Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 17, 1915 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE rwta
SHERMAff DAILY DEMOCRAT.
THURSDAY, JUNE 17. 191
'
>.
TV m\ DEMOCRAT
HHUKMAN. TUX AS.
O. O. * B. O. HUNTER, Publisher*.
The Dally Democrat 1* the official
newspaper ft the City ft Sherman
mad publishes all legal notices.
Subscription: SO cent* per month,
f5.00 per year In adrance.
The Weekly Democrat Is publish-
ed o« Thursday, 7? cggts * >®ar. It
la the big county seat newspaper.
Mall subscribers changing loca-
tions should give their former ad
dress as well as the new one. ’Sub-
scribers served by city carriers will
please assist the management In
rendering good service by making
complaints about Irregularities and
omissions.
any
Mr. Bryan converted the Common- sentatives. The resolution
er into s monthly when he went to forth the purpose of the fund
the cabinet. Wonder if he won't follows:
give It weekly i-gsin. And bv tliel i. Tp allow the citizens of
say, Brother Charlie, his publlHhcr,’COunty the local self-governing prlv-
has been elected mayor of Lincoln j|fge to establish a perpetual pub-
on a platform to lower the price of )jc students' loan fund. It is purely
a local option measure, the cltisens
of each county will decide as to
wehther or not the fund shall be
establish* •• in that county.
2. Deserving students Who need
financial assistance to acquire an
Dr. Brooks, of Baylor, the other
Waco candidate for the United
States senate declines to meek Con-
gressman R. L. Henry in ioint de-
a a
NEAR DEATH —^
BY SMOTHERING
BeHeVui, Wat AUrf CuM,
Effects Her Deliverance.
- rjfpNBg
Eaten d as gecond-flass matter at
the po6t office at Sherman, Texas,
under set of March 3, 1879.
hibition and
lc-election and for the rural credits
propaganda.
The frequent rains have undoubt-
edly retarded the wheat harvest. If
actual damage ha* not already been
done, but they ha-< wade the gar-
dens grew and II urish. Never be-
fore has garden truck been more
plentiful, of a liner quality nor
cheaper on the market. The family
tl^at is not eating fresh vegetables
and fruit in not llvlb'g as high as it
should.
1.
Kldd-Kcygcullcge will have on ex-
hibit at the*Wuy-ia*Texas'' convan-
tion at Fort W'oikh. Why not other
Gherman InstituUot s. Space will be
given frt-o. All Texas is Invited to
show the products of rail! and >'nc-
tory and ‘be colleges have a good
chance to tell their story too It is a
truth that many of us don't know
what we have in Texas or we would
keep more of our dollars from erone-
ing the border. There will be about
one hundred floats in line.
Muskogee had a know flurry yes-
terday and now we all know where
the cool breezes came from.
Lea Frank's cgse Is now up to the
governor of Georgia, all of thp ar I . ,,
gumeut* bavfni fa® cioWd. Vm the tAvine
Ph*1 through the city wilt not be a nien-
,- hen all open closets In Bhenuiin
p»rdon board went againpt him and
thj> outlook lp g locmy. . , ,,
?■’ The fly swatters ate pretty busy
And are killing a lot of the winged
Insects. However, a few of them are
left audi as leag as the swatter holds
out U won't dp to quit swatting.
With the best all around crop in
acf> to the health of the people that
It now is. but the manufacturing
plants'that dump filth In U should
also be made, to make sewerage con-
nections and quit this practice. This
ravine could he converted Into a nat-
ural storm sewer that would take
core of much of the filth In
Sherman and convey It to a place to
her history, and an expenditure of.‘be'SSroiittih and this is what should
$$00,000 in the making of good be done with it. The Democrat does
roads in tlf* county, Grayspb county
is in pretty fair condition, thank
' The Grayson county teachers are
With us, attending the summer nor-
mal school at Austin College. Sher-
man should show tbem some cour
tesy by tendering tbfiu a banquet
some time during their stay here.
The Yaqul Inclans of Mexico
have declared war on the United
States, Mexico and Germany. No
intimation is given whether they will
invade Germany or the United
States first. . t
Russia says inly one-fifth of the
•rosy reserve has been brought out
and that the policy of tho campaign
1b to wear out Germany and A .stria,
which wlU require about ten months.
Meanwhile Germany is walloping
Russia right along. . . t.
-—ttra
Next Saturday is i.iuanplpation
Day lor the negroes, and Governor
Ferguson will release about forty
friendleea colored men from - the
penitentiary. Some of them have
been serving for many years. > *
'• 1-fitN ealMS^BMM f*'i'
Bob Backer has been hear ! f’ oBi.
- He says the friends of MarUu Di-’s
of Beaumont are grooming that
gentlemen for an entree into the
United States senatorial race. Af
had better tell his friend Martin lo
bold the job he has as long as bp
can.
• * i. t o ,—r
* Bob Henry has accepted an invi-
tation to attend the Grayson county
Old settlers' reunion and make a
speecn. In fact, quite a number of
prominent men will be on the pro-
gram thin year. The old settlers
hold their picnic and reunion in
Sherman, Aug. 17, 18, 19 and 20.
Dallas is to got Dr. J. Wilbur
Chapman to he'd a revival In that
city. Dr, Chapman held a meeting
in Shermah a few years ago and
the splendid work he did here still
stands out as a monument for good.
Should foe come- to Dallas many
Sherman people will go down to
hoar him. -j
• i e
It Js given out by the stalisticlans
that one million more children v.ill
enter the public schools of Tcxat
pext year on account of the cum pul
sory education law. Ab the Democ.a
bap heretofore called attention,
thU will require the employment of
many* more sehool teachers an 1 the
building of some more school hoes
The G. B. R. Smith Milling com-
pany Is to be commended for divid-
ing; Its profits with all men who dp
the labor In the mill. , This is get-
ting to be more of a practice than
formerly and insures hot only th»<
the n»en wt» work will got a proper
proportion pf the fruits qf their la-
bor, but wilf make hotter workmen
out or them, mor# loyal than they
have ever been It is »- g«od practice,
that should be conimepUei.
and OUO
Mf«s Flora- B. Lowery of Hillsboro
Is the first matriculant In the South
txtf Mfithp4>8t -University* which
fthwip ip Dallas ip September., stm
17# annipr #nd called i« perepp. »re-
gentoA Mr rredJt*, picked her sub
Jepts and paid her tee. Freuu pho-
tog raphe puhUebed of Ml** Lowpry
she is quit# a beautiful young lady.
And we hope ter -her all of tbe suc-
ce*s and happiness which her qua!
iflcatlons and ambition would seem
to fit her for.
. JHere I# the way thp Fort Worth
M4s W ImRWtaWl mattor
plan the ef^etion of
tft hold i IsO.uee
not believe there Is a more impor-
tant nropoBltiou to all the people in
the city than the cleaning up and
cpNering of this open sewer. Every
property owner on either side of It
should be assessed to Jxelp pay for
the work. On various occasions tho
railroad* and manufacturing plants
have, offered to do their part, but
the city, it seems, has never keen
ready to go ahead. This matter, in
ttfe *t*tlnial1drt ot the V* Democrat,
should be taken up at an early date
and something done.
RK’HKH THAT ARE FAR GREAT-
ER than money.
Somethlmes it Is said, by the un-
thinking that nothing in this world
copnt* byt money, and the saying
vraoney U your only friend and your
hest friend” Is often heard. But
this is h mistake. Good character
and a clean life 1* f»r richer than
money, , and if one will take too
trouble to look about, this may bo
seen |hd realized any day. The fol-
lowing reproduced from tbe Musko-
gee (Okla.) Times-Democrat, gives
a touching Instance of a ypung man
who had lived such a life.
follows:
Checotah gave honor as a city
Sunday to the memory of Paul Par-
rott, aged 25, the young musician,
and man-about-tqwn who died at a
local hospital last week. Not only
did over 1,000 of Parrott’s towns-
men and townswomen attend the fu-
neral, hut every one of them was a
Uioymer, according to T. E. Wil-
liams of the Street-Eicboltz company
of Muskogee! who assisted in con-
ducting the services.
"Parrott was president of the
Checotah Epworth League, and was
otherwise aetlva in civic and church
affairs. He organized and taught a
brass band composed of thirty girls
of the town he painted master-
pieces in oil and gave them to the
Checotah churches; he added artistic
touches here and there to every
movement and campaign for the bet-
terment of Ohecqtah launched there
in recent years; and be died penni-
less becaimr he gave everything he
earned, wbiph (p tf>e way was «
great deal—to enterprises resulting
in ati-solutely no gain to himself.
■The casket was placed jpst in
front of the stage of the Checotah
high school auditortum for Sunday's
services. The floral offerings form-
ed a perfect background for the
casket, and overflowed onto the
stage. Behind the casket was a
single piece of pink roses four feet
high and ten feet long, with the
word ''Pol|y” through the center.
Another piece, made of white roses,
contained hundreds of the buds,
"While he had only ‘wo relatives
In the town', A. C. Parrott, his fath
qr. and e brothep, W. I. Parrott, who
is in the west somewhere there were
oyer 1,000 mourners at the funeral.
’There was not a dry eye in the as-
semblage,’ saiu Williams, ‘and even
the minister was so moved w.ith
grief that he could hardly deliver
the funeral sepmop. The girls of
band and IPqlv's Muaicgl Maids,
attended in a body; all of them were
crying and many of them were hys-
terical.
"Old men and qld Wdn>«n iolned
with Pay rati's younger friends ip
adding their tears to the general
grief. In fact, It was the most im-
pressive scene of combined affection
and grief, fiat J have ever .seen in
all the years I have beep conducting
ffimys
‘;Tha body of the young artist
and iupslci|n was burled In the
cemetery at’ Shecdtah. Members of
rarrott’B fCpwqrth league council
acted as pall besrprs.
nianent this public benefaction
those most in need.
3. Thousands of young people
now without means to become edu-
cated men and women will HU tty>
schools with paying students, whom
knowledge will bless and develop
into valuable citizens.
4. ThU benefaction will, go to the
needy ones who deserve assistance
but wbo are so constantly neglected
and forgotten.
In further explanation of the pro-
posed amendment, Representative
Metcalfe says:
"It will limply allow the legisla-
ture to pass a law directing how the
commissioners' courts shall select
the neediest students; what interest
charge shall be made; what security
if any, shall be required, and all
details of administration to make It
apply properly to those whom it is
intended to benefit and for its re-
payment and perpetual use by other
students and to guard against mis-
appllcutlon or .oss by Improper,use
of neglect- , .
"The fund can, of course, only be
• established In any county after an
election has been held and a major-
ity of taxpaying voter# decide in
favor of si) dolOP •
.*e state election to be held the
fourth Saturday in July merely in-
corporates In the constitution the
right to appeal at apy time a statute
that might contain imperfect or im-
proper vision#,
“T-he Brown fund in Georgia is a
moat notable benefaction of thlB
character, given by George Brpwn
as a memorial of hts son. While it
was not deriver from a public source
It Is similar in all other respects to
what the Texas students’ loan fund
will be, and serves to show how thn
original gums will compound / and
augment, even with a low- rate of
interest, as the Brown fund has
grown from |50,9u0 tp $l8d,(Mip at
4 per cent interest. While growing
it has assisted a thousand students
to become educated men. Being a
loan and not a charity, It can have
no delpcteripns effect on Us benefic-
iaries. but strengthens their charac-
ter while furnishing them a way to
become trained and useful men and
women.”—Greenville Banner.
NEW CHARGES * AGAINST THE
INSECTS.
The investigations of recent years
have disclosed the relations of in-
sects to malaria, yellow fever, bu-
bonic plague, and sleeping sickness.
The striking results already dem-
onstrated ip respeet to the activity
of mosquitoes, fleas, bedbugs and
house flies, inevitably raises the
question as to the possible signifi-
cance ot other species of insects
which may be less abundant but
whose contact with man may be oc-
casional or confined to restricted
localities. This group Includes
cockroaches, ants »ud heps. Thplr
role is as yet -purely conjectural
but it is of interest to consider
the -possibiliyes as they present
themselves to one trained to ob-
serve the versatile habits of insects
and to recognize tbe opportunities
for infection to which the-sanitarian
must give heed.
That an insect w.hich will devour
any sufficiently soft substance, from
human foods to glue, grease and
water colors, ^and wblch will live by
preference In* the cracks
JEXMSjGK’ f lRST bEUMON
A1 Jennings, who was converted
recently In Los Angeles and who
may possibly ent er the ministry and
occupy the cvai gslistical field has
already i.ireached his maiden ser-
mon asserts a friend of his who re-
side.t in Murkogee.
Al’s father was a minister in the:
day* j»f his yputh he was with bis
parents at all 1 Ind# of services
which a minister t* caflfd upon to
render. Tbs senupn which Jen-
nings prmched was in a lonesome
spot In Colorado and ito add to the
eo'rmnity of the occasion it was a
Ilunqral service. Thq Jepnlngs^bovs
a
-be-
tween them and a nelgh-
Jor on ** an adjoining claim.
In the fan fly of the neigh-
Draper, N C.—Mrs. Helen Dalton
this place, says: ”1 sutlered for y
with pains in my leil side, ai
alien almost smother to flegth.
Medicines paiched me up lor iwhile'had gone to Colorado and
but then 1 would get worse again. Final- oi jint While holding It down
Sy, my husband decided he U-3nted me to' friendship had grown up
try Cardui, the woman's tonic, so he
bought me a bottle and 1 began using if.
It dia me more good than 0U tbe ntedi-
dues I had taken. • .*•. i bor wag a blreht golden-haired girl
f have induced many of my friends t#‘Qj jj a strong attachment had
Iry Cardui, and they all.
been benefited by its use.
vflhey have
__ __ Ttfere never
- c*”**:.. f* WL.«!
grown up between-Al and the little
?l*y“igirl whom he called his wild bios-
medicine for all womanly trou-
For over 50 years, Cardui has been re-
lieving woman’s sufferings and building
weak women up fo heal)" and strength.
If you ar a woman, give it a fair trial.
M should rely help you, as 41 ha» •
million outers. *. " ** *
Oet a bottle of Cardui to-day.
Writ, U: Cbsttsnoet* Mwijytn* Go . USM
fore we had to send over gold.
In spite of the Inflow of gold
since tho beginning of tbe year, this
i tremendous; exportation in 1*14 hap
not been owarejme.
14 During the months of January.
February, March qnd April of 1||1
we exported about $If,0,00,poo i®
gold. We Imported about JyO.OOO,-
000.
Foreign gov-srun-ents and foreign
business may now owe us enough to
counterbalance the gold that we ex-
ported last ypar, but qptHnptents
have not ye; been made.
The Immense a mo up', of tau?ipes8
that we have been, doing lylth Pu;-
rope i? being pafu for in money that
we had to send over Inst R.nl!
the year previous to pay our debts.
The allies are really Paying us in
onr own coin.
The United Statee Is not yet In a
condition to finance Other countries,
aplte of its commanding trade.
And It cannot be ready tp do .this
work until cnormqus reserves are
built up in America. Our people have
rot hetjn able to a Wort) American
fecuritier,. The capital for many of
onr railroads and public and private
enterprise-* has bqen furnished by
England Belgium, Holland an0
France. .
If the war lasts long enough,
many of these securities will he
turned loose and we will absorb them
ag we are able to secure money
from out- exports.
The Untied States in Its exports
still paying on account.;—Memphis
(Tenn.) Commercial-Appeal.
»
FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN.
One forty Horse-power Twin City
Gasoline Tractor in first-class pondi-
tion, with eight John Deere fourteen
inch mold hoard, gang plqws. See
Rome Hall at Roberta, Electric ,Co.
f.
taken ill aod besides her ' mother
none watched so closely at her bed-
tide as did J innings. The cbil(i
died..there was no mipjstor any-
where in tbe country. Jennings hid
bpon u#ed to seeing funeral services
conducted and he could not bear tq
see the child laid away in a ioue-
some spot in the wilds of the sf ate
without some mark of divine ser-
vices. His zeal led hlnl to PreP08®
to hio companions that they arrange
for the music and that be would
preach .the sermon. An old Sunday
school hymn was selected and th^
few who gathered from surrounding
neighborhoods joined in the singiua.
