The Meridian Tribune (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1936 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE TWO
THE MERIDIAN TRIBUNE
Friday, December 4,1936
=======================
Ask Me Another
• A General Quiz
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
=========================
1. How many times does one
round a 220-yard track to make a
mile?
2. Why are detectives some-
times called sleuths?
3. What three oceans form part
of the boundary of Canada?
4. The son of what famous poet
served many years on the United
States Supreme court?
5. What is a flageolet?
6. Who were the “grand mo-
guls”?
7. Of what South American
country is Montevideo the capital?
8. What is a marten?
9. Who was Jean Ingelow?
10. What was the “Wilmot Pro-
viso”?
Answers
1. Eight.
2. From sleuth, meaning track,
as in sleuthhound.
3. Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific.
4. Oliver Wendell Holmes.
5. A flute-like musical instru,
ment.
6. Emperors of Delhi.
7. Uruguay.
8. A fur-bearing mammal.
9. An English poet and story
writer (1820-1897).
10. A proposal to bar slavery
from territory obtained from
Mexico.
OR THOSE WHO
men
• Here’s a baking powder,
( tried, tested and used exclu-
sively by experts.
f ONLY
10
Your Grocer
Has It
oaKinqPOWder
The Art of Brevity
Be brief; for it is with words
as with sunbeams, the more they
are condensed the deeper they
burn.—Southey.
Still Coughing?
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold or bronchial irritation, you can
get relief now with Creomulsion.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with anything less than Creomul-
sion, which goes right to the seat
of the trouble to aid nature to
Boothe and heal the inflamed mem-
branes as the germ-laden phlegm
is loosened and expelled.
Even if other remedies have
failed, don’t be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guarantee
Creomulsion and to refund your
money if you are not satisfied with
results from the very first bottle.
Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
Different Goals
• Ambition keeps some men go-
Ing, and revenge others.
FOR
ORE THROAT
GOLDS
The Original
Cellophane
Wrapped Genuine
Pure Aspirin
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER A1
St.Jose
o. 22-2
A PRODUCT OF PLOUGH INC., MEMPHIS-NEW YORK
SLEEP SOUNDLY
Lack of exercise and injudicious eating
make stomachs acid. You must neu-
tralize stomach acids if you would sleep
soundly all night and wake up feeling
refreshed and really fit.
TAKE MILNESIAS
Milnesia, the original milk of magnesia
in wafer form, neutralizes stomach acid.
Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk
of magnesia. Thin, crunchy, mint-flavor,
tasty. 20c, 35c & 60c at drug stores.
TheTitanZuho 0 0‘
2
Tales and
) Traditions
from American
Political History
FRANK E. HAGEN
| AND
> ELMO SCOTT WATSON
DEMONSTRATIONS
CONVENTION “demonstrations”
V —those -amazing exhibitions of
hysterical enthusiasm, usually
manufactured rather than sponta-
neous—had their origin in the Re-
publican convention of 1860 in Chi-
cago.
The two leading candidates were
William H. Seward of New York
and Abraham Lincoln of Illinois.
The New York delegation brought
along a prize fighter named Tom
Hyer and a band which marched
about the streets playing martial
music.
To match these noise-makers,
supporters of “Old Abe” hired a
Chicagoan “whose shout could be
heard above the most violent tem-
pest on Lake Michigan” and a
leather-lunged Dr. Ames, who,
though a Democrat, also consented
to whoop it up for Lincoln. But the
real “blow-off” came when Lin-
coln was nominated on the fourth
ballot. An eye-witness has de-
scribed the scene as follows:
“The immense multitude rose,
and gave round after round of ap-
plause; ten thousand voices swelled
into a roar so deafening that, for
several minutes, every attempt to
restore order was hopelessly vain
. . A man appeared in the hall
bringing a large painting of Mr.
Lincoln. The cannon sent forth roar
after roar in quick succession. Del-
egates tore up' the sticks and
boards bearing the names of sev-
eral states, and waved them aloft
over their heads, and the vast mul-
titude before the platform were
waving hats and handkerchiefs.”
Another chapter in convention
"demonstrations" was added in the
Republican convention,' also in Chi-
cago, in 1880. Roscoe Conkling of
New York led the forces that had
determined to nominate Grant for
a third term. At the first mention
of Grant’s name, a demonstration
began which lasted nearly half an
hour. Conkling, noted fox his "aris-
tocratic coldness,” unbent enough
to stimulate enthusiasm in the gal-
leries and among the delegates by
his. handkerchief. Then Robert G.
Ingersoll started wave after wave
of frantic cheering when he grabbed
a woman’s red shawl and waved it
aloft.
Men tore off their coats and used
them for flags. Then the Grant
delegates seized the standards of
their states and started a parade
around the hall—thus starting a
custom which has been perpetuated
to this day.
KEYNOTERS
IT OW many of us recall the key-
I 1 note speech of Senator Steiwer
at the Republican national conven-
tion in Cleveland this year? Or
that of Senator Barkley at the Phil-
adelphia gathering of Democrats?
The answers to that one fortify
the fact that keynote speeches fade
rapidly, then die as completely as
an ancient mackerel. The only one
which persevered through a cam-
paign was delivered at the Demo-
cratic convention of 1916 and later
events made a farce out of it.
That keynote was delivered in
favor of Woodrow Wilson; the man
who voiced it was Martin H.
Glynn of New York.
Like the “Three Long Years”
which Republicans emphasized in
1936, Glynn’s keynote beat the tom-
toms for Wilson’s achievements in
avoiding war in 1914 1915 and 1916,
ending each recital with the as-
sertion: “But we didn’t go to
war.”
Seizing upon the then catchy
phrase, which set convention dele-
gates on their ears, the Democrat-
ic national committee made the
race on the slogan of: “He kept us
out of war." It barely lasted to
re-elect Wilson, for two months aft-
er beginning his second term the
United Staes was in the war.
Success of a keynote in this par-
ticular instance was made at least
partially possible by the pussyfoot-
ing tactics of the rival party. They
didn’t want to discuss the war. But
the American voters were talking
about nothing else!
One other keynote has found a
place in our permanent political
history. It was delivered by im-
posing Albert J. Beveridge of Indi-
ana at the Bull Moose convention
of 1912 which brought Theodore
Roosevelt back into the spotlight.
Said Beveridge: “The people's
government has been usurped by
the invisible government, and the
people’s government must be giv-
en bac.. to the people again.”
Even today, with history record-
ing a Bull Moose defeat, there is
something about this well-turned
phrase which accounts for the per-
petuity which has fallen to it,
© Western Newspaper Union.
Terminal of Gota Canal
Gothenburg is one of the termi-
nals of the Gota canal, which winds
over 240 miles through the heart
of Sweden, sometimes following
lakes, sometimes rivers, some-
times a canal so narrow that trees
at the sides of the banks brush
the small steamers on the water.
All in all 56 miles of canal supple-
ment the natural waterway. These
various links were con nleted more
than 300 years after the project
was first conceived and undertak-
en.
© New York Post.—WNU Service,
Huddle Info Reveals
$253 Is Necessary'
for Big Ten Player
T T COSTS $253 to get each Big Ten
1 football player ready for a game.
This includes such items as equip-
ment, coaches’ salaries and stadium
upkeep, but fails to include the prep
school draft price, intercollegiate
waiver price and incidental re-
wards, emoluments and bonuses
. . . Bill Osmanski, Holy Cross’s
great sophomore fullback, wants ev-
erybody to know that his kid broth-
er, Joe, is even better, see right
now is achieving numerous touch-
downs for Central high of Provi-
dence ... Is there any truth to the
repeated gossip that the flu epi-
demic which disabled Army’s squad
a week or so ago really was pto-
maine poisoning?
The Four Horsemen, most cele-
brated backfield of all time, got
their chance because of a scandal
occurring while the boys were still
freshmen. A nearby town, anxious
to win a local game, hired some
Notre Dame regulars. Next year
these players were ruled ineligible,
and so the four sophs had imme-
diate opportunity to ride down into
history . . . Tip to Bill Terry and
Joe McCarthy—Watch Bill Booth,
Ohio State back. Unless Columbus
critics are greatly mistaken he will
be a major league infieider within a
season or two.
Can it be that the commercial
aspect of football finally has dried
up all the human
juices of the cus-
" tomers? A few
— years ago a cheer
- always was the first
act on the program.
• Now such salutes
• for honored guests
are almost as rare
i as the cheers teams
s used to exchange
after games . . .
Gil Dobie has real
Gil Dobie cause for smiling.
The large and powerful Hank Woro-
nicz, who enabled the Boston col-
lege frosh to beat Holy Cross year-
lings, is as good as nine-tenths of the
nation’s varsity ends.
Minnesota’s quarterback doesn’t
play favorites. Fourteen Gophers
have shared in the scoring this sea-
son . . . Princeton players say that
Danny Lewis of William is the best
center they have opposed in two
years of facing such other greats
as Robertshaw of Navy, Ray of
Dartmouth and Hauze of Penn . . .
Another center not properly noted
by the experts is Moose Stewart,
L. S. U. soph.
Navy’s football program, which
peddles for four bits, should be the
best money maker of all such aids
to the athletic association it is
filled with fat ads from armament
manufacturers and similar disciples
of peace and prosperity . . . Al-
though they agree he is the best
referee now doing business, Red
Friesell worries the officials who
work with him. He is so alert fol-
lowing the ball that he dives into
pileups a split second after the whis-
tle has sounded.
Kipke Is One of Game’s
Most Nervous Coaches
Aside from the way Penn wal-
loped his Michigan team, Franklin
field also provided another severe
strain on Harry Kipke’s nerves.
.While watching a game he wanders
up and down the sidelines, nervous-
ly picking and chewing blades of
grass. But even a team as lucky as
Yale would be hard pressed to dis-
cover a blade of grass on Franklin
field . . . Ashel Day, center for
Georgia Tech, was the first All-
America player selected by Walter
Camp from a Southern college . . .
Veteran observers claim that the
roughest, toughest game played this
year was between Colgate and Holy
Cross.
Skip Stahley, Harvard assistant
coach, sighs whenever he thinks of
the high school team he saw per-
form in his Lebanon home town
several seasons ago. The backfield
was composed of Dick and Jack
White, now of Princeton; Ditt,
North Carolina fullback, and Pete
Smith of Temple . . . Bob Stewart,
sub end who hails from Rochester,
is destined to become one of the
best basketball players in Syracuse
history . Members of Penn’s
very capable frosh team are al-
most as good in their studies as
they are on the gridiron . . . The
proper evaluation of Hunk Ander-
son, almost as much of a storm cen-
ter at North Carolina State as he
was at Notre Dame, is that he is a
truly great line coach, but no great
shucks as the head gee.
NOT IN THE BOX SCORE:
THE New York State Assembly
A this winter will be asked to in-
vestigate the conduct of the com-
missions supposed to regulate box-
ing and racing. . . Red Rolfe has
been adding to his World Series
winners’ share by betting on his Al-
ma Mammy, Dartmouth, to win
football games. . . Brooklyn fans
are asking why, if the Dodger di-
rectors were so anxious to have a
fighter to manage the team, they
didn’t select Joe Louis. The Bomb-
. knows the game, likes it and can
outplay nine-tenths of the gents that
were so generously provided for
Casey Stengel. . . Golf ranks a close
second to football in the sports af-
fections of Coach Elmer Layden of
Notre Dame. . . Phil Reuter, trainer
of the mighty Roman Soldier, once
was a waiter in a Chicago restau-
rant. Bert Baroni, owner of the
mightier Top Row, and Frank Er-
icksen, the head bookie, also used
to serve soup with their thumbs.
Has the feuding of the Dodger di-
rectors so impressed the Van Lingle
Mangos that they now are plotting
a divorce?
It is time somebody noted that the
nation’s longest intercollegiate foot-
ball winning streak extends back to
1931. Morgan college has won thir-
ty-nine games since then. . . The
biggest single bet ever cashed at a
pari-mutuel racetrack was when the
old Hildreth castoff, Bruns, won at
Pimlico. Jack Richardson had a
grand on the gee-gee, which paid 41
to 1. . . Coleman Kopcsak, star Car-
negie Tech back, plans to emulate
his brothers Arpad and Pete, and
win his West Point letter two years
from now. . . The Giants must draw
750,000 paid admissions to break
even on a baseball season. They
have lost money only once in sev-
enteen years. Then rain, which fell
on a couple of late season week-
ends, washed them $20,000 into the
red. . . Jake Slagle, much fatter but
still wearing his old Princeton all-
America helmet, now picks football
winners as part of the advertising
campaign of a Baltimore brewery.
Sixto Escobar Was
Handy at Baseball
Sixto Escobar, bantamweight ex-
pert, was aces as a baseball and
volley ball player during his school
days at Barceloneta, in Puerto Rico
. . . Carlos Indian Quintana claims
to be the first Cholo Indian ever to
become a prize fighter. . . Hirsch
Jacobs, the nation’s leading horse
trainer, is a movie fan. He seldom
misses the after-dinner show. . . .
Mathias L. Daiger, head man at
Pimlico, would win almost any turf
writers’ poll for the most courteous
racetrack official. . .. Lou Little,
the noted football coach and broad-
caster, is a teetotaler from ’way
back. When he was playing at Penn
he used to refuse even to taste the
champagne served at the training
table on Friday nights. . . The own-
er of Kate Smith’s Original Celtics
feels that Colonel
Jake Ruppert i .
handicap to an am-
bitious girl. The
reason is that Rup-
pert has Marius
Russo signed to
baseball contract
which bars the for-
mer L. I. U. star
from playing pro
basketball this win-
ter. . . Jim Jordan
Col. Ruppert of the Dodgers
stumbled on the
front steps the other day and now
is buying a new set of front teeth.
One of Manhattan’s plays is a
double shift which frequently
catches an opposing lineman offside.
Then, before he can get back into
position, the Jaspers wall him in,
snap the ball and get five yards for
nothing. . . Cecil Hart seems to be
the Casey Stengel of hockey man-
agers. At least New York’s hockey
writers used their own money for a
testimonial dinner to the very pop-
ular Les Canadiens pilot recently.
Bill Marks, Princeton frosh end
coach, says the Tiger cub line is
capable of playing varsity football
right now.
If the New York State Athletic
Commission would depart from its
provincial attitude and invite young
Joe McGuigan of Philadelphia to
referee occasionally the New
York State Athletic Commission
would improve its staff of referees
100 per cent. . . Paul Waner believes
that he led the National League’s
1936 hitters because he spent the
winter playing golf. Says that con-
stant practice in trying to locate
the green so sharpened his touch
that it became second nature for
him to place his base hits accurate-
ly... Regis Monohan, Detroit Lions
guard, has used the same pair of
football shoes for four years. Be-
lieves it would be bad luck to
change them and besides, they feel
good.
The foul most frequently over-
looked by officials who like the
hours and the pay is holding in the
line. . . Charles Francis (Socker)
Coe, the celebrated writer and
broadcaster, has lost so much
weight that he now looks- like only
one man. .. Jamaica and Aqueduct
will use some of mat $3,000,000, con-
tributed by bookmakers to metro-
politan courses this year, to im-
prove their tracks before spring.
Dan McGugin was coach at Van-
derbilt thirty years, during which
time he had but one undefeated,
untied season—his first. Six years
his record was spoiled by a single
loss; three years by a tie. In 1911
his single defeat, by a point, was
administered by Michigan, coached
by Fielding Yost.
(Chen
Srew
Simple But Smart Models
Frances
Grinstead
TTE WAS a small boy named
■ I Tim who had never been
— - more than ten miles from
his home in the Ozark hills. His
teacher said he couldn’t even bound
Arkansas, his own state, but what
his teacher didn’t know was how
well he knew the mountain
“crick” and the hill slopes circled
with green-gold pine trees that
bounded his father’s tiny farm. He
also knew what it took to keep a
family of six children and that for
as long as he could remember his
father’s farm had scarcely been
able to produce enough to stretch
over every need.
