The San Antonio Light. (San Antonio, Tex.), Ed. 1 Saturday, December 7, 1907 Page: 4 of 8
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4
The San Antonio Light
FOUNDED JAN. 20 1881.
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS.
Published Every Day io the Year.
Evening Dally—Sunday Morning.
BY THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT PUB-
LISHING CO. (Inc.)
A. G. MUNRO Manager
FREDERICK LOGAN Editor
TELEPHONE CALLS.
Business Office and Circulation De-
partment. both phones 176
Editorial Department both phones.. .1359
TERI S OF SUBSCRIPTION
By Carrier or Mail.
Daily and Sunday one year. <in ad-
vance* $5.00
Dally and Sunday one month 50c
Sunday Edition one year $2.00
Single Copies Dally or Sunday 5c
Entered at the Pcstofffce at San Antonio
Texas as Second Class Matter.
The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency.
Representatives New York. Tribune
Building; Chicago Tribune Building.
TO SUBSCRIBERS:
It Is Important when desiring the ad-
dress of your paper changed to give both
old and new addresses. Should delivery
be irregular please notify the office.
Either telephone. 176.
Only 15 more shopping days before
Christmas.
Evidently there will be no lack of
currency bills even if actual currency
is shy.
An English scientist has discovered
that green is a sure cure for worr;
Meaning of course the • long green.
The new system of telephoning
whereby the transmitter is held
against the chest instead of the ear
might be called a heart-to-heart talk.
Yes. all roads lead to Washington
but real money is now demanded to
ride on them even from congressmen.
Georgia tailors are said to be pro-
viding extra large pockets in suits to
be worn in the new prohibition state
next year.
It's not so much bow much you are
going to give toward the poor chil-
dren’s Christmas entertainment but
give something.
"The Time the Place and the Nomi-
lee” might be a fit title for the na-
aona] political drama scheduled for
production soon.
And then after all fixing the blame
for the financial disturbance is not
nearly so important as getting back
to sound conditions.
Indiana is setting a good example
in tree planting. In Spencer county
50.000 black locusts have been set
out on land worth $2OO an acre. It
is estimated that in 12 years these
trees will be worth $lOOOO.
Falfurrias is setting other Texas
cities an example in the City Beauti-
ful line. The town has just com-
pleted setting out over three miles of
new palms along its boulevards and
cement sidewalks are being laid rap-
idly.
"Fighting" has been resumed in Mo-
rocco say the cable dispatches and
one of them tells of a battle in which
were slaughtered while
the French lost eight men. "Fight-
ing" don’t somehow seem to be the
right word
CACAO TEA AND COFFEE.
Ths growing popularity of cacoa
and its products among the people ot
the United States to which reference
has been made from time to time In
recent years is illustrated by some
figures prepared by the bureau of sta-
tistics of the department of commerce
and labor which show the relative
growth in tea coffee and cacao im-
portations during recent years. Cacao
imports have grown from 18.000000
pounds in 1890 to 92000000 in 1907
coffee imports from 499000000
pounds in 1890 to 987000000 in 1907;
Und tea imports from 84.000000 in
1890 tc 8G000000 in 1907. Thus cacao
importations have quintupled during
the leriod under consideration while
those of coffee were scarcely doubling
and those of tea making practically no
increase. In value the importations of
cacao have grown from $2350000 in
1890 to $13350000 in 1907 while those
of coffee are practically unchanged
being $78250000 in 1890 and $78350
000 in 1907; and those of tea have
but slight increase being $12500000
in 1890 and slightly less than $14-
000000 in 1907.
Another interesting fact with refer-
ence to this more rapid growth in the
imports of cacao is that it has oc-
curred in the face of a greater advance
in price of that article than has oc
curre.ikn either tea or coffee. The
average value per pound of the crude
cacao imported in 1890 was 12.7 cents
and in 1907 14.5 cents; that of tea 15
cents in 1890 and 16.1 cents in 1907;
while that of coffee shows a marked
fall having been in 1890 16 cents and
in 1907 7.9 cents.
The growing taste for cacao among
our own people puts us into still
closer touch with the people of the
West India Islands and suggests pos-
sibilities in our own tropical islands
all cf which are capable of producing
this article. Of the 92000000 pounds
of cacao imported in the last fiscal
year. 39000000 pounds came from the
West Indies 20000000 from Brazil
15.000000 from other South American
couutries and 16.000000 from Euro-
pean countries but doubtless originat-
ing tn their tropical colonies.
RIPE OLD AGE.
John Bigelow at 90 is a living argu-
ment against the contention of Dr.
Osler that all men over 60 ought to
be quietly and decently chloroformed
and laid away under the sod. He is
also a strenuous demonstration in op-
position to the frequent complaint
heard on all sides that young men
have usurped all the tasks of life and
that the old fellows must take a back
seat useless and superanuated.
John Bigelow lawyer diplomat
journalist statesman and useful citi-
zen. devoted part of one day last week
to celebraling his ninetieth birthday.
Part of a day mind you—he was too
busy he had too much work to do to
give all of one day to jollification.
Hale and hearty strong in mind and
strong in body with four generations
gathered about him in his home at
Grammercy Park he gave a few min-
utes to each of the callers who came
to feel the vigorous grip of his hand-
shake Some of - them were almost as
old as himself. Some of them couid
recall the days half a century ago
when he was proprietor and editor of
the Evening Post or when he served
as minister to France during the civil
war. or his work as a leading member
of the canal commission under Gover-
nor Tilden in 1875.
And while he seemingly took a pass-
ing enjoyment in these reminders of
half-forgotten achievements bis mind
and conversation was devoted mainly
to the topics of today. He is not liv-
ing in the past but in the preset and
future.
PERFERVID EXHORTATION.
The New York Sun's leading edito-
rial Thanksgiving day was the follow-
ing paragraph double-leaded:
"Let us all thank God today for the
constitution of the United States the
most wonderful political charter ever
constructed by human intelligence.
Let us thank God devoutly that the
government which the fathers devised
and charted in this venerable docu-
ment still exists intact; and let hs
pray with due humility that it may
continue to endure."
But it has not endured as the fath-
ers devised it says the Indianapolis
News. Witness the amendments espe-
cially those which grew out of the
war; witness also the gradual devel-
opment of centralizing tendencies
through supreme court decisions en-
larging the scope of "implied powers."
It is the living American people in
their virile power to meet difficulties
as they come up whether by war as
in the sixties or by peaceful device
as in 1876. to whom we owe what the
Sun so humbly ascribes to the fathers.
These met an emergency when they
drafted the document. We have met
great emergencies since Mnd made the
document square with them. It is liv-
ing men that make a people great and
preserve government.
WHAT THEY LEAVE BEHIND.
(Boston Globe.)
Although 25000 foreign laborers are
sailing every week from New York
and many thousand; from other ports
for their homes in Europe and taking
with them millions in cash or drafts
thev are leaving behind the product
of their labdr. country is by
so much the richer They have added
to. not subtracted from the country’s
wealth and the fact that they will
spend their share of that wealth
abroad need cause no uneasiness. Be-
sides. their departure will make it all
the easier for those who remain here
to obtain work.
Through modern transportation fa-
cilities the world is becoming so
small that it seems to matter little
where a workingman lives. He works
in America during the summer and
spends bis winters in Europe—a boon
which is not granted even to all mil-
lionaires.
REPAIRS NEEDED.
(Philadelphia Record.)
The Arkansas squatter who could
not shingle his cabin when it raided
and would not when it was dry con-
tinues to be the great exemplar of the
standpatters. Whether in prosperity
or in adversity they never can find
occasion to revise the tariff. Yet they
cannot ignore the obvious truth that
in the Dingley tariff is one of the po-
tent causes of the industrial crisis.
PENNSYLVANIA’S BIG TREES.
(Philadelphia Record.)
Another ot Pennsylvania’s few re-
maining big trees has fallen a victim
to the axe. It was located on the Hi-
ram Pfantz farm in Lancaster county.
The tree measures four feet six inches
at the butt and is giving three twelve-
foot lengths. The lower log. it is esti-
mated. will cut over a thousand feet
of lumber. The three logs will proba-
bly cut 2500 feet. The tree is 80 feet
high and the lower limbs and the top
it is supposed will cut four cords of
wood.
SUSPEND THE SUSPENSION.
(Philadelphia Record.) •
In former financial crises there was
a bank suspension cf specie payments
Now it is a suspension of cash pay-
ments whether in specie or notes —
which makes some difference.
SATURDAY DECEMBER 7 1907. THF SAN ANTONIO LIGHT SATURDAY DECEMBER 7 1907.
Photographs of Mars
Professor Percival Lowell founder
of the Lowell observatory at Flagstaff
Ariz. and the leading authority on the
condition of the planet Mats has re-
turned to Boston bringing with him
some remarkable photographs of the
neighboring planet These photo-
graphs were taken at the Lowell ob-
servatory and by the expedition sent
out from the observatory at Alianza in
Chile South America and they cor-
roborate the theory of Professor Low-
ell *hat Mars is the abode of intelligent
life.
In the canal-like markings originally
discovered by Schiaparelli Mr. Lowell
finds not at all natural diversities of
surface but an artificially constructed
irrigation system brought into exist-
to serve the needs of sentient be-
i ings. These canals linking the polar
‘ snow water with the arid region of the
। equator appear at aepringtime when
J the polar snows have melted; and as
the water flows bands of vegetation
spring up growing blue green with the
summer’s crop changing to a gold
brown as the autumn comes on. The
flow as far as it can be noted occurs
twice a year first from one pole then
from the other; it advances down the
latitudes with a regular speed of 52
miles a day.
The canals are held to be narrow
belts from 10 io 12 miles on the aver-
age. They form a closely reticulated
system characterized by straight lines
and junctions which Professor Lowell
maintains puts the hypothesis of nat-
ural crigin altogether out of the ques- i
tion.
One of the most remarkable features I
of the canals is that —in complete ac- ■
cordance with the theory—some of
them appear to be double. For some i
time the canals were figured as they j
presented themselves to the telescopic •
observer. By some it was objected;
that the lines might be illusions of vis- [
ion. Eut in the past few months Pro
fessor I*well has had the satisfaction
of obtaining photographs of the planet
even better than those of two years
ago which amply confirm the appear-
ance previously shown in his draw-'
Ings.
The new evidence consists of two
sets of pictures obtained by himself
and Mr. Lampland at Flagstaff observ-
atory and by Mr. E. C. Slipher at All-
anta in Chile South America. The
expedition to the Andes led by Pro
fessor Todd was organized by the
Lowell observatory. E. C. Slipher
one of the scientific experts of the ob
servatory accompanied the expedition
took with him apparatus devised by
Mr. Lampland and also availed him
self in the actual work of photograph-
ing Mars of Mr. Lampland’s sugges-
tions as to the method. All the Mars
work in South America was done by
him.
The results achieved at Alianza
where at an elevation of about 4000
feet the air is unusually steady proved
both remarkable and very interesting.
Previously to this year it had been
possible to show only single lines for
the canals of Mars but the plates
tak-n at Flagstaff first and then at Ali-
anza plainly bring out. the doubling ot
some of the canals. It is regarded as
an event in the history of the applica-
tion of photography to observational
astronomy that the first picture of a
double canal on Mars—-that of “Gihon”
—wag made at Flagstaff and then
again in South America under the au-
spices and direction of the Lowell ob-
servatory.
All the photographs taken by Mr.
Lampland and by Professor Lowell at
Flagstaff as well as the pictures ob-
tained at Alianza by Mr. Slipher be-
ing cf the same region of the planet
in each case show complete agree-
ment with the drawings of the planet
hitherto made. The transparencies
from these photographs present the
contested details with unquestionable
clearness.
OR WASHINGTON.
("Washington Post.)
The other day a young man was
discovered in Texas wearing a hat
band with the Inscription "On my
road to hell.” He also had a ticket
for Chicago but he may only intend
to stop over there on his way to Pitts-
burg.
BUTTON BUTTON ETC.
(Boston Herald.)
It is possible however that Presi-
dent Roosevelt may be willing to re-
turn some of those policies that Mr.
Bryan accuses him of borrowing from
him. They are suspected of having
queered things somewhaL
NO NAME MENTIONED.
(Chicago Evening Post.)
Ambassador Reid yesterday toasted
the new star in the flag and told the
English that the next president would
preside over forty-six states. But he
omitted mentioning the gentleman’s
name.
IN MEMORIAM.