Tho Colorado scene was u ver' pretty
ty echo of the Sunday school work
done hack in the slates. Jennings
I rqaphcd the sermon, wild flowers
covered the gravp and there was nog
a dry eye In that assemblage during
the entire service.—Ardmore (Okl#.)
Ardmorelte„ ,
FOR MEN ONLY.
Women suffer as much as men
do from indigestion ani* constipa-
tion and require the same scientific
remedy to keep the stqmach sweet,
the liver active and the howels reg-
ular. Foley Cathartic Tablets arc
wholesome and cleansing; do not
gripe or cause nausea. Stout peoplo
say this Is the one cathartic that
takes away that over-full atfd
dogged-up feeling.J < Sold every-
where. ‘ , tu-tb-s
------ •:*
The Devil’s Own.
The limn of Court Officers’ trnlnlnf
corps Is proud of tu traditional name
the Devil's Own, a title which links
It with the patriots of tbe four Inns,
wbo formed a volunteer corps In th*
time of the Napoleonic wars. It wai
George Ilf. who bestowed tbe title on
tbe corps. He was reviewing bands ol
vpluuteers. and a* one particularly
smart body of men passed before him
asked wbo they were. “Lawyers,” wat
the reply. "The devil’s own. tbe devtl'i
own.” said the old k|D2- who' M"
habit of repenting his phrases. And
tbp lawyers, wbo bad a /icnxe of hu
mor. adopted tbe title with glee.—lain
dou Chronicle.
Join the class who cares,
Grpbbs to your lee ciMfii
4 «’
SdfU
7hme Vf'esf fid King
Jgsjoni
of the
floors and walls of houses, hakerie#.
restaurants, sugar refineries and
tanneries, where thpir bodies cqme
into contact with tbe filth and re-
fuse that necessarily accumulate in
such places, should^carry a host of
germs about, on and in their bodies
and be able to Infect our fqod. Is
certainly pot surprising. Yqt this ts
the halbit of life of the omnivorous
t-Jtrpach. RoaChts probably also- feed
on tuberculous sputum and dissemi-
nate the baecllli as readily as the
house fly.
Ants which are often abundant in
houses and are earily disseminated
by commerce, sometimes beeopie
pest to the hoqaewife, particularly
when thoy get into the stores of
food. They have not escaped sus-
picion as disseminators of patho-
genic micro-organisms. Wheeler
points out that It thus becomes pos
sib}e for ants to spread disease in
different ways.
Finally the bees, lauded for cen-
turies by poet , and prose writer
dike, have not escaped the accusa-
jpn of suspicion. Wheeler has oh-'
served the stingless bees visit collec-
tions of garbage in the canal zone,
presumably gathering foreign .sub-
stances which they knead into tho
the cerumen cells in which they
store honey eagerly collected for
food by the natives In many parts
ot tropical America. According to
Wheeler, there are record# of intes-
tinal disorders or even death follow-
ed by eafing pf such honqy. The
suggestion of possible contamination
with disease germs eollectqd by
filthy Insects Is plain. Journal of
America® Medical Association.
* * * ,,
Prepared Eifccially Res Jkii Newspaper
ky Pictorial Review
WHERE SIMPLICITY MEETS GOOD TASTE.
PAYING
ON ACCOUNT.
KIlDBSrS H'SP-
swaSr
KUinl-
Pklop
cost of production. Lqt
own«t »U1 go
were promisee last
was all.” If the *
Many wonder that if the United
States is selling so. much fpod am-
piunltlon and oilier things tn Europe
V*hat we are not enjoying u degree
of prosperity kindred tp a bqom
4n exawiqatiqa pf the trade of
this cquntry during thp two year#
wlU gtyq the
Inches wide foe the ntay. It is w;ell tq
us« adjustahls collars and revers with
these frocks as they add to the novelty
of tile, design#
The ehirt <t splemfid iqodel tp uy*
Independently, developed In taffpt^ of
soft face-cloth. Ta make It. (Irst Join
thp. twp upppr and two lower sections
as notcheif, leaving left side seap fyee
above large "O" perfpratlon for open-
ing. Crease, on lines of small *V’ per-
forations near upper edge; 'stitch H
Inch from folded edges. Inserting cord.
Lap carded edge of lower section op the
upper section, notches*- edges, center-
-V,
costume as this answers all
fronts and center-backs even, drawing
cord to lit. Adjust skirt, pt(tcblng up-
Bflr edgp ov*r Ip.wer edge of wglat. esp-
tm grgA mp ,ar«9 ”9”'
tl.on ip sfgy, drawing cqrd \o fit.,
^lie quiet froqf and bacg bgipg ip
«»' ahnpUAes matters greatly. Turn
under. Shoqlder edge 9f back pn gmall
”C perfoipfion#; stitjpb
fpld, inserting cprd. qa^ier, shoulder
edge of front between double, "TT' per-
forations. sew to back, notches even.
Closp under-arm seam as qotchcd
Center-front indicated by small “o"
104,000 Men
In the jungles and fields, in three , conspicuous improve-
our factories, etc., 104,000 ments.
men are employed to meet the Some Goodyear suprema-
detnand tor Goodyear tires. c|es can bp seen Igt a glance.
No other tire commands Compare size andN thickness
anywhere near such favor, with the average tire^ Com- ,
And this spring has shown, in pare number of fabric plies. A
sales to dealers, ah increase . „i , N
of 52 per Cent.
ViJue#
Pripes Down
Goodyear has made in about
two years three great price
The reason is. we fortify re(iuctions> tota|ing 45 per
our tires. We g.ye the best ^ Th(. ^ wa8 on f^.
that others give, plus five **- maryist Qur matchless out-
.elusive features.! In costly put enaWe, 8 which no
ways, emplt^ed by no qne else, ^Her maker'ean d«pljc«te,
we combat:"
•''f
BlowouU Punctures ble, less upkeep. That is proved
Loose Treads Skidding by our exclusive features! our
And we never skiyp. Dp- dominant place, and the swell4
spite all price - x i __ *' 1 '■ — 'nlt Goodyear
Goodyears mean less trou*
reductions,
Goodyears
are better than
ever. Lately
wehaveadded
Goodyear
dS ASBOKOHIO
Fortified Tires
Trod, or Smooth
tide. We urge
yoti to join this
' army. Any
l dealer will
'supply you. L
GOODYEAR SERVICE STATI0WS—-IfllES IN STOCK
SHUMAN...... Huberts Electric U.
,, SjbermaB Vulcanizing Works,
fR1SC0.......... W. 0. Dill & C9.
H0WE...~.......Howe Garage
LEONARD........!. W. Woosley A Co.
T0MBEAN ......T. A. Lackey j
VAN ALSTYN(..Cannog’s Garage
Morris & Overkey
HlinailCBT.Iclril’s Cirige
" *- if? v
EXCURSION!
SUNDAY, JUNE 20n
I 9.1 8
Waist Is t'mbro|(lcre<i in blue #ilk.
Th# legislature was almost unanl- previous tq th*
tuoys I® Ipi advoeacY pf the jqi«t atfawar. /
aqlotipp gr«Mcb wneu adopted by ~ ■" BMM
the voters of Texas
issued In advocacy of the res-
perforationj, Sqw gquarg ,collar tp
neck edge a# potfW Arrange ot) tin-
purlag thp yqar 1914 the United
SU^es exported to Europe {222,-
OhO.OOh in gold—an excess of $l*>o.
000,000 over the amount of gold It
imported. ThU gold movement was
'" ".....' ■i
^merely a settlement on ac
export the mtrehand
this model, the handwork being of ua- ter-front .
usually simple design. If »he marqul- The embroidery in color is always er-
setts Is
m
VIA
Texas Traction Co.
and Mei;0. & tr( ,
.• k . 42#*’
... ,a>fe soc
Lv. Sherman 7:20 a. m.
Ar. BremMe 10:45 a. n
Lv. Bromide S:45 p. m.
- Ar. Sherman 10:45 p. in.
iMitp . **1«.»«!"' A*i-I
Fine Fishing a
Famous Bromide Sprjtiflf and
Bromide Mineral Baths. Base
Ball Game, Band Concert,
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FOR NINETY CENTS
A Seat For Every Person
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 17, 1915, newspaper, June 17, 1915; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth720212/m1/2/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .