El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 134, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1897 Page: 4 of 4
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mi Paso Daily Times, Sunday, June 6, 1897.
I
m*.’
TIPTON’S MISTAKE.
GETS 8AM GATLIN’8 FINE MARE INTO
MUCH TROUBLE.
dim** DNNUn Work B| a Diplomat- H*
Had Nolklax Datlabl*. Bat Be Bad a
Baranatact Baal to Bit Ohlaamaa.
uuiuiaia urn
pttfty or part!
srr..“
Ood.uIE
WMWtbtl
Several waaka ago tha government
bara dtaoovartd that aoma
partial wara leaning bogus
oaUstlals to oroaa Into
from Jnarez, Mextoo.
I Buford undertook tba task of
king tba party who bad a gov
eminent oailaotor'a stamp for tba third
dlatriol of Taxaa with whtoh to stamp
fh* bogus oertlfloete*. It saami that
il Buford oonduotad bla Invts'.l
with such admlrabla tao'. that
toonfadarata “peached.” Consul Bu-
.'ordoommnnloated bla Information to
tha bostons autborlttaa on this aids,
and Inatruottona wara taauad to tha In
apaotor* on tba rlvar.
Yaatorday morning D. a. Tipton, an
old tlma sport of this olty, rods across
tba rlvar to Juaraz for tha oatonslbls
purpoaa of azorotalng 8. J. Gatlin’s
young thorough brad oars. This was
nothing out of tba ordinary for Tiptoo
for lt: looms that Ur. Gatlin was pay
Ing him to oxarolao and trala bis fl**t-
footad young mars
i at abont 11 o’clook yastarday
_) wbaa Tipton was raturnlng
juaraz, Iuapaotor J. M. Owyar at
ita Pa brldga, baltad him with
tba qaarry: “Hava you anything dntl
able?” Why, of oouraa, Tipton had
nothing dutiable, and ha was not In
tba habit of smuggling. Whlls tha
oonvaraatlon waa going on batwaan In-
spector Dwyer and Tipton, Captain
Boooa, of tba Inspaotor foroa, waa alt
ting on hla horse behind tha baggy. A
signal passed batwaan tha two officers
and Dwysr oltmbed Into tba baggy,
Inatraotlog Tlp’on to drlva to tha one-
tom house. Ha wanted to laava tbs
boras and buggy at tha stable, but In-
spaotor Dwyer aald “no.” At tba
custom house It was discovered that
Tipton carried batwaan his fast under
- —lb* lap. robe.a daplioate of tha stomp
0 * the collector of the third district of
1 'axes, whose headquarters are at Aus-
t n and whose name Is J. Edward
1 ianffman. Whan Mr. Tipton was
a sarobed there wara found on nls per-
s an twoOhlnsaa oartlQoatas, one blank
a nd the other filled out with tha namo
if Yea Hob. Tha name of J. Edward
1 Canflman was signed to tba oartlHoate.
I Ur. Tipton waa marched otf to jail
l there ha was seen by a Times raporcar,
in oompany with United States Deputy
Marshal Major yastarday afternoon.
1 Than asked by tha reporter if be
1 tad anything to say ralativa to tba
Charges against falm Mr. Tipton said:
“Only this: Whan I am triad It will
be discovered that I am not as guilty
aa they think. Why, Mr. -, I have
never so muob as smuggled a olgir
over tha rlvar, aod they will find out
that I am not guilty of this charge.
Plaaaa tall Gas Lee to send me some-
thing to sleep on. I am la a fearful
——rjgftfrtftan and oanoot sleep on wet
blanket i; and tall Dr. Rso* for ma
that I would like to see him. Dr.
Vila* a id Dr. Rsos know all about
my eom lltton. There Is nothing else.
SAT...
WILL YOU BEAD TUB
then come around and let
us try to convince yon that an invest-
ment in a good article of Furniture
pays best t
Why try to save a few pennies
and lose several dollars?
Our Iron Beds can’t be beat.
Cots of all kinds for summer use.
Reclining Canvas Chairs for the lawn.
Folding Camp Stools, just the thing for park concerts.
This coming week will receive a new shipment of Reed
Chairs and Baby Buggies. New, nobby and low priced.
WE WANT YOUR TRADE.
3IS EL PASO ST.
HOYT & BASS
Pitaeer Marble Wwks
m. BoToaao. rra».
tan&sg
to*. IronV*aem.
Y Oemetery
Statuary,
lu Antonio Wrcm,
Oppodt* Ooart Eoun.
IL ABO.
mu
MIDWIFE AND NUftSE.
Am an experienced midwife
and nurse and wish position.
Apply at Mrs.Kramer’s board
ing house, next to Fiest’s
-drug store.
BLACK MOUNTAIN NEWS-
But you *11 will find oat I am not so
guilty a I appear.*’
Tlptoi 1* an old sport and It Is said
ba baa p »y*d a part la some very wild
and raol Isas asoapades !u the wait.
But tod y he Is a physlosl wrsok liable
to go to >tioei at any moment and hla
frtanda wsert ba cannot live alz
months a a jail.
A gov rumeot offlolal speaking to a
Times Jw-,r relative to Tlpioo’e
arrest aald: •‘WOTOgnt exaotly what
waaxpaotad,aod 1 believe other de
valopments will follow. Omars are In
tha deal aod It la scarcely probable
that a poor sick man will shoulder
tha troublai of those who are cowardly
enough to want him to die la jail that
thay may esoape.”
Good eating at Smith’s Creamery.
among the churches.
v.
ST, CLEMENTS CHURCH.
Wbltsun.lay. Sunday school at 9:30
a. |m.; Holy communion at II a. m.
Evening prayer at8p. m.
Mayo Cabell Mabtin, lector.
E. H. J, Andrews, a mutant.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH,
At the First Baptist ohuroh today,
tba Pastor will have for is subject
“PfEpara the Way" and Naoasslty
forth# Atonement,” af !1 a m. and 8
p. m , respectively. Mrs W, W. Tur-
ney will be at the organ.
W. Oliver Mill in, Pastor.
Christian* on; i. ;.
Sunday school j. 15 a. m Preaching
at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Voting people’s
moating at7. p m Brsyor moating
ovary Wednesday at, S p m.
G. W. Vor. \ Pastor.
V ^
jove is the !
love
atone of a wo* ,
life. Her fo u
hopes rest upon
tender emotion,
highest pride isit: r
capacity to aw n
the love which
a
ft
le tram
■ In a perfectly
f by the nte of Dr.
tilon. which gives
pty to the special
ve-centres and
|herhood poaai-
ay.
^almost free
gcrfulness
gdgor to
in the
by an
baen-
,of
Geld On Banning Thirty Thousand Dol-
lars to the Ton.
Exciting rumors come from the gold
fields of Texas Canyon lu the Organs
and from Black Mountain.
John Bounty and Adam Dadd havs
nearly completed a fifty toot abaft un-
der their ooutraot with tha owner, D.
Y. Anderson, the president of a weal-
thy Kansas Olty oompany that lately
pnrobaied tha Gold Bag, an extension
of the Mormon. The vein Is rloh and
strong at the bottom of the shaft, tha
quartz being plentifully specked with
free gold.
The ‘ Bonanza,’’ In Texas Canyon
near Globe Springs, owned by the Fay
Bros., of Organ Olty, Is a very rloh
prospect. They bonded It recently for
115,000. Tba latest word brought In
by Oapt. Fieok la that ore hae jnet
bean atrnok In tba Bonanza shaft run-
ning thirty thoasand dollars and op
wards In gold, and fifteen hundred
ounces In silver.
The Foy brothers recently looated
a olelm for B. F. Soott, west of tba
Bonanza, naming It tha “Monitor.’’
Soott thought little of It nutll the
other day when Wm. J Savage bonded
It for 15 days from him for Colorado
parties for 85000. Soott Is now very
anxious for the bond to lapse, as tbs
rloh strikes on olaims around him are
vary alarming.
Jim Robinson, an old minor of Organ
Mountain fame, hae raoently looated
a gold olelm In Texas canyon. Hagen
and Breeoe have also several claims on
the same lead, which were mentioned
In the Times last weak. It teems thst
the “mother vein,” on whloh ell thee#
olaims are looated, Is very wide and
well defined, catting across the north
end of the Organs from east to wset
for several mllea. The ore Is free
milling qnartz.
This oemp la splendidly situated,
being oloae to an abandonee of water
and pine timber, end within three
miles of tbs surveyed line of Ihe Wblte
Osks line. Dodd first dlsoovered the
veins of this now district, and has been
fora year grinding gold qnartz and
getting oat gold bullion from a olelm,
using a steam arrastrs.
The Spanish aroheivee, ooplss of
whloh wara In the possession of the
lateOolonel Fountain, state that over
a oentnry ago one of the richest and
largest gold and silver mine* In Spanish
Amerloa was then worked near Sen
Augustine Sprigs, employing over one
thoasand miners under ground.
Cloudbursts, torrential flooda filled
and obliterated this wondetfal old
mine long ago. Recent disoovery con-
firm this old history.
Some Denver parties have contract-
ed for the ore on the Oriental damp,
about two hundred tons, and tha prise
Is said to be 812 a ton on the damp.
The enooareglng feature of the onwe
from the gold camps Is the fact that
Colorado men are qntetly slipping In
and taking a hand.
To Tal.phoaa Aifoii She Atlantic.
Boston Bvtnlng Transcript.
The annonnoment Is made that D.
MaoLanohlln Tberrell, the son’.hern
eleotrlolan of the Postal telegraph
oompany, whose hesdqnerteia are at
Atlanta, Ga., has oonoslved a devloe
by whtoh be hopes to revolutionize long
distance telephoning. The In vention,
whloh combines the prtnotplee of the
telephone end phonograph, has been
pnbiloly tested In a room at Atlanta,
where renditions of vocal and lnetro-
mental mnsto were transmitted through
a resistance equal to that of 12,000
miles or wire, and were perfectly audi-
ble to all who had assembled to witness
the experiment. Mr. Tberrell, In oon
veraatton with a reporter who was pres
ent, said: “It wouldn't do just yet to
alve-ant the details of tha patent, for
a publication •* Shea* weald prevent
me from eeoariaa Use risktIn may for-
country. The result Is obtained
by having the original transmitter very
powerful and by nslng repeat ere whloh
teke np and megolfy the sound at In-
tervale alcng the line. My pes sobs me
le to bsve e telephone line across the
Atlantic ooean. This can easily be
eooompllehed by hiving my repeetere
located to belle et e distance of 1000
miles apart. By the nee of the repeat
are I am enabled to employ a wire ranoh
smaller than the ordinary, and iftni
H the line muoh obeeper « in It
be."
PROGRESS OF “PINAFORE.”
Bekearialt of This Popular Opera Are
Ne*w Oa.
The rehearsals of the oomlo opera,
“H. M. S. Pinafore,’’ to be performed
at Myar opera house for the benefit of
the El Paso public library, are already
giving promise of an nnosnally good
performance. The oast and ohorns Is
composed • of the very best mnsloel
material to ba found In oar town, and
the ready manner in whlob those out
for the various parts take np their
speolal number* shows an aptness
rarely found In amateur circles; should
the performance com* np to the stand
ard of tha rehearsals, ws nndonbtedly
will have an exhibition of vocal work
far batter than many travelling com-
panies give ns.
The oaet In fall Is as follows:
Joesphlne,. ...The Captain's Daughter,
Miss Marl* Shelton.
Babe,............Sir Joseph’s Cousin,
Mias Stella Joseph.
Little Buttercup, a Bnmboat Woman,
Miss Emma Uilman.
Sir Jos. Porter, K O. B., British Ad-
miral...................H. O. My las.
Oapt.Corcoran, ‘H. M. 8. Pinafore.”
L S. Welch.
Ralph Rsokstraw,.......Able Stamen,
H. 8. Bsach.
Dick Deadsye,..........Able Stamen,
T. G Weston.
Boatswain......"H, M. S. Pinafore,”
H. Irvin,
Tom Bowlin,........Biots wain’s Mata,
Dev* Payne.
Mldshlpmite,..........Ship's Mascot,
By Hlmsslf.
Ssrgt. ofjMsrloes,........Royal Navy,
L. P. Jones.
The cast Is now fixed, and at last
nights rehearsal all tha principals gave
much attention to their partlonlaraolo
numbers. The next regular rehearsal
Is Monday night at Chopin Hall, when
any parents or gnardlans of small boys
who art small enough for the part of
“mldahtpmtte" will ba gladly received
by the stage mat agar.
To the PoOlle, v—
Constant Increase of oar business In
drawn work, straw and for hats, Msx
loan and Indian blankets and oarlos
itles, filigree, jewelry, pottery, ftnoy
goods, eto , force* ae to seek larger and
more oommodions quarters. W* have
secured the store and fixtures lately
o oon pled by P. E. Kern, the jeweler,
Oregon street, two doors sonth af post-
office and as soon as required altera-
tions arc completed on or abont Jan*
25th we shall move Into It.
Until then w* offer oor entire stook
at greatly rednoed prloes to save
moving expenses.
Special inducements to merohants
and bnyer* In large quantities. Oor
fixtures and two safes (or sale
Mexican and India Cubio Store.
Arthur A. Kline & Co. Prop.
He Had a Plan.
“Shay, you I” he began as ho confronted
a policeman on Cass street the othor night
at midnight. “Do me favor, will you?”
“What Is It?”
"Shoe that house over there? Zhat’t
my house."
“Well?”
“Went out to shee a man at 8 o’clock
and am out yet. Took a glass of shoda
water wizzer man, and It flew to my head.
You shee my head, don't you?”
“I see you are pretty well overcome.”
“Yeeh—overcome. Bin tryin to think
for an hour, but oouldn’t do It. Shay,
you shee zhat light In the window?”
“Ido.”
“Zhat means my wife's slttln np for
me. Wants to talk to me, you know.
Wants to spress her feelln's on zhls occa-
sion.”
“I understand.”
“Then do me favor—great favor. Go
round In 'er alley and yell lire. My wife'll
hear you and run out of back door.”
“And then yon'll slip In at the front?”
“Joes so and git to bed and asleep be-
fore she knows It and has chance to sprees
her opinion. 8hay, help me out.”
The officer declined to be a party to the
stratagem, and the belated citizen sat down
on the curbstone, found the stab of a cigar
In hla pocket, and as the blueooat struck
a match for him to light it by he said:
“Zhanksl I'm goto to wait here.”
“For what?”
“For a feller to oome along and throw
stone agin 'er door and scare my wife Into
fit. While she’s in 'er fit 1 11 slip in. See?
Go right 'long, officer—go right 'long and
Jo your duty. You’d do me a favor If you
oould, but you can’t, and I’ll ask foliar to
foui stones and scare my wife Into
comes out she'll
jester
HOTEL VENDOME.
X. B.Howley, Proprietor—BUI of Were (or
Todos’B Dinner From 0 to 8 P, M.
RELISHES.
Siloed Toma’oss Radishes Lsttnos
Green Onions __.
SOUP.
Pares of Ohloksn Consomme
FISH.
Filet of Sole a la Tartar
JOINT. „
Prime Ribs of Ktnsas Olty Bsaf, with
Natural Gravy
ENTREES.
Braised Ltg of Mutton, Walsh Style
Patties a la Tolonsa
BOASTS.
Domestic Chicken, Staffed, Peanut
Dressing
VEGETABLES.
Graaly Potatoes, Balled and Mashed
Asparagus French Peas
8WEETS AND DESSERT.
Oraam Costard Pla Sambaollon
Banana Ice Cream
Assorted Cak* Fruits Cheese
Homemade Bread
Graham Bread -
Hlotz Bros' Vienna Bread
Coffee Tea Milk
i O. SHBBBT, Prop.
6»iral Dollar and Shut Iren Works
Corner Santa Fe end Third Sts.
Sa.l.d Proposals Will bt Baealve*.
By the Board of Rsgsnts of the New
Mexico Cilleg* or Agrlonltnr* and
Meohanlo Arts, Mesllla Park, at tha
offioe of tha president of the oollegt,
O. T. Jordan, until the 19ch day of
June, 12 o’olook noon, 1897, for thef~jJ/i*/rL/iv>c
erection and completion of an Agrl- z t/iMXtxll/z o
onltnral Experiment Station Bnlldlog
and a Dormitory to be oonstrnoted
according to the plans and speolfloa-
tlons prepared by I. H & W W. Rapp,
Architects, of Lie Vegas, N. M
Plans oan be seen at the effloe of
the architects at Lis Vegas, N. M., at
the office of the president of the
oollege at Mesllla Park, N. M., or at
the office of Momsen A Thorne,El Paso.
Texas.
(Signed) T. J. Bull,
President Board of Regents.
Another Sad Case.
"Amdlsdt place whar dey complain?”
asked a middle aged colored man as he en-
tered deteotive headquarters the other
evening.
“Yes, If they don’t complain too loud-
ly,” was the answer.
“Den, sah,” continued the visitor, drop
ping his voice almost to a whisper, “I wish
to complain dat my clothesline was robbed
last night. Yes, sah, while we slumbered
somebody dun coine along an robbed dat
clothesline in de mos’ discontented fash-
on."
“Have you a list of the stolon articles?”
“I has, sah. It was one white shirt, sah
—de only white 6hirt dat I possessed In all
dls world. While wo was locked In de em-
brace of Morforous some villainous pusson
dun climbed de fence an bore dat shirt
away.”
"Just a shirt, eh?"
"Jess a shirt, sah.”
“That wasn’t such a great loss.”
“No, sail, not sieh a great loss, but look
at de principle of de thing, sah. If a hi-
larious villain am permitted to dislocate a
white shirt from a clothesline with impe
ounioslty, what guarantee hev we got dat
de same pusson won't return an abomi-
nate de entire Monday washln, an, like
'nuff, plunder de domicile to boot? I
hain’t lookln at de shirt, sah, but at de
Immorality of 'lowin an unhung scoun-
drel to take advantage of do ausplshus Do-
tation 1”— Detro.t Free Press.
There is
No Word so Fall
of meaning and
about which such
tender recollec-
tions cluster as
that of ‘ Mother,”
yet there are
months when her
life is filled with
pain, dread and
suffering.and she
looks forward to
the final hour
with gloomy
forebodings, fear and trembling.
“Mother’s Friend”
prepares the system for the change
taking place, assists Nature to make
rhild-birth easy, and leaves her in a
condition more favorable to speedy re-
covery. It greatly diminishes the
danger to life of both mother and child.
Sent by Mail, on receipt of price, $1.00. Book
to ‘•ExT'ec’.i>,'* ?loth<»r«“ free upon application.
The ZndfttM Btrnltlsr Co., Atluta, Ga.
•OLD BY ALL DNUGGItTB.
Monarch, Haliday, the easy
running Aetna. Chicago prices
REPAIRING AND ENAMELING-
EL PASO CY4LE CO.,
Next to Vendome Hotel.
Palace Diniog Hall,
HI LOY CO,
123 El Paw Street.
The beat fi Bt class Restaurant
Id the city. Open dav and night.
Regular Dinner 3:30 to8p m.
The Senate.
Lcmp’s Extra Pale Lager
1 lie Beat Beer in El Paso.
J. R. SALAS.
Merchant Tailor.
Salta made In Liteet Style* and vary
oh*ap. Larg* assortment of aamptoe.
Cleaning and repairing. Ladles’goods
ol*an*d and dyad. Satisfaction guar-
anteed. El Paso, Texas.
Napoleon J.Eoy
MERCHANT
TAILOR ...
EL PASO, : : TEXAS.
SHELDON BLOCK,
RANCH SALOON.
ALWAYS FEESH BBSS OR TAP.
BEST FIFTEEN-0ENT L UN OB
IN THE CITY
nOM UAH.T01 O'CLOCK P. M.
LongwelTs Transfer.
Freight Transferred.
Car* and Promptness Guaranteed.
Offioe— Ballinger Stable.
Telephone No. L
EL PASO
BOILER WORKS.
EL PASO TRANSFER Co.
HACKS, BOB ARD BAOQAOB.
Phone 18. 100 to HO South Oreeon St
LINK RESTAURANT.
ns RL PASO STBB1T.
SHOUT ORDER HOUSE
AND RESTAURANT.
VOpen dey and night. Oyrtan, Fish and
Gam*In every etyle.
SISTERS OF
HOSPITAL.
CHARITY
HEAD OF
NORTH STANTON BTBEE1
f
BLANKS to order
BLANK BOOKS
TO ORDER
AND ALL
KINDS OP
PRINTING to order.
Lithographers ) A<yt,_
and Engravers j
SRRD OBDRK8 OK SPKCIP1-
CATIONS FOB 1STXMATK8
|limes Publishing Co
i
KL PASO, TKXAB.
I
TP
Ell Paso Route
Texas! Pacific
The great popular route
between the
Bast and West
SHORT LINE TO
New Orleans, Kansas Uity, bt.
Louis, New York and
Washington.
Favorite line to the North, Blast
and Southeast.
Pullman buffet sleeping cars
and solid trains from El Paso
to Dallas, Ft. Worth, New
Orleans, Memphis and St.
Louis.
FAST TIME
-AMD— -
Sure Connection.
See that your tickets read
via Texas and Pacific railway.
For maps, time tables, tickets
rtaes and all required Informa-
tion, call on or address any of
the ticket agents, or
B. F. DARBY8HIRE
8. W. F. & P. A.
or
E. P. TURNER, L. 8. THORNE,
Otn .F. A T. Agt. 8rd T. F. A QJfaz
Dallas. T.x.s,
Volcanos,
Pyramids,
' Mumnres,
Castles,
and Coffee Plantations
Can be seen by tbe traveler
In Mexico
The standard guage line of the
republic is the
Bilroad extends west from Chi-
cago to Sioox City, Sioux Falla,
Dubuque andBookford, and north
from New Orleans to Chicago, St
Louii Cairo Jackson, Memphis,
Vicksburg and Baton Kongo. It
is the
Great Through Line
-B1TWKXH III-
AND
Ft st Vestibule Train,
The New Orleans
and Chicago Limited
makes the distanoe between the
Gulf of Mexico and the Great
Lakes with but one night on the
road. Through fw* vestibule
trains between the Missouri Blver
and Chicago. Direot connections
to prinoipal points North, Bast
and West, from all prinolp
points South, East and West.
Tickets via the Illinois Central
can be obtained of agents of its
own or of connecting lines.
A. H. Harbor,
Gen. Pas. Agent, Chicago.
W. A. Kelloud,
Ass’t. Gen. Pass. Agent,
New Orleans
For rates and further particu-
lars apply to
R. E. COMFORT,
COMMKBOIAXi AGENT,
■L PASO, TEXAS.
£1 Paso Coffin & Casket
Corripany.
EMERSON&BERB I ENT, Props
410 8. Bl Paso 8t.
EMBALMING
The largest and best stook of
coffins, caskets, metallic cases,
etc. Work and prices gaa an-
teed. Hearses and carriages fur-
nished. Telephones 71, 68 & 169.
Dr. E. Aleyar ciei’s
Native V^ine.
THX PUKE JUIOX JF THE GRAPE
AJdraee R. F.JO’INBONA 00.,Sol*
Agents, El Paso, Texae, for prioet hr
balk or see*.
is the modern conclusion of
both Democrats and Republi-
cans alike.
This I^uls
applies to towns and states as
well as nations.
The Times
a
manufactures all kinds of
Blank Books, Blanks, Checks,
Drafts, and everything In the
Printing line, Write for prices
or send In your orders.
When you benefit your com-
munity you benefit youreslf.
‘Protect Home Industries.”
TIMES
Publishing Co.
El Paso, - - Texas
Some Men *
Try
Advertising
as the Indian tried feathers.
He took one feather, laid it
on the board and slept on f
It all night. In the morn-
ing he remarked: "White
man say feathers heap soft;
white man d-fool."
Advertise judiciously
and advertise in . . .
The Times. {
It Pays.
LATEST
(Revised Dally) {
QUOTATIONS
LI*D(Ii« York)__________S 27 1-2 3 30
*1*.................................. 13 20 to IS 30
I HON (Aro.rloan) _____________ 0 38 to 10 23
MEXICAN PEdOH .................. 47
Mexican rnaoa (airuo)—.........47
Up-to-Date Railroads of El fm,
For the Bast or North the T1SMAM A PACIFIC leaves at 2:10 p. m., local time
For tha South tha HEXICAM CENTRAL leaves at 3:40 p. m., local time.
JO BETTER ACCOMMODATIONS. NO FASTER TIME.
/
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 134, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1897, newspaper, June 6, 1897; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth580979/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.