It was just before Christmas
time that he heard his father tell
his mother that if there was to be
anything “extra” to give the day
its meaning for the children, he’d
have to get the ax and hack out a
few ties. Her face
‘AI went white, for
> she knew what
A that meant. So
[ often had they
I been forced to
i remain on the
M hacking of a few
" ties to be sold to
" the railroad for
% dire necessities
that practically
a all their timber
3 available for that
purpose was
gone. And trees
don’t grow over
S night. She could
! tell by the look
a on her husband’s
k face that he was
taking a desper-
ate and back-breaking chance of
finding a few logs tough enough for
the commission -man to buy.
As she looked out of the window
and saw the passing cars of winter
“touristers” on the new scenic road
the government had built through
the hills, she wondered by what
magic folks could come to own au-
| tomobiles and take time off like
that to go traveling. But she hadn’t
many moments to spare on such
thoughts, for her husband had re-
turned to say that the ax was
gone. Could one of the children
have taken it? Or what with the
new road so near and strangers
riding through the hills, had some-
one made off with it?
The father had borrowed an ax
from a willing neighbor but on the
day before Christmas he was si-
lent as he unhitched his team in
the wagon lot. Christmas tomor-
row and he had been forced to
bring back the load from town. The
commission man had been truly
sorry, for he did need ties; yet
none of these were large enough.
He crept up to a window, lost
in the sense of failure that made
him ashamed to walk to his own
door. There an odd sight straight-
ened him. Inside were Tim and
his mother joyously trimming a
Christmas tree. Tim raced to the
door to keep the younger children
from bursting gleefully into the
room and learning its great secret.
When the father entered the
house, no one asked him about the
ties. “Dad, dad!” Tim shouted.
“Do you know those red berry
trees that grow
way up thera
crick? Awful:
hard to get to,
but when I found
’em I thought
they were so pur-
ty I took some to
school. The
teacher said,
‘that’s holly’ and
then I read about
holly and learned 905*7
that folks will -
pay for it to have bike, eng
it for Christmas.
So I gathered a Crotly
lot of it and made H Sale 22
me a holly stand
up on the new
road just hopin’ 8
they would. And dad, they did buy
it! Stopped their cars and said,
‘Why it’s holly; who would have
thought we’d find it here!’ They
wanted so much I had to work awful
hard getting it, but gee, it was fun! I
wanted to surprise mom and you,
and now I’ll tell you both that I
made $27.82. There’s $20 right now
in that bureau drawer left after
buying our Christmas. Gee dad, I
love this old farm! It’s got lots of
surprises on it yet. This one ain’t
the last one.”
The father brushed a tear from
his eye and kissed his wife. Then
he shook hands with Tim. “You’re
the kind of son a man can be right
proud to own,” he choked.
“But dad, will you forgive me?”
the boy suddenly implored.
“Why Tim, forgive you what?”
tlee father asked in surprise.
The boy led the way to the kitch-
en. “You see dad, I just had to
have it?”
The father pretended to frown
as Tim pointed and then he winked.
“Well, being as it’s just about
Christmas for us, as well as the
rest of the world, I guess I’ll have
to overlook it.” For there in a far
corner of the room stood the ax.
It was Tim who had borrowed it
© Western Newspaper Union.
1949
1973
M ATRON, maid, or tiny miss—
1 A your attention please. For as-
sembled here are three lovely
frocks to brighten your ward-
robes. All are designed to be
made at home, quickly and inex-
pensively, and each is accom-
panied by a step-by-step instruc-
tion chart which makes sewing a
real pleasure and recreation.
The lovely and graceful day-
time or afternoon frock, Pattern
1949, features a novel yet simple
yoke and collar treatment, a clev-
er swing skirt, and youthful
sleeves, long or short. Chic and
stylish, yet as simple as can be,
it will make up beautifully in sizes
12, 14, 16, 18, and 20 (30 to 38
bust measure), and size 14, with
short sleeves, requires just 3%
yards of 39 inch material.
The comely morning frock
which steals the center, Pattern
1973, is available in a wide range
of sizes and takes top honors for
comfort and versatility. Requiring
just five simple pieces including
the belt, it goes together like a
charm, to fit perfectly and make
your morning chores so much
lighter. The pointed yoke is slim-
ming, the set-in sleeves are free
and open, and the skirt is dart
HoUs hod @
© Question
Chocolate stains may be re-
moved from table linen by sprink-
ling the stain with borax, then
pouring boiling water through the
linen.
Cane-bottomed chair seats can
be tightened up by washing them
in a weak solution of salt water
and then drying in the open air.
To keep paint fresh in uncov-
ered cans fill them to the top with
water, after stirring the paint
thoroughly. When needed, pour
off the water with care.
Potatoes used in salad should
be thoroughly chilled and with
sharp knife cut into half-inch dice.
Add rest of ingredients and mix
with fork. This will aid in pre-
venting salad from becoming
“mushy.”
When sending a book through
the mail cut corners off stiff en-
velopes and put on book corners.
Protected in this way corners will
not bend.
Always make it a point to keep
your larder supplied with about a
dozen cans of soups, meats and
fruits. When an unexpected guest
arrives for lunch you will then be
able to serve a good meal.
© Associated Newspapers.—WNU Service.
II
Quotations11
--△--
Fiction is truth with its face lifted.
—Rex Beach.
It is women rather than men, who
are unfair to women.—Fannie Hurst.
Immorality, like war, is a state of
abnormality. Slowly but surely we
are swinging back to normality once
more.—Count Keyserling.
Great beauty is as inspiring as
great music or great architecture.—
Gertrude Atherton.
Poverty is one of the major curses
of mankind and we must wage tire-
less war against it.—Harry Emerson
Fosdick.
It has been mostly in times of
peril and need that great works of
progress have come into being.—
Albert Einstein.
1944
fitted at the waist. As easy to
make as to wear, this pattern is
designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42,
44, 46, 48, 50, and 52. Send for
it today. Size 38 requires just 358
yards of 35 inch fabric, dimity
or percale or gingham or seer-
sucker.
The tempting model for tiny tots.
Pattern 1944, is likewise utterly
simple to make, yet as cunning as
can be. Good for party or for
play, it is a pattern you can cut
twice and save for future use in
any of a wide range of fabrics.
The tiny puff sleeves are cut in
one with the shoulder with just
two simple pieces for the front
and back of the dress. The size-
range—six months, one, two and
three years. The one year size
requires 1% yards of 36 inch
material, and if you wish you can
make the pockets, cuffs and fac-
ings in contrast.
Send for the Barbara Bell Fall
and Winter Pattern Book contain-
ing 100 well - planned, easy-to-
make patterns. Exclusive fash-
ions for children, young women,
and matrons. Send fifteen cents,
in coins for your copy.
Send your order to The Sewing:
Circle Pattern Dept., 367 W.
Adams St., Chicago, Ill. Patterns.
15 cents (in coins) each.
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
WOMEN WHO HOLD
THEIR MEN
NEVER LET THEM KNOW
NO matter how much your
back aches and your nerves
scream, your husband, because he
is only a man, can never under-
stand why you are so hard to live
with one week in every month.
Too often the honeymoon ex-
press is wrecked by the nagging
tongue of a three-quarter wife. The
wise woman never lets her husband
know by outward sign that she is
a victim of periodic pain.
For three generations one woman
has told another how to go “smil-
ing through” with Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound. It
helps Nature tone up the system,
thus lessening the discomforts from
the functional disorders which
women must endure in the three
ordeals of life: 1, Turning from
girlhood to womanhood. 2. Pre-
paring for motherhood. 3. Ap-
proaching “middle age.”
Don’t be a three-quarter wife,
- take LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND and
Go “ Smiling Through.”
Useless Worry
Today is the tomorrow you wor-
ried about yesterday—and all is
well.
DISCOVERED
Way to Relieve Coughs
QUICKLY
IT’S BY relieving both the irritated tissues of the
throat and bronchial tubes. One set of ingre-
dients in FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR quickly
relieves tickling, hacking, coughing . . . coats
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The Meridian Tribune (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1936, newspaper, December 4, 1936; Meridian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1631623/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Meridian Public Library.