(In memory of our dear little friend
Adelina dnzon daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. F. Onzon who passed Into
eternal rest on December 4 1907.)
The hearts of those who loved her
Are now o’erflowing with grief
For ourtdear little Adelina
Whosy life was so very brief
Has left this world forever
For a world beyond the sea.
Where every one is happy
And their minds from care are free.
Her school books are laid away
In her own little room so neat
Her eyes are closed forever
And her lips too that spoke so
sweet.
But our darling friend is gone
And we shall never see her more.
She departed from this earth
To a Isnd with a beautiful shore.
We would not call her back to earth.
Where so much sorrow reigns
She escaped the storm and the tempest
Which mature life contains.
When our mortal journevs are ended
And wn cro’s to the other shore.
Her blithe snirit will be waiting.
And we all shall meet once more.
—Lena Stein.
i SCRAPs’of"" j
: INFORMATION :
• o
»•••••••«•••••••••••••••••
There have been over 50000 church
bells cast in Troy N. Y. since ths
first foundry was built there in 1825.
Near Wolcott N. Y„ lightning struck
a house and killed a cat. A child play-
ing with the cat was not injured.
Arrangements have been made in
sunny sandy Arizona for bhsebali
straight through the winter—six
games a Meek.
The colonies of Great Britain have
nearly 100 times more area than the
mother country of France 18 times
and of Germany five times.
Vegetarianism is being encouraged
in Italy with a view to accelerating
the time when that country will be
the market garden of Europe.
Ex-Congressman ‘ Private’’ John Al-
len is living on a farm near Tupelo
Miss. and is so well fixed that he will
not touch a law case for less than
$2OOO.
H. G. Wells the English literateur
in his vouth often wrote 8000 words a
day. while Conan Doyle it is said
once wrote a story of 12000 words at
a sitting.
The marquis of Alisa is an enthu-
siastic floriculturist and at Culzean
castle. Ayrshire has managed to grow
flowers which can be seen nowhere
else in Scotland.
Lord Curgon is extremely methodi-
cal. It is said of him when in India
that in a single moment he could place
his hand on any paper in his posses-
sion that he wanted relating to the
country of which he was viceroy.
Charles J. Glidden the wealthy
Boston globe girdling automobilist
says that his present ambition is to
make balloon ascensions in as many
countries throughout the world as pos-
sible. He is an insatiate traveler and
holds the world’s record for mileage
traveled in automobiles.
In accordance with a suggestion
made at the annual meeting of the
hunt last week the Bedale Hounds
met yesterday near a village school
the object being to give the children
an object lesson Ip hunting and to
inspire in their minds a respect and
regard for both hounds and hunters. —
Yorkshire Post.
Smelling salts are equivalent to a
practical joke in the estimation of the
natives of New Guinea. A traveler
tells how he once offered a native a
whiff of the salts. After going through
extraordinary contortions the native
went away returning soon with an-
other native whom he compelled to
make acquaintance with the salts. The
two brought a third and so on until
the whole village had been victimized.
The savages watched each new suf-
ferer with the keenest delight and
took good care not to let him know
what fate awaited him.
A native spectator at Cawnpore
seated on a branch of a tree overhang-
ing a huge figure of Rana was hurled
on to the figure by the breaking of the
branch. As he fell ou the top of the
figure one of the large bombs went
off. killing the man instantly. A po
Herman trying to keep the crowd off
had his skull smashed. A native said
to be mad began beating an old woman
who was looking on at the Ram Lila.
An ekka man passing by interfered
whereupon the madman set upon him
breaking open his skull. The ekka-
walla was removed to the hospital in
a precarious state.
The French Academy of Sciences
recently received the report of a com-
mission appointed to study the ques-
tion ot the value of finger prints as a
means of personal identification. The
report is highly favorable declaring
that the value of the finger print as
evidence of identity at least equals
that. all other physical characteris-
tics put together. It possesses the
great advantage of being applicable at
all ages in infancy in middle life and
during old age. Every day. the re-
port says Zhis system is tending more
and more to replace the method of t
antlyropometrical measurements.
Six small "Apaches" under the
leadership of a boy of 13 named Denis
Clalrvols. have been arrested at Lille.
France for systematic and extensive
robberies. The eldest of the boys is
15 and the youngest 10. Clairvois wag
the Raffles of the group. He ruled
his "Coliseum band” with a hand ot
iron and is particularly proud of hav-
ing cut off a finger ot one of the boys
because he dropped an alarm clock
when they were escaping from a jew-
eler’s shop and they were nearly
caught In consequence.. One of the
bovs confessed that their ambition
was to buy a ship and become pirates.
Thev intended to raid and if possible
capture America.
George Smith who. a few months
ago. created a sensation in tbc dis-
trict court at Reno by kneeling in
praver in the midst of a murder case
and asking God for light on the evi-
dence in the case and who later se-
verely criticised the judge for passing
the death sentence on four convicted
men. has built himself a church on the
crest of a high hill several miles
northeast of this city. The edifice
stands in a desolate country to the
west of the Wedekind mines and was
found bv a party of hunters returning
recently' from Pyramid lake. The
church is right bv two large roads
constructed at much expense. The
building is small but artistic. It
stands in a country unsettled and
Smith who lives nearby is the only
person within miles of the church
The servant problem in England
does not appear to be any nearer solu-
tion. The British housewife lost and
the Australian mlstresh gained 66
English. Scotch and Irish girls when j
rhe steamship Miltiades sailed from
Tilbury recently with its first con- |
tin gent of servants for New South j
Wales under the government-aided j
emigration scheme. One of the con- '
ditions was that the girls must be I
actually encaged in domestic service |
and the passage money asked for the j
16.000 mile lourney was $l5. As a j
guaranty of good faith a deposit of <
$lO with the government has been i
made bv each girl on their arrival ■
i in Sydney a little before Christmas ;
। thev will be met by a representative j
I of the government and most of them
I will at once go into places already I
I found for them. 1
Is Too Much Money
Harmful to American Women?
“When our foreign critics speak of the American woman they
have in mind the wives and daughters of unwisely chivalrous
men who have blindly allowed their women folk to pursue
ignorant and half-baked ideals of emancipation.”
“Almost without exception her attempts at a career
have been futile and often they have been notably even
pathetically ridiculous.”
“Lacking all vital contact with life ignorant of all the deeper
wells of human impulse her mind and her very good looks
are as superficial and as trivial as her activities.”
Women will be interested in
The American Drone
in this week’s issue of
THE SATURDAY
EVENING POST
A beautiful special Christmas Number of 52 pages. Of all newsdealers at sc. the copy;
the year by mail.
The Curtis Publishing Company Philadelphia Penna.
*
GOOD THINGS FROM THE WORLD AT LARGE
Disappearance of Ghosts.
(New York Post.)
"Where are the ghosts gone?” asks
a contemporary which claims to have
made a canvass of the neighborhoods
of cemeteries scenes of murder and
sudden death and the like. People no
longer fear these places is its con-
clusion. Grave diggers being inter-
viewed declare that nothing superna-
tural is going on just now. A stream
of pedestrians is no longer deflected
after dark from a graveyard. Even
children have learned to look tomb-
stones in the face. We fancy that a
changed conception of the ghost him-
self is responsible for the lessened
concern over his presence. Twentieth
century ghosts have ceased to wear
shrouds wail and clank chains. These
performances doubtless retain their
faculty of curdling blood but they
have gone out of fashion for othbY rea-
sons. The psychical research socie-
ties though they have not produced a
general conviction one way or the
other regarding the existence of
ghosts have nevertheless shed new
light on the properties of the crea-
tures supposing they do exist. Every
story of a matter-of-fact ghost ap-
pearing in the daytime lacking the
gift of prophecy talking or gesturing
much as he did in his fleshy vesture
and frequenting ordinary' streets and
houses instead of tombs and ruins
helps to brace our weak backbones.
It may not be that people are lets
afraid of ghosts than of yore yet it
is quite possible that they feel now
their chance of meeting ghosts to be
about as great in one place as in an-
other.
His Only Comfort.
The building of an "interurban line
of railway along each side of the St.
Joseph river in Michigan threatens to
destroy the practical monopoly of the
commerce on that beautiful and his-
toric stream enjoyed for so many
years by the little steamboat May
Graham.
A city man on his summer vacation
while taking a trip up the river on the
Mav Graham was expressing his re-
gret at the prospect.
“What would you do captain?” he
asked "if business should fall off to
such an extent that you had to take
this boat off the river?”
“Well” said jolly Captain Fikes
who has been both captain and pilot
of the little craft for nearly 31 years
as he deftly steered hfs boat between
a sandbar on one side and a snag on
the other "if it wasn’t that I’ve got
a good farm and a hardware store
and that I'm only steamboating for
fun I reckon I’d come mighty near
breaking my heart over it”
Eyes of Deep Sea Fish.
(Nashville Tennessean.
"But few people know that when
deep sea fish are taken from the wa-
ter their eyes pop from their heads”
said E. B. Wynn of Mobile at me
Tulane. This is due to being relieved
of the tremendous water pressure and
coming in contact with air. On the
gulf coast where thousands of fish
are caught daily one can see hundreds
and hundreds of deep water fish with
eyes hanging from their sockets.
Our Flight Through Space.
Vega is the star toward which our
sun is ceaselessly rushing through the
infinite regions of space carrying the
earth and all the other planets with
him. Though we are pursuing this
journey at the speed of eleven miles
a second so that at the end of eacfi
day we are almost 1000000 miles
nearer the star than we were at the
beginning yet at least 1000000 years
will elapse before we overtake and
drift past this great sun. Were the
life of man on earth not so short how
wonderfully would be see the face of
the heavens change as he passed
through our universe of stars. The
Great Dipper the Northern Cross and
even the Milky Way itself would ap-
pear to take new forms as he passed
on and viewed them from a different
direction and as he drew near the
blue star Vega a sun enormously
larger and hotter than our own it
would shine out with extraordinary
brilliancy.
A Curious Stage Custom.
(London Globe)
It is not generally known that ths
last three or four words of a dramatic
production are never spoken during
the period of the rehearsal of tho
piece. Most frequently they are nev-
er written by the author.
The superstition of the theatrical
world is that it would be certain to
bring bad luck to the piece if the last
words were pronounced on the stage
The State Bank and Trust Co.
321 East Houston Street. San Antonio Texas.
CAPITAL $lOOOOO
W. T. McCampbell President. Aug. Briam Jr. First Vice-president.
A. J. Bell Second Vice-president. J H. Halle Cashier.
ALAMO NATIONAL BANK
BAN ANTONIO TEXAS.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $600000.
SAFE CONSERVATIVE. ACCOMMODATING.
Best Fire and Burglar Proof Vaults In Fire Proof Building.
CHAS ZOLLErt. PAUL INGENHUTH H. R. SCHMELTZER.
Pres and Gen. Mgr. Vice-president Bec’y and Treat.
MERCHANTS' TRANSFER COMPANY
(Incorporated.)
RECEIVING FORWARDING STORAGE ETC. HAULING AND PLACING
SAFES AND MACHINERY A SPECIALTY. BOTH PHONES 359.
OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: 510 to 514 DOLOROSA ST.
iE B Chandleri
: MONEY TO LOAN i
• •
: Real Estate For Sale :
S 1 0 2 EAST CROCKETT STREET’
•••••••••••••••■••••••••••••• saaaaa^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
SAN ANTONIO
KERRVILLE
before the first night. But as the play
must have an end and it should be
known to all present that it is at an
end the actor or actress entrusted
with the last lines usually interpolates
a word or two. For instance the ac-
tor would say "My dear girl my dear
boy kneel before me that I may for-
give you and bless you with—a farth-
ing cake.”
Letter in Postoffice 151 Years.
(Boston Journal.)
Over in Winchendon there is an un-
broken rule that the cellar of the post-
office shall be cleaned out once in
every 150 years. The cleaner wasn’t
on to his job last year because if he
had been he would have found the let-
ter addressed to E. S. Merrill Win-
chendon posttnarked 1756 that M. J.
McDonald found today in the debris.
The old postmark shows ths cellar
hadn't been cleaned out in 151 jtars.
The Bond Hardware Co.
Cut price store north side City hall.
Stoves hardware guns paints glass
ihe house that saves you money.
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Logan, Frederick. The San Antonio Light. (San Antonio, Tex.), Ed. 1 Saturday, December 7, 1907, newspaper, December 7, 1907; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1691618/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .