
E are placing in
its branches. We have New Machinery, New Presses and New Type.
the Latest Improved, and our Type the Latest Designs and Styles.
All our Material is New and First-Class, and we guarantee to turn out
FIRST-CLASS WORK to all who favor us with their patronage.
^^9
ll
MpHa
V
Wllfil
«Ste COMS’AlJSVY,
Eastern Office:
230, 231, 232, 233, 234 and 235 Temple Court,
New York City.
W. F. BRITTINGHAM, Manager.
All advertising originating outside of t ne state
must be contacted tor through this office.
Entered at the Galveston postoffice as mail
matter of the second class.
Telephones.
Business Office
Editorial Rooms Tribune
Tribune Building:
Southeast corner 21st and Market streets.
Sending Letters by Wire.
What is termed telpherage, or the con-
veyance of parcels by electricity along
lines of wires placed overhead, is little
known in this country beyond the stage
of experiment. We have little real need
of this device to assist commercial busi-
ness. In South America, however, tel-
pherage schemes appear to be propitious
to the speculator/ and a line has been
constructed 186 miles long, which places
Buenos Ayres and Montevideo in com-
munication. Across the La Plata there
is a swing for the wires of nineteen
miles, and the initial start for this jour-
ney is afforded by two towers 270 feet in
height. It is intended to dispatch letter
boxes between the two cities at intervals
of two hours.—New York Journal.
, Queer world ! Queer people ! Here are
men and women by thousands suffering
from all sorts of diseases, bearing all
manners of pain, spending their all on
physicians and “getting no better, but
rather worse,” when right at band there’s
a remedy which says it can help them
because it’s helped thousands like them.
“Another patent medicine advertise-
ment,” you say. Yes, but not of the or-
dinary sort. The medicine is Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, and it’s dif-
ferent from the ordinary nostrums in
this—
It does what it ciaims to do, or it costs
you nothing I
The way is this: You pay your druggist
$1.00 for’ a bottle. You read the direc-
tions, and you follow them. You get bet-
ter, or you’don’t. If you do, you buy an-
other bottle, and perhaps another. If
you don’t get better, you get your money
back. And the queer thing is that so
many people are willing to be sick when
the remedy’s so near at hand.
SuckUn's As-nsca 3a!ve.
The best salve in the world for' Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fo-
yer Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chill-
blains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions,
and positively cures Piles, or no pav re-
quired. It is guaranted to give perfect
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price
25 cents per box. For sale by J, J.
Schott.
THROAT ANO LONG DISEASES I and Consumption.
THE BEST LUNG AND HEALTH RESTORER EVER USED.
however, to wholly eclipse the white
squadron.
How could it eclipse or in any way
OF HERMANN RADEKER,
Wholesale & Retail Dealer in
UL Butter, Eggs,
MILK AND GAME.
Prompt Delivery Throughout the City. POST-
OFFICE bet.20th and 21 st, atthe OLD ICE HOUSE
The Evening Tribbune penny will
soon find its way into the tills of the
shops and make it an adjunct of trade.
Advertising Rates.
Display, per line v • ; ■
Special rates on contract.
Local notices, per line
Special position, per line
Come to the Sangerfest. ;
Get into harness and work for Galves-
ton and the Sangerfest.
Take in your decorations and preserve ;
them for the musical carnival.
Note yesterday’s real estate transfers
and see whether Mardi Gras pays.
The weather clerk deserves lynching
for the atrocious weather he is dealing
out. ___________________
Now for a long pull, a strong pull
and a pull altogether to make tne Sanger-
fest a success.
The Waco News refers locally to “the
horrible ■prostitution of little children
going on in the reserve.” Keep your
family skeleton in the closet.
There is no other city in the south
that has made the progress that Galves-
ton has during the past two years, and
she has scarcely started on her onward
career.® _
A bill to abolish Johnson grass has
been introduced in the state legislature.
If it passes it will doubtless have the
same effect that the Pope’s bull had up-
on the comet.
Factories which will convert the raw
products which can be produced in Gal-
veston county, will give employment to
the laboring man and make money for
the men who put their capital in the
enterprises.
In order to test the constitutionality of
the anti-lottery law, the editor of the
New Orleans Daily States mailed an edi-
tion containing objectionable matter,
notified the authorities, was arrested and
held to bail. His preliminary hearing
will take place before the United States
commissioner probably today.
The first issue of the Texas Commer-
cial Traveler has reached Evening Trib-
une’s desk. It flies the names of N. W.
Floyd, editor, and J. M. Benish, business
manager. It is published at Houston
and is the official organ of the Travelers’
Protective association in Texas. It’s a
typographical beauty and, under the
control of “Nat,” will not only deserve,
but will command, success.
The resolution recently passed by the
house of the state legislature allowing
each member to subscribe for twenty
daily papers at the state’s expense has
attracted a rush of “blanket sheet”
morning paper solicitors to Austin. The
twilight twinkiers sit serenely by and
witness the scramble, confident of the
support of their home constituency. The
people know’ a thing or two.
The Fort Worth Mail in referring to
the late scandal created in that city by
the Kansas City Sun’s correspondent and
Senator Carter, of Tarrant county, re-
marks upon the subject, says :
“If Senator Carter is correct in his
estimate, the press, as a whole, is char-
acterless—it is brutal; not man’s honor
nor woman’s fame are respected by it.
Only the law prevents the average news-
paper from degenerating into a Sunday
Sun.” In his accidental position as state
senator from the Fort Worth district,
some influence might attach to the hon-
orable senator’s comments. As an indi-
vidual, his opinions are as worthless and
weightless as the veriest buffoon.
CURRENT COMMENT.
San Antonio Light: Galveston thinks
that about $100,000 per month will carry
on her jetty work under her contracts.
Work is to commence in April 1891, and
$600,000 additional to the regular $500,000
is expected to carry the work on until
September 1892. Eighteen months
work at $100,000 per month will come out
- rather short on an appropriation of $1,-
100,000, only $500,000 of which is abso-
lutely assured.
Will the Light kindly send a diagram
by which the public can solve what it is
trying to get at. It is either badly in-
formed or wilfully unjust.
Houston Post: The Galveston News
says that Editor Floyd is a “trained
newspaperman.” Of course he is; he
graduated from the Post.
All a mistake; no newspaper man ever
graduates; he can learn something new
every day of his life.
” The San Antonio Express is getting
bloodthirsty. It says:
To Governor Hogg: Nevermind your
other promises; they will keep. Bend
your energies toward the hanging of the
drunken pistol toter. So shalt thou
prosper and make thyself strong in the
hearts of the people.
Does the Express wish to depopulate
its city?
Waco Day: We are gratified to an-
nounce that, true to her sporting pro-
clivities, Galveston will present a cock-
ing main in connectjon with the Mardi
Gras festivities. It will not be allowed,
F. A. PARK. C- VANSICKLE.
-wnB> ATg-sr VAircsiCKllvEj, = =
- REAL ESTATE AGENTS,
Galveston National Bank Building, j GALVESTON, TEXAS*
Corner Strand and Tremont Streets, i
TBXSPHONE No. 319.
a
H 3
The Galveston High School of Music
elves instructions either private or in
classes on piano, organ, violin, cornet,
zither, banjo, guitar or any other
intrument at lowest prices and by only
the very best teachers. Give us a trial
and you will be convinced. Pupils can
begin any time during the month at the
Galveston High School of Music,
Over C. Janke’s & Go’s Music Store.
The Demand for Stenographers.
The demand for good, careful and ac-
curate stenographers and typewriters is
increasing, not decreasing. A girl needs
to know how to spell and punctuate a
letter, besides being able to correct one
that is wrong grammatically. She must
be possessed of that rare and priceless
qualification—common sense. She must ,
be observing, and she should have an
average amount of intelligence. No
prodigy is required.
As to wages, the average young girl
cannot expect to be paid as much as the
average man. It is hard to say why this
is so for she is almost always just as
capable. A young woman for instance
will get ten or twelve dollars a week
where a young man of the same caliber
will receive fifteen to twenty dollars.
Perhaps there is an indefinable feeling
among employers that they cannot ex-
act so much from a woman as they can
from a man. A man will be often re-
quired to do a great deal of miscellaneous
work in connection with shorthand and
typewriting, which would never be im-
posed on a woman.
But there can be no doubt that there
is still room for those who will take the
trouble to properly equip themselves for
the work. The remuneration is ample
for the needs of the average girl, and
greatly in excess of that paid for other
kinds of clerical work.—Ladies’ Home
Journal. ________
Feminine Reasoning.
Tiiey are always in the right, aren’t
they, these women who bind their vari-
ous wrongnesses into their own sweet,
feminine selves? “ Why do you try your
eyes,’’ said a “sensible” woman to a flut-
tering little flurry and feathery creature,
“with that spotted veil?”
“But you don’t wear any veil at all,
do you?”
“N—ot very often.”
; “And your boots have thick soles and
low heels?”
i “Yes, but”——
> “You don’t carry any muff, I suppose?”
, “No, I couldn’t walk with my arms in
> any such cramped position; but how
do”---
“And in summer you don’t use a par-
asol?”
“Parasols are nuisances; but who
told”----
“And you have a pocket where you
can get at it, and yon don’t carry your
purse in your hand, and you wouldn’t
use face powder for anything, and you
don’t wear a yellow garter nor a shoul-
der cape, and you aren’t afraid of a
mouse, and you can indorse a-check,
and”---
“But you never saw
day”---
“And when you wore a little girl you
never jflayed with dolls 1”—New York
Cor. Denver Republican.
vessel carried a cockpit of its own?
San Antonio Express: The Waco Day
laughs at .the claim that the buttonless
shirt' is a late invention. It has been
known to married men since linen was
made.
Don’t single men wear shirts?
Carrying Oil.
A cargo may consist of several quali-
ties of oil, and these are separated from
each other by narrow water spaces.
Some two years ago a sailing vessel was
built by the Barrow Shipbuilding com-
pany to the order of an Antwerp firm.
She was designed to carry petroleum in
bulk in competition with the steamers.
The success attendant upon this new de-
parture may lead to the more extensive
Construction of vessels of a similar nat- .
ure. Petroleum vessels cannot be used !
for any other purpose on account of their
peculiar arrangement and smell. A pro-
posal to carry palm oil in a similar man-
ner has been found impracticable on ac-
count of the corrosive ingredients which ,
attack the steel instead of preserving it,
as petroleum does.
Apropos to this departure in British
shipbuilding it is stated that the Per-
sians as far back as 1760 were known to
carry petroleum in bulk in their own
vessels on the Caspian. Petroleum car-
riers are generally fitted with electric
light, so as to insure a minimum of risk
from fire. With every precaution that
modern science can suggest the carriage
of this oil is beset with much difficulty
and danger.—Chambers’ Journal.
Slie Writes Love Letters.
Very few people can do what a jolly
, old lady who keeps a notion shop on
Thompson street has succeeded in doing
—inspiring sufficient confidence in a
large circle of her young male custom-
ers to induce them to intrust to her the
writing of their love letters. These
young men are mostly wage earners,
who toil all day, who have horny hands
but warm hearts, and who have never
become well enough acquainted with
the pea to give them confidence in their
own ability to write nice letters to their
sweethearts. x
These young lovers go to the little
shop on Thompson street, and in the
privacy of the quaintly furnished back
room give the pink cheeked, silver haired
mistress of the place a general idea of
what they want to write “to de girl.”
Then they sit back and play with the
yellow tabby cat and listen to the
scratching of the old lady’s pen. In ten
minutes the letter is read to the lover.
Il it meets with his approbation, it is
sealed, addressed and posted. Then the
blushing youth hands the old lady a
silver quarter and goes on his way re-
joicing.—New York Star.
Knowledge and Instinct.
James Hogg, a Scotch poet known as
the Ettrick Shepherd, was a close ob-
server of life under many different forms
and conditions. A conversation witl^ a
fellow shepherd upon tne habits of the
salmon is reported, in whicn snrewd
native reasoning is shown. It brings out
the Scotch love of metaphysics.
Shepherd—I, maintain that ilka sau-
mon comes aye back again frae the sea
till spawn in its ain water.
Friend—-Toots, toots, Jamie! Hoo can
it manage till do that? Hoo, in the name
o’ wonder, can a fish, traveling up a
turbid water fra the sea, know when it
1 reaches the entrance to its birthplace, or
that it has arrived at the tributary that
was its cradle?
Shepherd—Man, the great wonder to
me is no hoo the fish get back, but hoo
1 they find their way till the sea first ava,
’ seein’ that they've never been there
i afore!—Youth’s Companion.
A Safe Investment
Is one which is guaranteed to bring
you satisfactory results, or in case of
failure a return of purchase price. On
this safe plan you can buy from our ad-
tised druggists a bottle of Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption. It is
guaranteed to bring relief in every case,
when used for any affection of the throat,
lungs or chest, such as Consumption, In-
flammation of the Lungs, Bronchitic,
Asthma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc.
It is pleasant and agreeable to taste, per-
fectly safe, and can always be depended
upon. Trial bottle free at J. J. Schott’s
drug store. 1
We have just received from the factory
30 beautiful Upright Pianos, in Burl
Walnut, Antique Oak, Rosewood and
Mahogany Cases, comprising only the
leading and standard makes, such as
real Mathushek & Son, Gabler & Konin.
ger, Clough & Warren, and Newby &
Evans Pianos. We sell either for cash
or on easy monthly payments at greatly
reduced prices. It will be to your in.
terest to see our pianos and get our
prices and terms before purchasing else-
where. C. Janke & Co.,
On Tremont St., bt. Market & Mechanic.
Opposite Rosenberg Bank.
fteSSfi SANITARY ASSDCIAT’N
1. Will place on your premises absolutely Odorless and Sanitary Closets and
keep them in order by the year at a nominal cost.
2. Will thoroughly Clean and Disinfect your Closet, Vault or Cesspool without
raising any odor or offense and at low prices.
3 Will dispose of all matter it collects without throwing into beach or bay
but'will dispose of it withuot odor or offense.
The Customers of This Association Protect Themselves, Their Families and
Their Neighbors from the Dangers of Disease.
THE GALVESTON SANITARY ASSOCIATION
61 Twenty-Second St., bet. Strand and Mechanic. Telephone S34.
J06L WOLFfr&CGi
SOILS AGENTS FOR
Improved Brown Cotton Gins,
Feeders and Condensers. * ■
Engines, Boilers, Cotton Presses, Wheat and Corn Mills, Saw Mill Outfits, Wagons,
Mowers, Rakes, Stalk Cutters, Sulky Plows, Walking and Riding Cultivators,
Avery Plows, and Implements of all kinds.
LEATHER BELTING, ELECTRIC BELTING, LEATHER LINK BELTING
AND LACE LEATHER,
Rubber Bating and Hose, Engine
JOEL WOLFE & CO., Noe-
Terms of Subscription.
Single copy...... $s 2
One year bv mail ♦£
Six months by mail 0 Y
One month by mail • • • „
City subscribers by carrier, per month
Fa '
ffwawaniTHk
■
609 Tremont, bet.
J- Church and
Winnie Sts.
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Burson, J. W. Evening Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 90, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 14, 1891, newspaper, February 14, 1891; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247090/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.