Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 117, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 10, 1912 Page: 3 of 10
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3
APRIL 10,
1912.
WEDNESDAY.
n.A i A' !• c-TOtf
YB IB UN
TYPHOID FEVER
LIGHTFOOT TELLS
WHY HE RESIGNED
IS PREVENTABLE
f
$
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<
A
A
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7
DistilleryBottling
of
V
I
fflJETO
U.nrr
SiSf.
t
Dallas
AND
F ort W orth
$26.45
And BEYOND
First to Arrive.”
“Last to Leave.
r
TWO LECTURES BY ' •
GUY CARLETON LEE
t
/
feeling
Mr. Dudley in the part 'of
TRANSFER
iPHOHE 227
Use FREELY in EYE CUP
I • triany years arid has had
f
The Hahh of Saving Is What Increases the Wealth of a Community
2:45 p. m.
I
Arrive.
STATES THE TRUTH
5 :15 p. m
10:(?“ i>. m."
10:30 p. m
4:10 a. m
Headache,
Arrive.
Grsgory Auiomablle Department
12:40 a. m.
1,
'JU-
-r^v’
M. NAUMANN. C. P. & T. A.
1--.1. .m r«»mfr«TPicgagzy^iai3aKmromMg3ewn:
Schedule of the Arrival
and Departure of Trains
Salary of Attorney General’s
Office Does Not Meet Requi-
rements He Says.
This Disease Causes Tremend-
ous Loss of Life Each Year
in This Country.
You Dd Not Have to Buy a Book—Open
Day and Night
COLONISTS RATES
To CALIFORNIA
POINTS
10:15 p. m.
1:15 p. m.
Depart.
2:40 p. m.
4:00 p. m
5:30 p. m
7:30 p. m
Arrive.
5:40 a. m.
6:35 p. m.
SUCCESSFUL OVER
SOCIALIST MAYOR
com-
You
after
The only Baking Powder, made
from Royal Grape Cream ©3 Tartar
TRINITY & BRAZOS VALLEY.
..Houston-Dallas-Fort Worth....
Inquire at
City Ticket Office, 301 Tremont St.
PHONE 2220
Arrive.
11:05 a. m.
Arrive.
... 0:15 a. m.
•I PS®
@@®L
BAKING
POWDER
Aftsotofe(y Pw®
■
8:00 a. m.....
4:30 p. ni.....
Leave
Arriv _
Leave
NO DYSPEPSIA OR
STOMACH DISTRESS
Economizes Botier9 Flow®
Eyys; makes the food more
appetizing aad wholesome
fa
Depart.
4:10 a. m
8:30 a, in
T, & B. V. Ry.
“THE SHORT LINE.”
TnT
GULF & INTERSTATE RY.
1HE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Galveston and Beaumont
Fare $2.35
Leave Galveston daily..... .8:00 a. m.
(Motor .Car Service)
Beaumont........
Galveston daily ....
Beaumont........
Beaumont daily. . .
Settles out-of-order Stomach and
ends all Indigestion in
five Minutes.
Arrive
Leave Beaumont
Arrive Galveston....
6:45 p. m.
8:45 a. m.
11:00 a. m.
SENATOR CHARLES CURTISS, OF KANSAS,
' IS PROUD OF HIS BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTERS
... 6:35 p. m.
... 3:20 p.m.
... 10 45 p. m.
,.. 2:50 p. m.
INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN.
.....Galveston-St. Louis Fast Mail.......
.....St. Louis and Main Line Local.......
..........Fort Worth Division............
BOLTON’S
... ,...^1 J W U 1
trunks west of |
Ji, east of 27th, I
•th of Broadw’y, I
RW
Wife ;
.’f®® S3
“IT’S ALL
I KSEEEGiSSragM ,
■WHISKEY
Special to The Tribune.
Austin, Tex., April 10.—On the re-
turn of First Assistant Attorney Gen-
eral James D. Walthall /from San An-
tonio, Attorney General Lightfoot gave
out his promised, statement wherein
he sets forth his reasons for retiring
from the office of attorney general and.
entering the private practice of law.
General Lightfoot wanted to confer
about the matter with Mr. Walthall
before he made public his official state-
ment, but as indicated in yesterday’s
dispatches Mr. Lightfoot declares that
the time has arrived where he can
provide for the future, and the sal-
ary of attorney general does not meet
these requirements.
In connection with
Mr. Lightfoot, Mr.
nounced his candidacy
TkZ (O YT STANDARD
ID 11 r<J O L Kye w ATER
Arrive Beaumont.........11:50 a. m.
'____ .4:30 p. m.
Arrive Beaumont...........8:lSp. m.
Beaumont daily.....4:30 p.m.
(Motor Car Service)
Galveston..........S:20 p. m.
daily..... 8:00 a. m.
.... 11:35 a. m.
EDWARD WEIL CO. Houston,
distributors Texas
I I I i 1 I t H 1 i » D I I I 'I * 1 1 1 1 M *1-1 ‘ 1 1 1 * ‘ 1 H * 11 11 1 1 I I 1 * I I I I I I |
1-
J;
.III
:: :
i
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS.
.............Katy Flyer.............
.......Katy north’ connections......
GET 'THE HABIT
Start an account with us and you will be interested to see it grow.
4% INTEREST PAID OH SAVIN8SI
Ed. lyjcQafthy & Co., Bankers
UNINCORPORATED)
Monticello
A^akht'pure rve^whis^
CM
Crystal-Majestic.
“The Golden Gypsy’ the offering of
the Dudley Company at the Crystal-
Majestic the first half of the week has
made such a tremendous hit and
proved one if not the best of the many
plays produced by this clever company
during its stay , here, and the down
pour of rain that made it importable
for many of the patrons to witness
this intense, drama that Mr. Dudley in
order to favor the patrons upon their
“The Golden
Depart.
9:30 p. m
To find From Station Adjoining Wharf, 22d Street and Avenue A.
Depart. GULF & INTERSTATE. Arrive.
... .Galveston-Beaumont. (Daily).............11:35 a. m.
... .Galveston-Beaumont. (Daily)............ 8:20 p. m.
No artificial
“aging,” not a
drop is bottled un-
til it has been mel-
lowed by four full
years in charred
oak barrels.
Upper left, .Miss Leona Curtiss, upper
right, Mrs. Charles Curtiss; below,
Miss Blanche Curtiss.
Among the many interesting fami-
lies in the nation’s* capital, the wife
and daughter^ of Senator Charles ,
Curtiss, - K.-nsas, always receive es-
pecial attention. They are popular
to an unusual degree, their popular-
ity coming as a natural tribute to
their grace and charm. The Misses
Curtiss are also famed as among the
• most beautiful1 in Washington society.
To and From Interurban Static n, 21ut Between Church ord Postoffice Sts.
Depart. GALVEb u ON.HOUSTON INTERURBAN. Arrive.
6:00 a. ..................First Train. (Daily)................. 7:40a.m.
Interurban trains leave every hour, on the hour, and
airrive 40 minutes after each hour until—
Jl:00p. ....................Last Train. (Daily)
WlllbltM
hag
H
Notico to Auto Owsiars!
■■ . NEW PRICE ON PRESTO TANKS "B's”
1 J .-- ’ ■’ “ Exchanges $2.50
Gasoline 12k Per Gallon
(68 TEST GUARANTEED)
_____j).......... 0:25 a.m.
... .Galveston-Houston Special. (Sunday only)...... 9:50p.m.
....Galveston-Houston Special. (Sunday only)....
.....Houston-Galveston Special. (Sunday only)
We Will Pay Yowr
Druggist 50 Oenh
For a Full Size Box of Make-Man Tab-
lets—The Results WiU. Amaze You.
Do you realize that your health,
strength, happiness and even life itself
depend upon the condition of your
nervous system? You have simply got
to take a flesh, strength and nerve
builder. Make-Man Tablets nourish and
enrich the blood and strengthen and quiet
every nerve cell in the system.
Results prove it; results will prove
it th your case, and these results will
cost you nothing, not a cent. We will
buy for you a 50-c©ut full-size box of
Make-Man Tablets. ^JYou are under no
obligation whatever except to use them
as directed. Isn’t that a fair offer?
Send the coupon to-day and begin us-
ing Make-Man Tablets without delay
and just watch how your nervousness,
exhaustion, sleeplessness, loss of flesh,
stomach derangements, rheumatism,
melancholy, poor, thin blood, liver and
kidney trouble, will leave you. Make-
Man Tablets are sold at 50c a box in all Drug
Stores bn a guarantee or money refunded.
CUT OUT FREE 5Oo COUPON««
I MAKE-MAN TABLET CO.,
H 624 Make-Man Bldg;., Dept. 24, Chicago,HL jj
I 1 have nevei- used Make-Man Tablets before and I
k wish to try, free, a full-si^efSO-cent box.
h Druggist’s Name..............................m..... S
H My Name...................... |
H Address................................... |
fcaasn Write plainly—one box to each family ■■■»
“Say, pop, what’s a. holding
pany?” “I kinda forget, son.
might ask your sister .though,
Cholly leaves tonight.”
Oil
8Sll
SHOWS BIG GROWTH.
The aluminum industry has grown fi
enormously from a production of less Ik
than- -IOOiOOO- pounds in the United ’
States in 1,88.3. In the next ten years
it had becomp 350,000 pounds and in ",
„ _ 'lMO‘3- it was'T,500,000 pounds, while to-
in attending ' the ■ lecture'".be- dav ls WWO pounds.
It- is rather startling to be told that
in 1909 there were more cases of ty-
phoid in the United States, with a
population not half as large as India,
than there were cases of plague in
India; and that there were four times
as many cases of typhoid in the United
States as cases of cholera in Russia
during a period including the epidem-
ic of 1910., These figures are taken from
an article by McLaughln of the Mraine
Hospital Service, who Says that we
consider with apprehension the coun-
tries is which cholera and plague oc-
cur frequently and call them pest-rid-
den countries, but do not consider the
problem of typhoid fever in our own
country with sufficient seriousness. He
gives tables to show that within the
registration area in the United States.,
in fifty cities having an aggregate
population of over 20,000,000 the aver-
age typhoid death-rate for 1910 w_as
25 per hundred thousand inhabitants.
In one city in that year it amounted to
86.7 per hundred thousand, and in sev-
eral cities it amounted to 45 or more.
In ten of the largest cities of northern
Europe, composing a population of 15,-
000,000, the average typhoid death-rate
per hundred thousand of population
during a period of ten years, from 1901
to 1910, was only 3.4, and in 1910 the
rate had gone down to 2.5. It is con-
sidered in Europe that a death-rate, of
13 to 15 per, hundred thousand eonst"-
ti'les a rather serious reflection on the
sanitary- management or the water
supplies of such . citi js. .And yet the
fig’ires are fgr below th? .average of
above referred to, in which the death--
rate was 25 per hundred thousand
population. Leaving out of account
such causes of typhoid as infected food
and milk, contact, carriers, etc., Mc-
Laughlin believes that this death-rate
can be very materially reduced by fil-
tering the water-supplies of our cities,
which are too largely contamented by
sewerage. Not only is this high death-
rate from typhoid fever to be deplor-
ed on humanitarian grounds, but the
occurance of such a large number of
cases represents (an economic loss so
great as to be almost incalculable. The
Journal of the American ’Medical As-
sociation says that our legislators and
city authorities should feel the obli-
gation to adopt more vigiorous meth-
ods of preventing this enormous waste
of human energy, earning capacity
and human life.
25 CENTS
TS ALL we charge
I to haul your
16th* ” "
□.ort..-------------
West of 27th and
east of 16th 5<)c
for 1, 75c for 2,
$1.00 for 3.
GALVESTON, HOUSTON & HENDERSON.
..Southern Pacific eastbound H. Sc. T. C. connection
i. .Galveston-Houston Express, connects at Houston S.
P. (west bound) and H. & T. C. (north bound).......
.......... . .Houston Local................
..............Houston Local.................
.... .Galveston-Houston. (Sunday only).......
...........Galveston - Houston...............
Galveston-Houston Special. (Sunday only)...
Grand Opera House.
“The Midnight Daughters,” a bur-
lesque on “Mid Night Sons,” closed the
engagement of Rube Welch, Kitty
Francis and their company rit the
Grand last night and a decided hit
was scored. Lots of singing, dancing
and clever jokes entertained the audi-
ence for several hours and there were
few dull moments.
Miss Francis and Mr. Welch, while
the chief fun makers, were assisted by
every other member ofl the company.
Novelties in the form of Russian danc-
ers and a Japanese juggler added to
the evening’s entertainment. The sec-
ond part of the bill “A Royal Recep-
tion,” was absurdly funny, and it is
safe to say when this company re-
turns to Galveston it will be greeted
with a reyal reception.
Tonight Viola Allen in “The Her-
fords.” L
To and From Galveston Union Station, Corner Strand and 25th Street.
Depart. GULF, COLORADO & SANTA FE. Arrive.
7:00 a. m........Kansas City-Chicago Express. (Daily)........ 9:45 p.m.
8:00 a. m..........Houston-Galveston Express. (Daily).........
.........Houston-Galveston Express. (Daily).........
i.........Houston-Galveston Express. (Daily).........
i..............Main Line Local. (Daily)..............
[..North Texas and Kansas City Limited via Houston.
(Daily).........-••••• .......• ......
Depart. SUNSET ROUTE.
7:2Oa. m..H. Sc. T. C., G., H. <& S. A. connection, New Orleans
Express, T. & N. O,............................... 12:20 p. m.
7:00 p. m.-Southern Pacific (west bound) connection, G., H. &
S. A., H. & T. C. connection.................... 8:40p.m.
4:45.p. m.................New Orleans Express................. 9:20 a.m.
Dr. G. A. Badlng.
The people of Milwaukee turned
out in a record-breaking vote to
defeat the socialists, and as a result
E-. G. A. Badint has been placed in
the chair, and the whole city govern-
ment is to be overhauled.
,,: Dr. Guy;. Carleton Lee delivered the
■last -two -of a -.serious p.f t,hree lecturers '"
- , yesterday afternoon-and night at,.Ros-
enberg hall, Y.. ■ M. C. A.-,;, under - tiro
■ auspices of the Ladies’-AJd society of'
■ .the First B'aptist church. •- Both ad-
dresses were attended by large audi-
' ences, whowere amply repaid for the
effort and inconvenience they had beeii
’ put to L. ___________o ________ „
, ■cause of the rainy. weather outside. Dp
s Lee came up to thp -reputation eslali-
> lished by him in his Monday’s lecture,
s in his presenttaion. of “The Heart ojf
• -a Child” in, his -afternoon lecture and
In “Mind of a Man’ in his eyenirijg
lecture.
In his treatment of “The.-Heart of
a Child,” the versatile lecturer por-
trayed a knowledge of child life that
was indeed astonishing. He declared,
that all parents 'who gush about their
children are a public nuisance: That
in order to raise the chidren in the
manner they should be raised there
shoud be a perfect understanding be-,
tween the parent and child.
“THE MIND OF A MAN.”
In his presentation of “The Mind of
a Man” the speaker even surpassed
his afternoon address. The noted ora-
tor declared that “The individual, no
matter how great, is only a fraction
in the sum of ife. The family is the
true unit, having for its component
parts the man, thq woman and the
children. In the ancient home the
father' was the absolute tyrant of the
family with powers of life and death.
Every century has seen the demoni-
tion of this power until now the wife
is on a level with the husband.”
A Poor Weak Woman
hAs she is termed, will endure bravely and patiently
agonies which a strong man would give way under.
The fact is women are more patient than they ought
to be under such troubles.
Every woman ought to know that she may obtain
the most experienced medical advice free of charge
and in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to
the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, R. V.
Pierce, M. i)., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce
has,.been chief consulting physician of the Invalids’
Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for
; rriany years arid has had a wider practical experience
in thp -treatment of women’s diseases thari any other physician in this country.
His medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy.
The most perfect remedy ever devised for weak and deli-
cate women is Dr. Fierce’s Favorite Prescription.
IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG,
SICK WOMEN WELL.
The many and varied symptoms of woman’s peculiar ailments are fully set
forth in Plain English in the People’s Medical Adviser (1008 pages), a newly
revised and up-to-date Edition, cloth-bound, will be sent on receipt of 31 one-
cent stamps to pay cost of wrapping and mailing only. Address as above.
; ; ......._ __ _ ____ -
®<rrrtEO AT OUR DISTHAERt*®*’ •
District or maryiaho
Richmond Hill, L. I.—Albert Porter,
who has lived here for some time, be-
lieves that when a man in bad health
finds something that is just what he
needs it is his duty to let the facts be
known.
He says: “All winter I had a .bad
cold and a cough which I could not
get rid of. I was badly run down be-
sides. A short time ago I started using
Vinol and my cough is gone now and .1
feel well ’in ’ every way. This shows
what Vinol will do fbr any one in that
condition and I strongly recommend it
to everyone.”
The reason Vinol, our delicious cod
liver and iron preparation without oil,
cured Mr. Porter is because it went di-
rectly to the seat of the trouble, which
was his weakened, rundown condition.
Its curative, blood-enriching and
strengthening properties built up his
health and his cough disappeared as a
natural result.
We guarantee that Vinol will do all
we claim and will pay back your money
if, Vinol does not satisfy you. J. J.
Schott, Druggist, Galveston, Tex.
Depart.
5:40 p. Hl .......
4:10 a. m. J....
JV,„ x
Z ' ■ - ..A’Jk
lllsBz J
'J - >
On Sale March 1 to April
15, Double Daily Ser-
vice Tourist Sleepers. Oil
Burning Locomotives. No
Dus4 No Cinders. Din-
ing Cars Service.
City Ticket Office, 405 Tremont
Street. Fhone 87
J. H. MILLER, D. P. A.
C. H. COMPION, C. T. A.
Viola Allen.
There are few American actresses
more highljr esteemed than Viola Allen
who returns to this city tonight at the
Grand, when she will appear in Rachel
Crothers’ new play “The Herfords”
says an advance notice. The play may
be accepted as a powerful preachment
against the modern tendency of many
women to neglect the duties of wife
and mother by engaging in worldly
work that woula better be left to the
men.
The Herfords have been happily
married for 17 years or more. The hus-
band is a sculptor Of renown, and a
few years before the period of the play
the wife, in her desire for closer com-
panionship with her husband, took up |
the study of art, and has progressed
so* rdpidly that we now find her his
rival in the competition for a $50,000
prise that is to be awarded for the de-
corations of a public building.
It is made clear that the husband
and wife are mutually much in love,
Their 6-year-old daughter has ’ been
sent away to school because her pres-
ence interfered with her mother’s ar-
tistic labors. The husband believes
that his wife has the right to do any-
thing she wants to, and he does not
realize that she is neglecting her home
duties.
The action of the play is rapid, dra-
matic and teeming with human inter-
est. An exceptionally strong cast of
players will interpret the different
characters. In support of Miss Allen
will be found Charles Waldon, late
star of “The Fourth Estate,” John
WestOly, late star in “The Upstart”;
George Fawcett who has starred in
“The Great John Ganton”; Miss Grace
Ellison who was featured in the arig-
inal production of “The Lion and the
Mouse”; Jessie Izette who was Arnold
Daly’s leading lady who followed Elea-
nor Robson in the title role of “Salomy
Jane,” and Beatrice Prentice late lead-
ing lady for Robert Edeson.
M si||
,■ , -
VoT
the retirement
Marshall an-
candidacy for the office.
Mr. Lightfoot’s statement, which is ad-
ddessed to the people of Texas, fol-
lows:
“Several months ago, in responding
to the solicitation of friends to enter
the race for other honors, I said that
‘when the time came to make an an-
nouncement I would not consider offer-
ing for any other office than the one
I now hold.’
“In view of the decision I have
finally reached after several months
of thoughtful consideration, I feel that
an annuoncement of my intentions
should not be longer delayed.
“I have been associated with the
attorney general’s department for more
than seven years; first in the capacity
of an assistant, and at the end of my
present term I will have served you
three years as attorney general. I have
devoted nearly eight of the best years
of my life to the service of our be-
loved state. Whale we have lived mod-
estly, we are poorer today than when
I entered the service. The salaries
pajjd by the state were fixed in 1876,
and while probably sufficient at that
time, are now, in my judgment, in-
adequate to meet the exactions im-
upon those occupying impor-
have anything for
posed upon those
tant position and
the future.
“I love the public service anu have
assurances ‘which justify the belief
that I would be continued in it, but
am convinced that if I do so longer
I cannot give my children the educa-
tional and other advantages which L
crave to give them, nor can I lay
by any store for my family against,
that day which must come to all of
us.
“For these reasons, and these only,
I have concluded to ’retire from - the
public service at the close of my pres-
ent term.
“I will enter the wider field , af-
forded by the general practice of the
'law. Assistants Attorneys General
John W. Brady and E. B. Robertson
will be associated with hie in a firm
which we will establish at Austin. Our
deliberations to this end have been
ripened into action because of recent
Changes at this bar.
“I have an abiding affection for
every section Of our grand sta'ie and
all of our people without regard to
zone of residence or political divis-
ions, and while B shall retire from
active politics, I shall take a lively in-
terest in everything which may affect
the happiness of our people or the
welfare of our state.
“I take this opportunity to renew
my expressions of deepest gratitude for
the high honors you have bestowed
and for the generous approval, from
time to time, accorded our efforts to
serve you.”
----
I w
1
% 1W
There would not be a case of indi-
gestion here if readers who are sub-
ject to Stomach trouble knew the tre-
mendous anti-ferment and digestive
virtue contained in Diapepsin. This
■harmless preparation will digest a
heavy meal without the slightest fuss
or discomfort and relieve the sourest
acid stomach in five minutes, besides
overcoming all foul, Nauseous odors
from the breath.
Ask your pharmacist to show you
the formula, plainly printed on each
50-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin, then
you will readily understand why this
promptly cures Indigestion and re-
moves such symptoms as Heartburn, a
feeling like a lump of lead in the
stomach, Belching of Gas and Eructa-
tions of undigested food, water brash,
Nausea, Headache, Biliousness an<J
many other bad symptoms, and, besides,
you will not need laxatives to keep
your stomach, liver and intestines clean
and fresh.
If your Stomach is sour and full of
gas, or your food doesn’t digest, and
your meals don’t seem to fit, why not
get a 50-cent case from your druggist
and make life worth living? Absolute
relief from Stomach misery and perfect
digestion, of anything you eat is sure
to follow five minutes after, and, be-
sides, one 50-cent case is sufficient to
cure a whole family of such trouble.
Surely a harmless,- inexpensive prep-
aration like Pape’s Diapepsin. which
will always, either at daytime or dur-
ing night, relieve your stomach misery
and digest your meals, is about as
handy and valuable a thing as you
could h?ve in the house.
„ . request .will . continue ‘
Gypsy,” the remainder of the week.
Those that braved the weather tip
. witness “‘The • Golden Gypsy” Suri day
and Tuesday left the theater
that they vzere amply paid. A capacity
audience ventured out through the fog .
and threatening weather last night and
enjoyed two and one quarter hours qf
real comedy and thrilling sensational
climaxes. Mr. Dudley in the part 'of
Geo. Hathaway the Sampson of . Yale,
was all to the good and handled the
role in his ever artistic style, while
Miss Bonnie as the Golden Gypsy gave
and artistic and pleasing intreperta-
tion of the difficult role. George Craw1-
ley as Dennis the childhood compan-
ion of George Hathaway creates some
good cleancut comedy with his clever .
Irish dialect. R. E. Johnson as Mr.
Parker the treacherous friend of Hath-
away’s handled his role in .excellent
style. John J. Justus handled the part ■
of Zeffo the boss of the Gypsies in first
class style the other members of the.
cast were excellent in their work and :
the wrestling match that Zeppo and
George pulls off is equal to the prefos- .
siorial westler. “The Golden. Gypsy”
wil run out the remainder of the week
with the usual Saturday matinee.
la
kZi" /r-’ *'
e, Wt ■
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 117, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 10, 1912, newspaper, April 10, 1912; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1409466/m1/3/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.