The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 6, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 29, 1905 Page: 4 of 12
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VANDKRBILT UNIVERSITY LOSES
ITS MAIN BUILDING BY FIRE
Tin* main building of Vandcrhllt un-
iversity, at Nashville Timn , was «|o-
Blroyed by liic April 2<l. causing a
loss of $200.1)00, jwitli insurance of
S i i r. ,000. Tlio ImlIdiii u was of brick,
ami w as « r *«-t« «! in 1ST I Vunderbilt
nniv-i iiy was founded l>> Commodore
Cornelius Vaiiderblli, and was opened
in October, 1 K7" . The endowment
was SI.ooo.uou, to which the city of
Nashville added $2fi.ooo, with which
h beautiful tract of twenty.five acres
Just outside the city limit- was pur-
chased. In value of bulldinKft and
grounds and in prodm tlve endowment
Vanderbilt university surpasses any
other Institution in the south. It was
the express wish of 15;• • founder, now
recorded on the pedestal of the stutuc
elected in liis honor on the campus
by the citizens of Nashville that the
Inlltii'iice of the university might "con-
tribute to strengthening the ties that
should exist tie'ween all sections of
our common country." The university
hi:.- graduates in cv, n sect: >n
saw gen. oku take village
Correspondent Writes of the First Bat
tie of Which He Was Permitted to
Or1 an Eye Witness — Tactics Em-
ployed by The Japanese in Deliver-
ing a Frontal Attack.
i
Field Headipiarters. II. 1 .1 II.. Sec-
ond Army Match 0 To-day for the
first time in this battle I saw a light,
writes Will ii Brill, correspondent ol
the Chicago Journal. I had given up
a!! hope of steiinr anything and that
added to the pleasure of really seeing
something aftct all. The tight I saw-
was the attack on and capture of the
little village of Kankyachien which Is
one of a dozen villages lying lu the
angle made hy the Hun rivet on the
south and the railway on the east. It
was it good light and I could see al-
most every detail of It
Karly tins morning we rodi forward
to a long low sand hill which lies a!
most directly west of Mukden at a
distance of about ten miles. There
Gen. Oku and his staff had taken up
their quarters and there the corre-
spondents and military attaches pre-
empted an end of the hill for them-
selves.
At the foot of tin hill lax a large
open plain bounded on the southwest
by the abandoned railway embank-
n-ent To the southwest of the hill,
across the plain, lay Kankyachien.
On one side of it was the village
which I have called the North village,
on the other one which 1 have called
the West village. Moth these villages
were occupied by the Japanese yester-
day. but this morning Kankychin was
in the hands ol the Russians, as were
several villages beyond It.
Artillery Duel Takes Place.
Beyond the railway embankment
was a Japanese battery of heavy guns,
while between trees in front of the
embankment was a battery of field
guns Both these batteries were shell-
ing Kankyachien and the Russian bat-
terle- bevond when we reached the
hill The Russians were returning the
fire heavily Hundreds o| shells fell
into and around the north village, fir-
ing St in several places, while shell
and shrapnel burst on and over the
field in front of us. Here the Russian
fire was wild, for during the whole day
there was nothing on the field to fire
at save an occasional mounted or-
derly.
The hill Itself, with Its hurrying
aids and staff officers. Its busy tele-
phone tents and its steady stream of
galloping orderlies, reminded me of
Panchopu, from which we saw the last
dav's fighting In the battle of the
Shuho.
All morning the bombardment kept
up from ImiiIi sides, but there was
nothing else. The chief of artillery
of tin army raent most of his time at
his telescope on the top of the hill,
and there was usually a staff officer
at the big glasses, but the stafl in gen-
eral didn't seem to be taking any par-
ticular interest In the affair.
Charge by the Japanese.
At 2 o'clock, however, the Japanese
bombardment began to increase until
it seemed that every available gun
had been turned on Kankyachien.
Tl.i continued for an hour, and then
there was a stir among the tents and
Gen. Oku. followed by nearly all his
staff officers, mounted the hill. They
spread themselves on the sand, and
each one turned hit- glasses on Kanky
achien We followed suit.
Just at that moment the Japanese
artillery fire stopped altogether. The
shells ceased to burst over the vil-
lage and the smoke ami dust cleared
away At the -sine moment a half
dozen soldiers in extended order
emerged from the north village and 1
started on a run In the direction of
Kankyachien They ran forward for
perhaps 2o0 yards and then dropped
As the first men dropped another
lot left the village and went forward '
' to the same line. Then came a third
lot and a fourth and a fifth. When
perhaps loo men had gathered on that
line, the first men went forward again,
tlii;- time not so far, and dropped,
J again followed In the same order by
j the other groups.
By this time the Russians had ills-
: covered them. Some of the soldiers
who startod forward did not reach the
■ second line. They dropped on the way
and became mere dark spots on the
l ground. Dozens of them dropped as
the advance continued, but that did
not stoji the others, who went on until
nil who were able reached the second
line. Then another rush began. The
shelling was heavier than before and
the rush was still shorter this time,
and there were more dark spots on
the ground.
Few Reach Safety Goal.
Then I noticed that a similar ad-
vance had begun from the west vll
lage. men going forward in the same
manner and also leaving behind them
dark spots on the ground. From both
parties soldiers were going back to
the starting point, some of them run
ning, some walking very slowly, some
limiting painfully. They were the
wounded, and to reach safety they
were compelled to go through the line
ol sheli fire again. Few of them
reached safety. I saw one party of
five start back. Only one reached the
goal, the others being added to the
nark spots on the ground.
At the same time we saw re-enforce-
ments moving up to the west village
from the railway embankment. They
went forward a few at a time in a long
straggling single line. The Russians
evidently saw them, for they began
throwing shrapnel in their direction,
but so far as I saw not ono of them
was hit.
Now the attack <>n the village was
closing in. The men who were left
of the attacking parties were getting
closer and closer. The rushes were
only a few yards long now and they
came at longer Intervals. Rifle fire
from the village was added to the
sound of the guns and more and more
men fell. Re-enforcements began to
move forward In rushes from both vil-
lages.
Final Rush Begins.
,across the plain from the north vil-
lage and through tin trees from the
west village they went, paying no
heed to the shells that were sweeping
the ground In both directions A
party of a dozen had rushed forward
but a few yards from the west village
among them. When the smoke and
dust cleared away there were four or
five dark spots on the ground, but the
other men were rushing on, regardless
of their comrades' fate.
At last came the final rush From
both sides the Japanese attackers
rushed into the village and were lost
to sight behind the walls. For a mo-
ment there was heavy ritle lire In the
village Then It grew fainter and
fainter and finally died away alto-
gether. Then the Russian shells be-
gan to burst over the village and we
knew that the attack had been suc-
cessful. Mori men moved into the
village, this time with less trouble,
although the sliolls still fell thickly on
the plain and In the grove, but the vil-
lage was captured.
The night Is calm and peaceful, and
still, but in the improvised hospitals
men are moaning and suffering and
out there on the battlefield the (tars
cast their faint light on hundreds of
dark spots on the ground.
Youngest Bowdoin Alumnus.
Henry K Bradbury of Mollis Me
who recently died after practicing law
for over a half a century l said to
have had the distinction of being
graduated from Bowdoin college at a
younger age than any other of Its
hlumni. He entered college at 13
years of age and was graduated tit 17
in the fatuous class of 1*<44
EVENTS OF EVERYWHERE.
R S Collins, a merchant of N>bra
1 1 Cliy, Neb . iiad his poi ket picked >t
$•'.00 a,: the Katy depot at Denism, a
f> w lllgtits sll.ee
Claude \\ ilkerson. a barber, vge.l
twenty five, died Friday morning at
•dannsvllle. I l I). Mb is supposed to
have res 11 • i■ 11 from jmiI-siin contained la
bav runt.
Lewis Flitting' of New York, di 1
In week from h> Irophohia contracted
from a dog bit,' |,i • Sfptemle i Th >
W :;>:J vva d!> iifeeted at the time but
not cuuteri/cd.
< apt. R( bcrt T Chapman, graduate
<>f Annapolis and dlstliiguiahe I in hn
1 t vice in th 1 t"onI( derate Navy mi-
ll r Admiral Semnies, died a: tialves
ton last Thursdav
CHOSEN HEAD OF DAUGHTERS
OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
In Cheyenne re-
fi r thirty miles
Trainmen arriving
p rt t hat i v ■ i s p >|,.
i t of Ch> venue and twenty mJles
south 11 1 been level" 1 hy the snow,
which fell Wednesday
M: '-i Agnes Wat si n. the only daugh-
ter of Hon Thomas K. Watson, was
married Thursday afternoon at tho
home of her parents in Thomson, Cia.
to Oscar S l.ec, a merchant.
Iatte indications of successful treat-
ment of cancer by radium have lead to
r-newi ! activity iu experiments aluum
tills Hi,, w l ie)i ar. meeting constantly
increasing eiici ur: gemi nt.
The conclusion ha- br-cn arrived at
in New \«it U that cet'i bro-Splnal men-
ingitis Is contagi ous and lion -'■< where
cases have • xi •■•! must be fumigat I
upon death or recovery i f patient.
Brown Booth ol Bivnhatn, Texas a
lad about IT years of age, while trying
to catch u through freight train, was
horribly mangle | at Pottsbor), Thurs-
day evi ning He neur regained con-
sciousness.
Pre Id"!,f Tiro melt had killed a
bear and a loin u up to Tm -day. He
Is satisfied with his hunt for the big
g« game the Rod affords If he
ge's one more P ar or several he will
be highly pie; ■•■d.
The strike of railr' id men which be-
gan in Rome .Monday is not the suc-
cess expected. Some of the man re-
fused to strike and published a mani-
festo, saying they would not risk tho
bread of th. Ir families.
John Alexander Bowie of Chicago
hiss cl< -ed negotiations and obtained
options on a tract of two million acres
of land In the State of Tamaullpas,
Mexico, where he proposes to found a
new Zion City.
Hiram Cronk of the town of Ava.
N. V., one of t he oldi -t surv i vors of tho
war of 1 si2. will celebrate his 105
birthday W In day next. The aged'
veteran lives wi'h his daughter on a
farm near Ava.
Federal officers have arrested lot-
tery men at San Antonio who ar - be- ;
llevod to have operated extensively
An entire printing plant was taken by
tin officers with which lottery tick- ;
eis were alleged to have been printed.
The new Hamburg American line
steamer Amerlka was launched at Bel-
fast Friday In the presence of thous-
ands of people. The vessel Is Intend-
ed for Imni' llrue service between
Hamburg and New York. Her capacb 1
ty Is 1(1,000 tons rf cargo and about.
4.000 passengers and crew
T'nlted Stati s Senator Arville Hltch-
coelt I'latt of Connecticut died at Ills
summer home In Washington, Conn ,
Friday, from pneumonia The end
came almost tin xepectedly from the
breaking of Hi" abress which had
formed in the right lung.
Mercy Alvlna Mi ore, agi^I 01. n
member of the choir which sang at
l.ineolif- funeral, died Tuesday at Hln-
ton. 1 T Site was a native of Hart-
ford. Conn., and w idow of Thus. Monro,
who ibed fifty-one years ago
Rev. B. II Hurt]' aged 71, of Lu-
cerne, Ok . dropped dead between his
home and his barn while trying to
reach th" house He had teen a min-
ister of ilie g( pel for fifty years and
was a pioneer churchman in Wood-
w ud county
J Pi'Tporvt Morgan, of New , rk,
wa- received here by Foreign Minis-
tei Tlttonl. who renewed, lu tie name
of the f!ovi rnnien' his thanks for Mr.
Morgan' gene: isity In returning the
Ascoll cope.
James J. Carroll, better known as
"Virginia' Carroll an 1 for many years
on • of the mo i noted figures on the
American turf, Is dead at New Orleans
of cancer at the age of IT He was
Imrn in New Oilcans and was a mem-
ber of a family still prominent there.
When thi Hamburg \m rlran line
steamer Pennsylvania arrived at New
York Friday from Hamburg she had
on board the large t number of passen-
gers ever brought on a single hip;
Including cabin and steerage, •
I
\ 4 . •; . C:
W. -v.' ' - V - :
CURE YOUR KIDNEYS.
When the Back Aches and Bladder
Trouble* Sat In, Get at the Cause.
Don't make the mistake of believing
back ache and bladder Ills to be local
ulliiienl- liet at the cause and cure
the kidney*. Use
I tear- - Kidney
Pi lis. w liich have
cur- I thousands.
Captain S (>.
Hunt t of i.;n.m
gi" No H. Pirta^P
burg Pa. Fire
I b p irtuiellt, and
residing at 2TJ9
\\ ' He a v v n u e,
say s:
It w i - three years ago that I used
I hi Kidie :• PIIN for an attack of
I. incy 111 hi hie that was mostly back
i ■ and th. ■ fix*- I liu up line. There
is no mistaki a1 out that, and If l
s,i.,iii,l i vi i I' troubled again I would
«* t tlu m first ihuir a . 1 know what
the) are '
For
cents 1'
le by all di ilers Price 60
ti r Mdburn tBuffalo, N.Y.
The Great D-tcctive.
I Sherhxdt Holm- olve anoihei my-*
i te: v in th- Sun lay World n- \ Sunday
fiet the -i t \ cotnple'e Con.in
i IKivie Sherlock II 'lines story every
I Sun lay If von ( ini.ot get paper from
newsdea'er end fiv cuts io Tho
\\ o d. Park Itov New York.
A Heavy Fine.
I'n ier tin FN i law. any railroad
1 company which pay i' bales in any
fi i m. or any shipper who accepts
them is llabb to a line i from |1,< 00
to
pre
i. ""
hii tt-
li than
liit< r 'ate
• mpinveri
vlidati : -
Knapi oi
-me. this
Ing has i
ill mi conviction l> also
th i am leg ( f freight at.
t. ■ i ub11 bed tariffs. Tho
i • mnieti <'omuiission is
io d« lect and prosecute
f tin -tan
I e Colli III is-
law w.i pass
en a - rat as
tor:
Ml lion.lid Mel.can ol New York,
the new pri -ident of the Daughters ol
the Anierh in Ri volution, probably
has made more spi eches on the su'i
Jeer of patriot! in than any living
Woman. She has spoken in school,
and at celebrations In half the states
id : he ui on and ha■■■ bet n act I ve in
o'le r v\ ijs in patrlo!:c i iiieationnl
worl. She is a cimr.-i ne mil" "I
thi- I) A. K Her cimpaign for thu
presidency was made on an "Anierb
"im" platform Mr . McLean was
born In Maryland
II [Ml
Inn
our
li'Tliii ( out'
to ileal wl
woman of
lei.
- •
: otindln.
an
w 1
P; l b lit
tales tliut
relnt. pay-
ry
, ■■ c 11 1 I
.irought
a grand
I by
motives of john paul jones Dyspepsia of Women
The r cent diss-Irons earthquake In
India sent a tremor half around the
world wliifb reached Baltimore In flf
t"en minutes This I- the record
shown by examination of th* seismo-
graph film at John Hopkins Univer
sity, Baltimore
Difference of Opinion as to Whether
the Splendid Exploits of America's
First Naval Hero Were Due to Love
o' Adventure or to His Devotion to
Hio Adopted Country,
If the bringing buck of the remains
of a hero to the land lot which he
fought were a proper occasion for a
popular demonstration of iuii*y en-
thusiasm tt is probable that the re-
main? of John Paul Jones would be
teeehed In America with the acclaim
ol admiration n.tlier than tho acclaim
Of love.
Some day It may be known defin-
ite!) whether America's first admiral
lought for the infant republic from
motives ol pure patriotism or from
the spur of ambition He fought w th
nothing less than desperate courage
for the cause which he had espouse.!,
luo there are those things in John
Paul Jon« s' life which make it seem
that he may have fought because ol
sheer love for fighting and because
the immedia'e need of the struggling
'colonies gave opportunity for the ae
({Hiring of that meed of Individual
i glory which some men claim the sou!
i "
1 ol John Paul Jones craved
# He did Ills work wa ll There wi
no turning back; there vvas no letup
: In strenuous endeavor No t.,an whose
birthplace wa,- America and whose
'bean's love was fixed on the country
of his hearthstone fought more appar-
ently soillfully for III can-" ol the
struggling colonies than did John
Paul .lone the alien For what he
did his tunic will lie held in admini
Hon In the centuries to come as It
ha been held in the century that has
passed. It may lie that when more s
known about this man of mystery the
people will revere hi memory as they
do that of the known patriots of the
rt volution.
James Fenlmore Cooper served in
the I'tilted State- navy. In < uniiton
with his fellow sailors of the old oak-
en frigates h' held in first place of
honor the alien admiral who com
maltded the first vessel living the
American tlag which compelled a ship
of the supposedly Invinciblc British
navj to strike colors Yet Janie Feiil
more Cooper in that gia aie ■ d <n
tales, "The Pilot " paints John Paul
Jones as a hero rather than a* a
patriot. At the close of his story
Cooper puts Into the mouth of one
of his chief characters, a naval of-
ficer. the e words, touching the life
and motives of John Paul Jones
Ills devotion to America proceeded
from a desire for distinction, his rul-
ing past-Ion His love for liberty may
be the more questionable, for If he
commenced lit deeds in the cause of
tb''S( free states they terminated In
the services of a (Ies|Mi'
"He Is now dead, but had he lived
In times ami under circumstances, 1
Rests with Oursrlves.
There is n way of relating ourselves
to the Incident - of life through which
wr inn t par o that n• in• f them
;inl! work us Injury There is no
\m r In sorrow, pain, ol Injustice
which tan hurt us. utiles in some
■Any we fail in on> own duty In meet
tng It "
vh i. bis consummate
his profession, hio cool,
i v en desperate <aiui aji
been, exercised in a rc>
knowledge oi
deliberate and
e could have
ii I in and wall
supported navy, and had the habits
j (il Ins youth belter •] 11 il 11 tl < > 11 hi iii to
| have borne meekly the honor lie ae
( (pnred in his age, he would have left
1 behind him no name in Its lists that
would have descended to the latest
posterity of his adopted country men
i w It I gt i a or renown.
It may I., how. \a r, that tin Atneri
■ n who la va e.-j John Paul Jmu • for
the blows that he struck for liberty
would prefer to lake as tho • ssence ol
truth the words which Cooper puis
into the mouth of the admiral, lu the
story, "The Pilot," John Paul Jones
stands on Hngllsh
Mice DuiiKcomue
lor being disloyal
Pilot" answers:
"A man with a soul
ed by th< arbitrary
tyrants and hirelings
has the right as well
tlon to grapple with
whose name soever It
In whatever hollow and specious shtifu
it founds its claim to abuse our rao '
ABS0I I'l tLY NKEDLESS AGOiNY
Cauppil by litprlns Disorder* sr.d Cured hy
LyCia E, Plnkham s Vegetable Compound
A i-rent many women suffer with a
form of indigest ■ ai or dysj i p*in which
<i •-. not seem to yield inordinary treut-
i nut VV 11., e t be sy mptoiiis seem Ni bo
similar to tlio.-x- of ordinary indices-
tioii, vet the ne d. eines universal I v pro-
scribed do not set in to restore the j-iv
tieiil's norma! condition
soil iiiul has
She upbraids
to his king. '
mot
him
Tlu
not to be limit
boundaries of
. Iml nne whn
as the iuclluit
Oppt ei- - loll. Ill
Is exercised ' r
r#M_
[ Airs. At IVr / gh t
One of the latest and pot- Ibly tlu
best of the biographers of John Paul
Jones says that his life was written
In three languages Kngllsh. Frencii
and Itu- inn and that though till.- life
was "for more thsn 100 years the
theme of many busy pens, the half
of it has not yet been fold "
' The half of It ha not. yet been
told.' because the half of' it is not
known. The papers of John Paul
.loii' were yalteii'd to the four
winds Some, of them have been
font . and from them s disconnected
account of his life and of the motives
which actuated him liu beet con
stiucted. When more material lias
been 'collected and a fuller study can
be made light may be let In upon
the character of till; man who enrrb I
the first American Hag to victory on
the high sea
There Is one authenticated stnrv
cntii ' rnlng John Paul Jones which
would go to show that Ills love for
America had an earlier blrtli than iIi«•
date of the opening of the Vnuriean
revolution which gave the sailor his
opportunity to serve his ambition
lotii was living on i> plantation • ii
Virginia. Some British naval officer
were visiting the port near his home
One nl them. Capt Park', when the
subject of il po Ilile revolt of the
colonies was broached, said In I dies'
presence "America enn lie ensllv
overcome If the courage of the colo-
nial men is on a par wl'li the virtue of
the ohmiai women
John Paul Jones promptly knocked
Capt Pat In down an I the officer was
carried to Ills hip and never pressed
for the opportunity to fight In a due!
F It C , In Chicago Po t
All in God's Good Time.
Carlyle loved his mother dearly.
In one ol his letters he say "The
good old heart ot a mother' She is
the t end ere -1 sight w have j„ this
world' One could weep floods of
tears,, wet- th<"t not oiiieihlng in
Mrs I'inkham claims that there is a
kind of dyspeti'.ia that is caused by a
derangemnnt of the female organism,
Utfid which, while it causes a disturb-
ance sjm. ar to ordinary indigestion,
cannot Lie relieved without a medicine
which n • on ■ ,iets a a stomach tonic,
but has peculiar uterine tonic ilTeot*
also
As proof of thi* theory w call i t-
tcnt on to the ca-e of Mrs Maggio
\Nr,,'bt. Brooklyn, N. Y-. who wax
com pie 11 cm ad 11 v l.ydia K. Pink-
ham s Ve^'i't able • ompou ud after ever v-
thing else had failed .she writes
For twi. \iiis i sutt.-r.'.l itli dvsju'pkln
whi' h "ok ;','ln t ate I my eiitiri iv t-in i tint I
wns uniiblo l attend to no lads duties I
felt w-ak and n. rvoiis, urn! rn'tliuig tluit lute
tasiisl k'hhI anil it '-iiii-msI u disiurl uu -i in my
*t« 'ItUl'-b I tried dill- i lit ilv«pi'|,-i.t run*,
but notliing aBmned to bslp ii, I was ud
v : 's| l>. •!%(. l.ydia II 1'iiii.b.oil's V"i;i tuli|ti
t oii) "atii I a trial, uud w it - brtj |it| v '^urpriHud
to ttn I that ii acted like n line toiu< und In n
fi'" euv - I I- . oi to enjoy and properly digest
niy f'n I My irniv-n a- rapid mid In
tlv, | was n w.-ll woinuii. I buvc n'c
on,:ii.'inlt«I it to iiimiv mitfering women "
No other medicine in the world hns
r' eivial sueh wide-pread and unqillill-
I I endorsement m hassuch n record ot
r .re- uf female troubles, as hik-s l.ylia
1.. I'liiliham'i Ve^etubiu Lniupouud.
Alabastine
Your
V^alls
il or a sacredni's thai \< beyond
was a saylna of Bernard. ! tears. ' The Most High God ma■'.>
Nothing can work mi damage but motheis and the a. r • 1 uffecijoti ot
myself The harm I sustain I carry
about with me and I nev. i mi a real
kufTerer but ly my own fault- '
children's heart and shall It not iu
the end lie all well. nt, this side of
death or beyond dciiiii.'
I'tae in<e*t desirable thins? in wall
covrnn^ iacifun ity ic >vennk' power).
Next t-j ih.it v:mr r f ar>plication
In both of the •• Alabaslmc stands
prc-emitif nt I Inn there are other
]«unts the limim-is, the [lerman-
ence, ihe binding qualities, and it is
tniied with rlear, pure water
bastinn is n t dependent on
paste, nor stnelley i;hic to bind it
the wall, it is an Alabaster remcnt
that set. on Ihe wall It is the puiest,
the nicest, the b*!st wall (overin^
ma le I he most beautiful color
efb-cti, thr most beautiful color
si hemes, the most beautiful designs
are possible ui Alsbastine.
AI \ It V s I INK n tpc mil v Kiiliablp f>,r
i li'io Ii nntl ■ < liool liuiis' w i k Write
<n fai Color ell ,e* fur & ui tl work.
The best deal-rs sell it If
doesn I. send us his name and
see that yon *re supplied
ALABASTINE COMPANY
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Cain, Thomas C. The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 6, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 29, 1905, newspaper, April 29, 1905; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth205903/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.