The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 28, 1890 Page: 4 of 8
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AUSTIN WEEKLY 8TATE3MAN THURSDAY A'JGiUST 28 1893
t Wtt$ Statesman
BT TBI
STATESMAN PUBLISTING COMPANY
A. P. WOOLDKIDGB President
E. J. HILL Vice-President
PEYTON BROWN General Manager
Daily per year f 10 00
Weekly per year 1 25
Invariably in advance.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
To 1)6 Voted November 4 1890.
STATE TICKET.
For GoTernor
JAMES S. HUGO.
For Lieutpnnnt Governor
GEO. C. PENDLETON.
Far Comptroller
JOUN D. Mc0AI.L.
For Treasurer
fWILLIAM B. WOBTOAM.
For CommlMloner of General Land Office
W. L. McGAUGUEY.
For Attornoy:GeDeral
CIURLES A. CULBERSON.
For Superintendent of Pulillo Instruction
CARL PRITCI1ETT.
CONGRESSIONAL TICKET.
For Congress Tenth District
JOSEPH D. BAYERS.
JUDICIAL TICKET.
For District Attorney
JAMES II. ROBERTSON.
TBAVIS COUNTY. DEMOCRATIC TICKET
For Beprcsontatlve
A. W. TERRELL
N. A. DAWSON.
For Count; Judge
WILLIAM von ROSENHEIM.
For County Attorney
ANDREW J. GIBSON.
For Collector of Taxes
JOUN W. KELLY.
For Assessor of Taxes
HAM M. METZ.
For Sheriff .
EMMETT WHITE.
For Clerk of District Court
JAMES P. BART.
For County Clerk
JOHN 0. JOHNSON.
For County SchoolJHuperintendent
J. B. SOGERS.
For County Treasurer
W. A. PITTS
'JFot County Surveyor
J. E.JWALLACE.
For Hide and Animal Inspector
R. E. CAPERTON.
For County Commissioners
JOHN W. BROWN Product No. 1.
W. N. McELUOY Precinct No. 2.
JOHN W. YOUNG Precinct No. 3
CHARLES F. AUSTIN Precinct No. 4.
For Justice of the Peace Preclnot No. 3
JOHN A. STUART
CHARLES J. FISHER.
For Constable. Precinct No. 3
JAMES M- DAVIS.
ISSUES OF THE FALL ELECTIONS.
A number of States iu the North
and West hold elections for congress-
men this fall and in the political com-
plexion of the representatives chosen
the people can and will speak out on
the issues now agitating the country
The great overshadowing question
will be as usual the tariff. If the
voters desire a continuance of the
tariff robbery if they are satisfied with
the principles of the McKinley bill
pronounced infamous by so good a
Republican as James 3. Blaine him
self they can return Republican rep
resontatives and if nay Democrats.
Another issue on which the people
jBie called upon to express themselves
ithe Force bill which in reality
involves their liberties and the ques-
tion of erecting over them a practical
military despotism. If the principles
of this infamous measure suits them
if they are willing for the change of
form of government which is the
intention and will be the ultimate
effect of such a law they can deposit
their ballots for the Republican can-
didates. If on the contrary they wish to re-
tain intact the liberties handed down
to them by the founders of the gov
ernment they can vote for the Demo
crats and send up representatives of
that party.
Still another issue prescuts itself for
approval or disapproval. It is the
reckless extravagance of the Republi-
cans since their return to power their
creation of a fifty million dolicit to be
saddled on the taxpayers of the coun-
try next year. If the people wish this
juandoring and wasting of their
meney to continue they can vote for
Republican representatives. But if
they desire economy and a wise man
agement of the revenues is was the
case under the Cleveland administra-
tion they can return Democratic mem-
bers. It is for the people themselves to
say how they want these issues set-
tled and they can say it in the fall
elections.
The county commissioners court is
the authority that stands nearest to
the people as it handles the money
of the people. This morning is pub-
lished a full report of that courts fi-
nancial transactions for this month.
DEMOCRACY'S TICKET.
The Democratic ticket State con-
gresBi'onal district and county is pub
lished in full in this issue and will
daily appear at the head of the edi-
torial column for the remainder of
the campaign. Read it from top to
bottom and answer; is if not a first-
class ticket in every respect? Is it
not such a ticket as the Democracy
will have cause to be proud of? The
great danger with the Democratic
party of Texas is that because of its
overwhelming majority and conse-
quent certainty of victory no matter
what its platform and who its nomi-
nees it may grow careless
as to its platforms and
nominees. Such carelessness has
not been shown in the framing of
the present platform and the nomina-
tion of its present candidates. That
platform is made of sturdy planks in
which there is no giving way and the
nominees are men of sterling ability
and integrity to whose keeping can
safely be entrusted the conduct of the
governmental affairs of the people.
You have seen the platform repeatedly
in print and know its every plank.
Now scan carefully the names of the
leaders of the Democratic hosts and
commit those names to memory to
the end that in November 1G0000
more tickets bearing upon their face
those names shall be deposited in the
ballot box than can be found of tickets
representing every other political
party arrayed against Democracy.
The Philadelphia Record is putting
in some telling blows right under the
belt where they do the most good. To
the farmers of Pennsylvania it says:
"The present delegation in congress
from the State of Pennsylvania con-
tains twenty-one Republicans and
seven Democrats. When these
twenty-one Republicans shall come
stumping among you this fall and
shall tell you that the McKinley
tariff bill was devised to better your
condition you should reply :
"'There is not a section or a line in
the entire bill that will open a
market for another bushel of wheat
or another barrel of pork.'
"And if they want to know your au-
thority for that statement you can
tell them it is James G. Blaine the
chief apostle of protection and the sec-
retary of state of the administration."
And again in the same Issue it says :
"The St. Louis Globe-Democrat one
of the leading Republican newspapers
in the West declares that in 1888 'the
promise of the party was to protect
home labor not by subsidizing special
interests but by cheapening the cost
of living and making the tariff a 4 low
as possible.' In its indignation at the
failure of its party to live up to its
promises the Globe-Democrat declares
that Cleveland would now be presi-
dent if there had been any hint of
higher tariff legislation as a result of
Republican success. This truth is
late in the telling but it throws new
light on the exceeding anxiety to pass
the McKinley bill before the pressure
against it in the West shall have be-
come to strong to be successfully re-
sisted." The advanced thought of the
East is with the South and West and
we will unmistakably down the tariff
monster this fall
San Antonio's $2000000 will mean
simply the best of pure water at
merely nominal cost to consumers
and free to the city. 'Austin's $1400-
000 will mean not only all San An-
tonio will get but in addition a sur-
plus power for electric lighting the
city as bright as day. power for run
ning a perfect system of street car
lines and in addition 10000 horse
power to be given away or sold to
manufacturing establishments bring
ing thousands of operatives here and
building up the city as nothing else
can do. And it means eveu more
than all this it means just above
town the grandest inland lake in the
South. Isn't all this wortli thrice the
If 1400000? Who can measure its in
estimable value in cold dollars and
cents?
Because ot the silent hush that
pours thunderously from the editorial
sanctum of the News we must take
this answer by the Fort Worth Ga-
zette as full explanation. The Ga
zettesays: "The Austin Statesman
wants to know why the D. G. News
'makes such a fuss' about the com
mission amendment if it 'does noth
ing and amounts Jto nothing.' The
Statesman forgets perhaps that the
News has a special talent for much
ado about nothing which itcaunot
Placed Under Arreitt.
Last evening Deputy Sheriff Plumb
arrested Murry Brezele and R. Gilpin
both of whom are charged with ex
hibiting a gaming table.
FARM NOTES.
FULL DISCUSSION OP THE TREATMENT
AND CHARACTER OP THE GREAT
GROWING CROP "KING .
COTTON."
Selection of Cotton Seed One of the Moat
Important of QuchUoms.
M. James B. Brown writes asking
for further information about Peterkin
cotton. He asks: 1. How does
Peterkin differ from other varieties?
2. What are its good and what its
bad qualities? 3. Is it hard to pick?
4. How does it stand a storm?
On all these points I have given my
opinion frequently during the past
few months through these columns
but as Mr. Brown's letter is a sample
of many I receive on the same subject
it is evident that the subject is of in-
terest to cotton farmers and I will
briefly answer the foregoing queries
in a general statement.
The "Peterkin" is a long-limbed
cotton. Last year I had plants seven
feet high with limbs four feet long
but they were exceptional. In an or-
dinary way it grows and spreads much
like the "Myer." It is a late variety
and grows off slowly. It is late to
bloom late to fruit and late to ma-
ture. It stands dry weather and in-
tense heat better than any variety I
have seen. My "Peterkin" kept on
blooming and fruiting all through our
recent drouth without any apparent
check when other varieties were burnt
up. It is very prolific every plant
carrying more than double the num-
ber of bolls borne by other varieties
The bolls are small but as the seed is
also very small each boll
contains nearly if not quite as much
lint as the larger bolls with large seed.
It is champion at the gin as 1300
pounds of dry seed cotton will make a
500 pound bale. It is very easy to
pick as the lightest touch brings the
whole of the cotton out of the boll
rarely leaving a tag.
These are its good qualities and. its j
bad ones are more quickly told. Being
so easily picked it will not stand a
storm and even drops to the ground
without a wind or rain. The lint is
inferior to any other kinds but as
buyers in this market don't seem to
discriminate between a good and a poor
lint the farmer need not consider its
quality as a drawback.
Taken altogether the "Peterkin" is
the bes cotton to stand our long dry
Bummees and I would strongly
recommend every cotton grower to
give it a trial.
GRADING COTTON.
What is cotton worth today? is a
question daily asked by thousands
interested in the crop. Nominally
there are six grades of cotton ranging
from ordinary to middling fair prac-
tically there is but one grade and
that middling which is the standard.
Now it does not take a very good
bale to grade middling in the
Liverpoal New Orleans or Gal-
veston market but in the
small markets of the country
it always takes a good middling and
often a middling fair to meet the
standard and this is where the cotton
buyers profit comes in.
A farmer will often be told that his
cotton is low middling and about the
end of a rainy season he will learn
that he is the owner of an ordinary
bale but buyers rarely tell him that
he has a good noddling or middling
fair and when they are constrained
to make the admission they will Jrare-
ly pay more than a sixteenth over
midd ing price.
It is claimed that it costs a cent a
pound to transfer and pay all costs
on a bale from Austin to Galveston.
If this be so it follows that a buyer
say in Austin cannot afford to pay lO
cents for cotton that will only
bring 11 cents at the seaport. To
do so would be to work for glory a
charge never yet laid against a cotton
buyer yet some of these gentlemen
practically affirm it where they grade
middling fair as middling and offer
the price of the latter. Old farmers
knowing that they do not get any
more for an extra fine sample have
long since ceased to exercise any care
in the handling of the staple and as
a consequence Uiousandsjof dollars are
lost to tiie country every year.
What is needed is to have spinners
buv direct Irom the producer. The
middle man or men get too much out
of it at the expense of the farmer
This is a lit subject for the alliance to
consider and act on.
SELECTION OF COTTON SEED.
Now is the time to select seed for
next year's plantiug. No seed runs
out quicker than cotton and it is only
by careful and judicious selection in
the held that a standard can be main
tained. The value of good Beed for
plantiug is now beginning to berecog
uized and the most casual obssrver
can distinguish between the crop from
selected seed and that from the cow
feed bin.
To keep up to a standard or im
prove it requires no skill but juBt a
little patience and judgment. The
process is simple. When the middle
crop is fully matured go along the
rows and pick only five lock bolls of
large size from healthy vigorous plants
I having the characteristics you desire
57JACOBS 0l
CURES PERMANENTLY"
SPRAINS and STRAINS.
Athletes Praiae It Blehly.
H Minna t-t.fcun Francisco Cal. May S 1887.
Some time ago while a member of th
Olympic Athletic Club I sprained my knee
severely and suffered agony but was speedily
and completely cured by Ht. Jacobs Oil.
JOHN GAKBUTT.
Jumped from Engine.
09 8. 17tu St. Omaha Neb. Sept. 22 1888.
I Jumped from an engine in collision and
strained my ankle very badly I used canet
for weeks. St. Jacobs Oil completely cured
lne. G. ROEDEK."
At rRrGoiTa vr Dealers.
THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO. Baltimore 111
to perpetuate. As the object of the
cotton planter is to get the largest
quantity of good lint off the smallest
quantity of land he will select soils
containing a good staple large in
size and numerous n quan
tity. This latter feature can . only
be secured on well branched plants.
The tall meagerly boiled Stalk
should be passed untouched no matter
how large its bolls may be. If this
plan is persistently followed for a few
years the improvement in the crop
otner tilings being equal will be sur
prising.
It is now generally admitted that
d-year-old cotton seed will give a bet
ter crop than 2-year-old and 2-year-old
than that grown the previous
year. The most successful planters
Keep tneir seed at least two years be-
fore planting. To insure sound old
seed it should be stored in small quan
tities say in five bushel sacks. If
kept in bulk it is liable to become
heated and lose its vitality. The
philosophy of the old seed superiority
is that only the fittest survive conse-
quently to insure a full stand old seed
should be planted thicker than new.
REGULATING THE RAINFALL.
On April 1 1886 there appeared in
Texas Farm and Ranch an article on
this subject by the present writer. It
was intended for a joke on the editor
and it was a success for that astute
gentleman took the matter seriously
and published it as a fact. Since then
it has travelled over th9 civilized
world and is possibly still travelling
and gaining credence as it goes.
It purported to be a description
of a discovery and invention whereby
the moisture in the summer clouds
might be condensed and distributed
just where wanted.
A certain German chemist had dis
covered a chemical compound which
when exploded in a rain cloud caused
said cloud to disolve and descend to
earth. The compound was enclose! in
a brass cylinder or cartridge to which
was attached a time fuse. The
cartridge was fired from a species of
light field gun which was so con-
structed that it could be fired at any
angle from the horizontal to the
perpendicular. It was also fitted with
an apparatus for estimating the veloc-
ity and elevation of the clouds. The
whole thing was a cunningly
devised scientific hoax but it
was more it was intended to
excite inventive genius and invite at-
tention to the possibility of utilizing
the vapors that so exasperatingly pass
overhead almost daily during the
summer months.
What was launched mainly as a
joke is now to be tried as an experi
ment by the United States govern-
ment. Congress has appropriated $2000 to
test the efficacy of dynamite as a
cloud burster and the experiment is
to be tried somewhere on the bound-
ary line between Kansas and Colo-
rado. The dynamite has to be carried into
the cloud by a balloon and exploded
by a time fuse. The experiment will
be watched with interest by scientists
and farmers and who can tell but we
are on the verge of a new discovery
that will do as much for mankind as
the invention of the steam engine or
the electric light.
CRIBBING CORN.
The best way to prevent the develop
ment of the weevil in corn is to gather
and crib it while it has still some
natural moisture in it. It the a goes
through a sweat that is very destruc-
tive to the weevil in its incipient
stage. Sulphur fume s will destroy the
pest when developed but as preven-
tion is better than cure corn should
be cribbed early. Corn is generally
left in the field until after cotton
picking and often till spring plowing
compels its removal. Every day's de-
lay in cribbing after the corn is fully
matured io a loss.
Not only do weevils rats and crows
devour the crop but it shrinks in
bulk and weight and its feeding value
is ereatlv reduced. When corn fodder
has been saved a row corresponding
to every row of shocks will have been
knocked down by the wagon in haul-
ing out the fodder. If left on the
ground it is au easy prey to rats and
other vermin and if it escapes then it
will rot with every shower. .This
fallen corn should be the first gath-
ered and never left till the main crop
is housed.
If seed corn has not already been
saved now is the time to remedy the
neglect. Fix a feed box or other re-
ceptacle behind the wagon and when
ever an extra good ear is lound put it
in and keep apart from main crop.
Don't let corn intended for planting
go Mirough a sweat as that will in-
jure its vitality. It should be kept in
a cool dry place where frost will not
rea;h it.
A very common remedy for weevil
in the crib is to sprinkle the corn with
ealt or salt water. This will produce
moisture and induce the heating pro
cess I refer to if used in sufficient
quantty but is not an effectual Jcure
and will not form a substitute for the
natural moisture in the corn. The
salt however makes the shucks more
palatable for stock even if it dees not
kill the weevil. -
WASHINGTON 1ETTER.
THE FORCE BILL NOT ONLY POSTPONED
IT IS WHOLLY AND UTTERLY
KILLED.
Carlisle Has Downed Senatorial Usage
and Wields In the Senate Tremen-
dous Influence.
Washington Aug. 2G. "The king
is dead long live the king." Such is
the shout given by the Republican
faction which has supported the force
bill. It will not be heard or again tins
session but it will live again in the
next if the aforesaid faction can have
its way. When a Democratic leader
is asked his opinion it is emphatically
to the effect that the infamous meas-
ure is not only dead but sensible-like
it is going to stay dead.
Under the Republican agreement
this bill is held in abeyance until next
session and thus from a present dan-
ger has become a future apparition.
But of this ghost Democratic senators
say that they are not afraid. The
next session will consist of but thir-
teen weeks of which at least two wdl
be wasted in tlie Christmas recess.
Within this limited period thirteen
general appropriations measures nec-
essary for the operation of the govern-
ment must be considered and passed
some cf which are not yet laws after a
long session of nine months.
The absolute necessity for the
passage of these measures al-
ways bars out the opportunity
for much other legislation. Again if
the Democratic senators would talk
from now until the 4th of March to
defeat the radical design to seize the
government the people of the country
notwithstanding they certainly can
and will be able to take up every
moment of time between December
and March should the infatuation of
Grandma Hoar for her baby make
such an avalanche of speech making
necessary. Your correspondent from
all information searched out by him
has always asserted as is known that
this outrageous legislation .would
never be accomplished and now it is
a happiness as well as a duty to say
that it is now dead beyond resurrec-
tion.
There is wailing and gnashing of
teeth artificial i he latter among the
old and vindictive white heads who
have so long ruled the senate and the
Republican party therein. Beyond
everything else they are shocked to
see Quay in their minds a senatorial
upstart jump into the leadership in
legislative affairs and dictate the
course of the senate in the most im
portant political and economic busi
ness. Then too Edmunds in revolt.
Holy horrors they say to find the St.
Jerome of the senate fighting caucus
resolves hiid giving aid and comfort
to the Democrats. It has been the
sarcasm of Republicans in congress
that the Democrats are without a
leader but if this thing keeps up much
longer it may be said at least in the
senate that the Republicans are with-
out a party.
During the last week Senator Plumb
has been trying to cut off senatorial
whisky which is furnished to the
thirsty in the senate restaurant. The
discussion got so warm and bid so fair
to descend to the personal that Grand-
ma Hoar saw the necessity for pub
lishing to the world the fact that in
this temperance matter at least the
senate could furnish a character for-
getful of the old Scotch maxim that
"he who excuses accuses."
The truth is the senate has placed
on public exhibition some of the most
conspicuous examples of inebriety
ever encountered in this country the
i-tst of which was that Virginia sen-
ator now dead who gave the Repub-
licans of the senate so much concern
but delivered the vote that kept them
dominant in National legislation.
And too they were never bitterly
shocked at Riddleberger's appearance
until by accessions to their ranks
they could get along well enough
without his vote. To give another
Republican "frightful example" none
can possibly have forgotten the North-
western senator upon whose befuddled
head Charles Sumner threatened to
call down the censure of the senate.
It cannot be denied too that Demo-
crats of prominence have been the
victims of this blight. But enough
of the past. I have called to the
attention of those senators who have
been engaged in the delightful occu-
pation of giving themselves a "char-
acter" a few specters of the paet so
that their present virtue may not be
wantonly lost through too excessive
confidence. Senators still drink much
too much both fcr their own and the
public good and it would not be
stretching it to say that almost every
senate committee room is a barroom
exclusive of course at which
senators and their friends tipple
and blush the thought sometimes get
drunk. -VlnsFy therefore excluded
from the restaurant alone will not
effect any senatorial reformation if
that is the object of the promoters of
the resolution for men prone to get
drunk are pist as apt to do so when
they drink at others' expense as they
are when they pay for it themselves.
A senator from the South sav s that
his party is more than sssisfied with
the management of its affairs in the
senate. Gorman and McFheff-on of
New Jersey have proved a strong team
wwm
at
REDDING &tffT "
BCSTOH.
For Sere Eyes Flesh Wocailt Sam-
Plies. Felon3. 1 Is TiHeM. t .
in the tariff fight as both are men of
. - i . .
practice iu uubiucbs uuuirs anu talk
sense from experience. To these men
the long and cool heal of Carlisle of
Ken tuck has been an eflicientsupport
the Kentuckian although new and'
withal modest having"gone up head"'
of his senatorial class. My friend
further said that the feeling actually
preva'led with his associates that if
the Democratic thunders against the
tariff or McKinley bill were kept up
much longer sufficient Republican
votes would be gained to materially
modify its extortionate charges upon
the people if it did not compass its
full defeat. He called attention to the
fact that six Republican senators had
voted against their party in more than
one contest over the measure bat per-
haps this h over confidence showing
however that Republicans of
moderation are beginning to see the
handwriting on the wall.
The Pulpit and the Stage.
Rev. F. M. Shrout Pastor United Breth-
ren church Blue Mound Kan. says: "1
feel it mv duty to tell what wonders Dr.
King's New Discovery has done for me.
My lungs were badly diseased and my par-
ishioners throught I could live only'a few-
weeks. I took live bottles of Dr. Kine'j.
New Discovery and am sound and well
gaining 20 lbs in weight."
Arthur Love Manager Love's Funny
Folks Combination writes: "After a.
thorough tiial and convincing evidence I
am confident Dr. King's New Discovery for
consumption' beats 'em all and cures when
evreything else fails The greatest kind-
ness I can do my many thousand friends i
to urge them to try it. Free trial bottles at
J. J . Tobin.s drug store. Regular sizes 50c
and $1
The Military Encampment.
apt. Houx Lieut. W. B. Corwia
and Adjt. Smythe rsturned last eve
ning from Marble Falls to which point
they had gone to arrange matters for
the excursion of the Travis RiMes to-
that point on Friday next.
Coiisnmiitlou Surely Cured.
To the Editor Please inform your
readers that I have a positive remedy
for the above named disease. By its-
timely use thousands of hopeless cases
have been permanently cured. I
shall be glad to send two bottles of my
remedy free to any of your readers-
who have consumption it they will
send me their express and postoffice-
T. A. Slocum M. C. '
181 Pearl St. New York.
The Hunter Bend Shooting.
The latest information from the
Hunter Bend shooting wherein it was.
reported Lue Wilson had shot and
killed Prince Sorrells is that the
shooting was accidental. Sorrells was-
very seriously wounded but was not
killed.
That Terrible Cough
In the morning hurried or difficult breath-
ing raising phlegm tightness in the chest.
Sickened pulse chilliness iu the evening
hot sweats at Hightail or any of these things
are the first stages of consumption. Dr.
Acker's English Cough Remedy will cure-
these fearful symptoms and is sold uuder
Apositive guarantee by Dr J. J. Tobin.
Advice to Mother.
To Kill Johnson Grass.
Dr. Hamilton claims to have ft
specific for killing Johnson nut and
other grasses. If true then indeed is-
Dr. Hamilton a benefactor to his race
in this glorious climate of Texas
where Johnson grass is a costly
nuisance.
Extraornlmiryilione Scratching.
" Herbert Sperry Tremont 111. had Ery-
sipelas in both legs. Confined to the house
six weeks. He said: "When 1 was able
to vet on my legs I had au itching sensa-
tion that nearly run me crazy. 1 scratched
them raw to the hones. Tried everything
without relief. I was tormented in this
wnv for two vears. 1 then found Clarke
Extract of Flax (Papillon) Skin Care at the
drug store used it and it has cured me
sound and well."
Clarke's Flax Soap has no equal for hatb-
and toilet. Skin Cure $1. Soap 25 cents.
For sale at Oscat Samostz' drug store.
The Cotton Market.
Receipts fell off yesterday and the
market generally was demoralized and
prices went down 9 being the top
price.
alwuvs
cows
of pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypo
phosphites of Lime and Soda la
almost as palatable as milk.
Children enjoy It rather than
otherwise. A MARVELLOUS FLESH
PRODUCER It I- Indeed and tt
little lads end larr.'es who take cold
easily may be f.u-tlfled anolnot 0
cough that mlBh' -.'rove serious by
taking Scott'e Fin-lslon aftor their
meals during the winter season.
JSetrnre of lubstitutiont and imitation-
I jya. Children
iVnJ Enjoy It.
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The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 28, 1890, newspaper, August 28, 1890; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth278225/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .