The Tribune. (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, June 12, 1908 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Stephenville Empire-Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Stephenville Public Library.
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C. ft. COULTER, Publisher.
BTEPHKNVILLE,
TEXAS.
sm
ONE IS KILLED; SEVEN ARE FA-
TALLY HURT.
All the world guys the lover.
How could a breathless man be
without pants?
In a favorable wind a fox can scent
a man one-quarter of a mile away.
The number of victims of tubercu-
losis in Germany exceeds 120.000 a
year.
Spain Is spending $4U,000,000 on
new battleships and lockyard con-
struction.
Fortunately the girls aren’t wear
Ing the old-fashioned hoopskirt along
with the Merry Widow hat.
The largest quill toothpick factory
is in Paris. It was originally started
as a manufactory of quill pens.
MOTORMAN FORGOT CURVE
When a tornado makes one of its
flying visits unannounced you have to
forego all previous engagements.
The Sunday Rest league, with head-
quarters in Sacramento, is spreading
rapidly all along the Pacific coast.
Sun spot3 are causing a great deal
of talk among astronomers, and also,
it may be remarked, among beauty
doctors.
Remember that while your own
home city is the fairest in the land,
all towns must look alike to the rail-
way manager. v-
The Colorado man who pawned his
false tooth for food may have planned
for a case of dyspepsia which would
make fasting easier.
Culture, said Prof. Shatter Mathews,
is going to hum in Chicago, and then
retired when George Ade read one of
his fables in slang, thus giving cul-
ture a running start.
The power of mind over matter may
be seen in the fact that what Presi-
dent Eliot has to say about athletics is
attracting a great deal more attention
than anything John L. Sullivan might
have to say about education.
Count Tolstoi naturally considers
that a Jubilee will hardly add to his
honors. Besides, propriety at such
an event might require that he wear
shoes, and, at his age, he has no in-
tention to court unnecessary misery.
A French physician claims to have
photographed the soul of his wife 80
hours after her death. He explains
that the picture shows a nebulous
glebe. This being the case, the wear-
ing of corsets cannot have any effect
on the soul.
Ten years ago at this time the
schoolboy who could locate the Phil-
ippine islands would have been rated
as a class wonder. To-day the geogra-
phy of that quarter of the globe is al-
most as familiar to the average Amer-
ican youth as that of the baseball
world.
Score of Passengers Crushed, Bruised
and Internally Injured. Iron
Bar Cuts Child’s Trdoat.
St. Louis, Mo., June 8.—An east-
bound Creve Coeur car loaded with
ninety-three men, women and children,
jumped the track while taking a curve
at forty-three miles an hour near Del-
mar Garden late Saturday night, in-
juring over half the passengers and
causing one death. Of those hurt, sev-
en are so badly mangled that they will
die, according to the physicians at
the hospitals where they have been
taken.
The accident occurred within 600
yards of Delimar Garden, which was
filled with thousands of people. Half
of the passengers were women and
children, returning from Sunday
School picnics at Creve Coeur Lake.
There was no panic In the car after
it overturned, and as soon as the
men recovered themselves they looked
after the women and children, passing
them through slits in the canvas
roof .which they cut with knives. The
car was of the variety known as a
moonlight gondola, with an open side
and a screened side and a canvas roof.
The closed side is the one near the
other track.
When the car leaped in the air and
overturned it struck with the closed
side to the ground.
The motorman was arrested soon
after the accident, and made a state-
ment In which he says he was on his
first trip on the Creve Coeur line.
He admits that he had been warned
about the dangerous curve where the
car was wrecked, and says he forgot
the warning. He has been a motor-
man for nine months.
The conductor was dragged out from
beneath the motor box with his chest
crushed in and both legs cut off. The
motorman was pitched from the plat-
form several feet away from the car.
He was knocked unconscious, but not
seriously injured.
Half of the passengers on the car
were women and children returning
from Sunday School picnics at the
lake. Many women were -pulled from
under the wreckage of the car un-
conscious and bleeding from various
wounds. One of the children’s throats
was cut from ear to ear by being
shoved against an iron bar over a
window.
No Reply to Inquiries 8ent to Hla
Apartment.
New York, June 10.—A newspaper
representative called at Waldorf-As-
toria last night and sent his card to
the apartments of Senator Joseph W.
Bailey. A reply was returned that
no visitors were received, and request-
ing to explain in writing his wants.
Thereupon the following was sent to
the Senator’s apartments: "Reports of
the serious condition of Senator J.
W. Bailey are being circulated, and
rumor has it that the gravity of his
ailment portends serious, if not fatal,
results. Would thank you to confirm
or deny the reports.’’
The messenger returned with . the
words, “There is no reply.”
Many inquiries emanating from va-
rious sources were similarly treated.
It was learned, however, that "the
Senator is doing quite nicely.” Noth-
ing official is obtainable around the
hotel, the clerks all refusing informa-
tion. They will neither admit or deny
the rumors going the rounds of the
corridors, nor will they admit that
an operation has been performed.
The Senator, however, is confined to
his apartment, and is not receiving vis-
itors.
Tragedies of County Seat War.
Muskogee, Ok., June 9.—The Mc-
Intosh County seat fight assumed its
second stage when General. Dunlap,
who was guarding the court house in
Eufaula, was shot and instantly killed
last night about 9 o’clock in the hall-
way on the third floor of the Hotel
Foley.
Night before last F. M. Wood was
shot and fatally wounded by Joe Par-
menter.
The tragedy has stirred alHEufaula,
and for a time there was fear of
mob violence. In tho afternoon Dun-
lap was heard to say that he antici-
pated trouble. Dunlap was for a num-
ber of years deputy under United
States Marshal Bennett.
Cyclone Visits Texarkana.
Texarkana: This city was visited
by a cyclone during the noon hour
Tuesday and much damage of a minor
nature resulted in the form of par-
tially wrecked buildings, the destruc-
tion of trees, sm^ke stacks, windows
and outhouses. The wind blew at a
terrific rate for about ten minutes,
and was followed by a rain that was
little short of a cloudburst. So far as
is known no serious personal injuries
were sustained.
HO FOR SAN ANTONIO!
PROS CARRY THEIR POINT
Dallas, June 9.—At its meeting held
in this city yesterday the Demoer&tlc
State Executive Committee ordered
that the following propositions be sub-
mitted to the voters in the primary
election to be held on July 25.
Prohibition Ticket.
“For the submission by the Thirty-
First Legislature of this State of a Con-
stitutional amendment to the people
for their adoption or rejection prohib-
iting within the State of Texas the
manufacture, sale, gift, exchange and
interstate shipment of spirituous, vin-
ous and malt liquors and medicated
bitters capable of producing intoxica-
tion .except for medicinal and sacra-
mental.”
“Against the foregoing.”
Local Option Ticket.
“For the Bystem of local option and
proper legislative enactments for the
perfection of the laws so as to pre-
vent the barter or sale of intoxicating
beverages in local option districts.”
“Against the foregoing.”
When to the paragraphs which have
preceded this one is added the state-
ment that San Antonio was selected
as the place for holding the State Con-
vention of the party in August, and
that suitable arrangements were
made for putting into effect all the
actions taken, the story of the salient
features of the sessions of the com-
mittee has been told.
Both sides In the prohibition were
well represented and made a lively but
good-humored fight from start to fin-
ish. The formal Submission of the
State-wide petition was by Sterling
P. Strong, Chairman of the committee
on that side, and the local option peti-
tion was presented to the committee
by John L. Wortham, Chairman on the
other stde. The first was said to have
something over 44,000 signatures, and
the latter is claimed to have append-
ed more than 50,000, with about 5000
others on the way.
BIRMINGHAM IS PREPARED.
THE WEEK’S EPITOME
SAYS ACREAGE IS UNCHANGED.
By a new law in New York hunters
are not allowed to shoot other hun-
ters or guides by mistake without be-
ing charged with homicide. This looks
like a retrograde from the governing
principle of the game laws, that all
other rights must give way to the
supreme end of hunting.
A new' kind of gas which can be
bought by the bottle and used for il-
luminating purposes has been Invent-
ed by a German. Fifty cents’ worth
of it will furnish a 60-candle power
light eight hours a day for six weeks.
People who have their money invested
in gas stock will regard this inven-
tor as a menace that should be sup-
pressed.
The markets have been famed all
over Italy foil many centuries. Once
a Veronese guest of a Milan nobleman
for a joke bought out the Milan mar-
kets three times in one day, so his
host could not give him a dinner, but
in spite of that the hucksters and
butchers supplied the host with ma-
terial for the best dinner the guest
ever had.
This is going to be a giddy world.
It was but lately given out that the
north pole is gradually shifting its
position. Now comes the hint that
before long the majority oT the na-
tions may agree to adopt some other
initial meridian than that which
passes through Greenwich, from
which point we now number the de-
grees of longitude. It will be the
equator's turn next to brace up and
get a move on.
The man who goes around croaking
that the worst is ..yet to come either
has a weak spine of knows of some-
thing that he would like to get at a
marked-down price. This from the
Chicago Record-Herald, which moves
the New York Herald to remark:
And the best part of It all is that the
“croaker” Is finding everybody too
busy to listen to him. The surest sign
of good tlmeB is tho fact that people
have ceased to talk about hard times.
Cotton Crop Same Amount in Acreage
as Last Year.
New Orleans, June 8.—The Tlmes-
Democrat today says:
The Times-Democrat herewith pre-
sents the first of its reports on the
cotton crop of 1908. The concensus of
correspondents’ opinion seems to be
as follows:
The aoreage is practically un-
changed, as compared with last year.
The ohange, if any^has been in the
division of a trifling increase.
ThO stands have been impaired and
cultivation has been retarded by ex-
cessive rainfall over wide areas of
the belts.
The supply of labor is, as a rule,
I better than it has been within the
recent past.
Complaints of boll weevil come from
certain districts west of the Missis-
sippi.
j The outlook, taken, as a whole, Is
j fair, but the ultimate outcome will
| depend upon the character of the sea-
! son from this time forth, and the
date of frost will cut a great figure.
A good deal of alluvial land has
been overflowed, and the result of
Gore’s Sight Improved.
Washington: For the first time in
twenty-seven years Thomas P. Gore
of Oklahoma was able to distinguish
an object when, for the brief period
of thirty seconds, he could see his
cuff with his left eye. For the past
week the Senator ha3 been receiving
treatment at the Episcopal Eye, Ear
and Throat Hospital In this city. «•
further improvement is shown it may
not be necessary to operate on the
Senator,
Oklahoma Lines Stopped.
Ardmore, Okla.: Heavy rains north-
east of here, with water from heavy
rains north put the Washita again on
a rise. The Santa Fe track is sub-
merged through the canyon, and no
work of repairing the roadbed can
be done. The Rock Island bridge
across the Washita east of Randolph
is under water, and these trains have
been annulled. Detouring trains over
that line by the Santa Fe has ceased.
Rumors of Cotton Worm Damage.
♦
Waco: It Is reported that the cot-
ton in the section of country around
Eddy is being eatdn up by a worm.
The report i3 that the worms make
their appearance in a field, eat it bare
and move on to the next one. There
are rumors that the same worm is
replanting is to the last degree prob- i destroying the crops in the vicinity
lematical. I of Rosenthal and several other places.
--..--- | The tfarmars are buying seed and
planting over.
Iowa Town Devastated by Tornado.
Charles City, la.: A tornado struck
here about 5 o’clock Saturday evening,
demolishing about 2(50 residences and
j barns. W. R. Beck and a child were
! killed and three children are reported
i missing. The tornado started about
i three miles southeast of town, tearing
down farm houses and barns and kill- j
ing many head of stock. It struck the
southwest part of Charles City, blow-
ing a path through the northeast Bide,
and spent itself a tew miles from
! town.
There have been horrible records
to wrYte of the sea when such menac e
threatened aB caused the boats to be
lowered—records of brutal contests
to be first off a doomed vessel; of
cruel assault to beat away the help-
less Such chronicles would never bo
written were all craft governed by the
discipline of wblob the crew of the
Gladiator gave a notable example.
England, remarks IlUJ Philadelphia
Ledger, cdtld well afford to lose a lit-
tle cruiser to demonstrate the charac-
ter of Its naval personnel, officers und
en alike.
Dickson Car Wheel Plant Burned.
Houston: Fire Saturday night com-
pletely destroyed the oil plant of the
i Dickson Car Wheel Company on the
1 north side of Buffalo Bayou, the total
loss being close to $150,(M0. The ma-
j chine shop, tho soft casting foundry,
the pattern storage room, ths g'rlnd-
i ing aifif w libel cleaning departments,
j tluj ) dark smith shop and the uffles.
• went up. This Is the third time with
! in two years that this plant has boen
I burned.
Louis J. Wortham of the Fort Worth
Star has filed application with County
Chairman Ayers to run for State Rep-
resentative from Tarrant County. He
represents the anti-prohibition fewer
and better laws policy, and is a Bailey
adherent.
Dallas newsboys have formed a
Newsboys’ Union, and started in with
a boycott of certain publications.
Hail is reported to have done con-
siderable damage around Denison
Tuesday morning.
John James, aged 40 years, was
found dead at his home in Riverside.
Fort Worth, with the top of his head
blown off. A gun was discovered near
the body. He leaves five children. De-
spondency Is attributed as the cause
of the deed.
The Trinity River at Dallas had
gone down within its banks Monday,
the first time within two weeks.
Owing to a scarcity of cattle a raise
In the price of meata has been put
Into effect in Chicago of from one to
two rents.
A RESUME OF THE MOST IMPOR-
TANT NEWS AT HOME AND
ABROAD.
NEWS FROM EVERYWHERE
Alabama City in Readiness for Con-
federate Reunion-
Birmingham, Ala., June 9.—Every-
thing Is ready for the opening of the
annual reunloi$ of the United Confed-
erate Veterans, which begins today.
I The crowds began to arrive earlier
| than expected, and each of the eighty
passenger trains entering the city car-
ried extra coaches. The visitors were
I well taken care of.
Practically all of the prominent offi-
cers of the organization gdt In yes-
terday and opened their headquarters.
General officers and division command-
ers have quarters at the hotels, while
State headquarters for the various
commands are assigned to various
public buildings.
Thus far Atlanta is the only South-
ern city with a delegation on hand
working for the next reunion. There
is already much rivalry and politics
in the air as to who is tp succeed the
late Stephen D. Lpe as comjnander.
General Cabell of the Trans-MlsMsslp-
pi department has the advantage of
seniority In the rank, but the veter-
ans themselves will have the decision
of the question of the most available
man to fill the place. General Clement
A. Evans of Georgia, commander of
tho Department of Tonnessee, has
some strong workers in the field, who
are interesting themselves In his be-
j half.
All of the visiting officers expressed
admiration as to the manner In which
the city Is decorated. Hotel-John B.
Gordon has already proved itself one
of the most popular places In the city.
This is thetname given to the hotel
which was equipped at the State Fair
Grounds, and it Is here that all com-
1 ers who wish it will be entertained
free. A large majority of the veter-
ans have preferred to go there rather
than to private homes, as It will give
them so much better opportunity of
I meeting their old comrades.
The convention will bo called to
! order promptly at 10 o'clock by Gen-
eral George B. Harrison, commander
of the Alabama Division, and will be
opened with prayer by the Chaplain
General, J. W. Jones of Richmond.
C. A. Lamlua or Abilene bought Ok*
Wortham brick plant last week, pay
ing $25,000 for It. .
The Texas and Pacific Railroad sent
out the first Dallas-El Paso train since
the flood Thursday night ■
William A. Cocks of Ban Antonio re-
fuses to stand as a candidate for re-
election to the Legislature.
Moberly, Mo., capitalists have pur-
chased a tract of land near San Angelo
Of George Hagejstein and propose to
settle it with Northern farmers.
Secretary Metcalf has announced
that the names of the two new bat-
tleships authorized by the r«y?nt Con-
gress will bc\ Florida and Utah.
Two boys atv Brady emptied a largo
cartridge into a beer bottle and drop-
ped a lighted match Into the bottle
also. The explosion was Immediate
and both may lose their eyesight.
Bishop Potter is at his home in
Coopertown, N. Y., suffering from nerv-
ous breakdown. It Is declared the
Bishop's Indisposition caused him to
abandon his trip to Europe.
The five mills of the J. and P. Coates
Company, Limited, In Pawtucket. R.
I., and Centerville, R. I., have resumed
their schedule of five days a week. At
least 2000 operatives are affected.
Thomas Gore, the blind Senator
from Oklahoma, who is undergoing
treatment at the Episcopal Hospital
in Washington, firmly believes. It 1*
said, that his sight will be restored.
John Duerry, an aged negro who had
resided for many years on a farm near
Forest Hill. Tarrant County, dropped
dead while plowing in his field one day
last week. He was 70 years of age.
Houston Sneed, a negro, was run
over by a street car in Denison Sun-
day night and was taken to the sani-
tarium in Sherman, where he died the
next morning. He resided In Sher-
man.
Mall advices from Australia state-
great preparations are being made to
receive the American battleship fleet.
There will be a round of banquets,
balls, picnics, regattas, cricket and
baseball matches.
J. K. Pittman, a veteran resident
of Corsicana, was found dead in his
bedroom at his home Sunday night.
He was a widower and his son und
son’s son, who live with him, were
in Palestine on a visit.
Charles H. Briggs, one of the most
prominent machinery men of Dallas.,
head of the Brlggs-Weaver Machinery
Company, died In that city Monday
night. He had been a resident of that
city for twenty years.
Warning has been sent by State Fac-
tory Inspector Daviess of Illinois to
635 places of amusement in Chicago
that they will not be allowed to ex-
hibit children under fourteen years
of age under any circumstances.
A home Industry banquet was given
at the Commercial Club rooms in Mc-
Kinney Monday evening, which was
The Oklahoma anti-nepotism act. bv attended by a large number of citizens,
which tjie employment of relatives of Everything for the banquet was fur-
blood or marriage to the third degree, nished by McKinney business men.
if. made a crime Involving a fine from 1 . _ , . ,
, . i -A message was received In Wnxa-
$100 to $1000 and forfeiture of office, . • , . ... . a
7 „„ ■ 1 hachle a few nights since from San
became effective Monday, June 8. . . , , . . _
Antonio, stating that Colonel John C.
Complete returns received by the Su- Gibson, one of the early settlers of
perlntendent of County Instruction Waxahachle, had died there. Mr. Glb-
from the eleven enumerators who were : H<»n went to Kan Antonio seveial weeks
engaged in taking the scholastic een- I f,,r (be benefit of hla le-alth
A Carefully Digested and Condensed
Compilation of Current News
Domestic and Foreign.
A Pan-Slavic expoaition to be held
In Moscow In 1910 Is planned by Rus-
sia.
Robbers cracked the safe of the
Bank of Falrland, at Fairland, Ok.,
and escaped with $10,000. The rob-
bery was committed by three men, who
escaped on horseback.
W. J. Bryan was Indorsed for the
Presidency by the Louisiana Demo-
cratic State Convention. It was,
however, decided to send the delega-
tion to Denver uninstructed.
Charles T. Muir, paying teller of
the Forty-Second Street branch of the
Corn Exchange Bank, New York City,
committed suicide in the basement of
the bank a few days since.
Mrs. Leavitt, daughter of Hon. W.
J. Bryan, has been named as a dele-
gate to the Democratic National Con-
vention accredited to Colorado. The
Colorado delegates goes uninstructed.
The law passed by the recent Mis-
souri legislature making It unlawful
for a telegraph operator to work more
than eight consecutive hours has been
declared unconstitutional by Judge
Lamm.
Returns from Monday’s election
show that Governor Chamberlain, a
Democrat, will have a majority of
1000 over Judge Cake, his Republican
opponent for United States Senator
from Oregon.
An unidentified man and woman
were drowned in four feet of water in
Creve Coeur Lake, St. Louis, Sunday
afternoon. Had they retained their
presence of mind they could have
waded to Bhore.
Many farmers In the Brazos bot-
toms, whose crops were destroyed,
are having great difficulty in securing
seed for replanting, being heavily
handicapped by scarcity of seed and
from lack of funds.
Bandits attacked a pay train on the
way to the Los Grandas mines, near
Balsas, in the State of Guerrero, Mex-
ico. Of the escort of four men, three
were killed and one wounded. Four
thousand dollars were stolen.
Application for the organization of
divisions in South America and In the
canal zone have been received by the
Brotherhood of Ix)comotlve Engineers.
The application from South America
came chiefly from Brazil.
The St. Louis, Brownsville and Mex-
ico. Railway has notified the Railway
Commission of (he completion of Its
line from Brownsville to Algoa, a dis-
tance of 39ft mile3, all of which has
been valued, and made application tot
a valuation qf fifty-nine miles between
Bay City and Algoa for bond Issu-
ance.
Snaked a Tray of Sparklers.
Houston: Officials of the police de-
partment nte still working on the rob-
bery which occurred at the Jewelry
store of Taylor Brothers late Saturday
afternoon, when a tray of diamonds
was taken from a showcase ip the
front part of the store. The diamonds
stolen were- all mounted, and ranged
in value from $76 to $500. They were
mounted in various styles of rings.
A Hot of the stolen property has been
furnished the police.
sus Of the city of Dallas shot 13,718
children of school age In the city.
Hon. Peter White of Marquette, one
of the most prominent men In the up-
per peninsula of Michigan, dropped
dead In Detroit Saturday In front of
the city hall. Heart disease is sup-
posed to have been the cause of his
death.
One million three hundred thousand
appliaction for divorce were mbade be-
tween the years 1887 and 190ft, and of
these between two-thirds and three-
fourths resulted in decrees of divorce.
The census bureau expects to have the
analysis of Its figures ready to make
public In the near future.
in Panhandle well No. 3 about
twelve miles north of Henrietta, at a
depth of 1,450 feet, astratum of oil was
struck that is 75 gravity. The w-il
was closed awaiting experts from
r'entinunt.
Word has Just reached Mexica City
that twenty lives were lost and prop-
erty damage to the extent of $20,000
by a cloudburst In Quanajuato, Mexi-
co. It is understood that one of the
mine tunnels was flooded.
Capt. John T. Harnbleton, alderman
at large and one of the best known
cltlwcns of San Antonio, died Sunday
afternoon after a long illness. He was
steamboat pilot and captin in the early
days on the Mississippi and worked
with Mark Twain and other noted rlv-
or men.
At La Porto, on the mainland of
Galveston Bay, prospectors have
brought In an oil well that gushes at
Intervals, and tho production Is esti-
mated at 1000 barrels a day. It has
been In process of drilling several
months.
China has refused the request made
by Japan for permission to station
twenty men In Chinese territory over
the Korean border for the purpose of
apprehending leaders of the Korean
Insurgents seeking to make their es-
Four young men rescued a man by
the name of Hicks anil his wife and
two small children from the* Trinity
flood In tho southern port of Kauf-
man County this week. Illeks and hla
family were in the second story of
their house, and the water was six
feet deep in the bottom story. HlckB
Is a one armed man.
Several small lists of cotton have
been turned loose within the past few
days by farmers who were holding. A
prominent farmer at Petty refused
ltVjc for 119 bales.
President Roosevelt has been giving
attention lately to plans for a trip to
British East Africa next summer, on
which it Is understood that hla son
Kormit will accompany him.
Henry Y, Allen, 8r., aged eighty-four
years, died Saturday afternoon after
a brief Illness at his home, after a
residence of five years In Dallas.
A gas tank explosion in Indianapo-
lis Injured eleven persons Saturday,
Home, It Is feared, fatally.
Hob Long was held without hall
Saturday before Justice of -the Peace
Hoyett In his examining trial for the
murder of Prof. J. O. Jacoway in
Paris last. Saturday.
A movement Is on foot to organize
"Village Blacksmith Williams” Demo-
cratic clubs over the State, to boom
the Cumby blacksmith-lawyer who
has announced as a candidate for
Governor.
The Texas Bankers held their an-
nual association meeting In Fort
Worth last week, adjourning Satur-
day.
Claiming to huve acted in defense
of her slater, Miss Johnnie Davidson,
a popular young lady of Neosho, Mo„
shot and killed Roy Ramsen at her
home Saturday.
Tax Commissioner Dashlell has ac-
cepted an Invitation to deliver nn"ad-
dr e mi to the Central West Texas As-
sociation of Commercial Clubs which
cape In that direction.
meets otgAbllene June 1ft.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Tribune. (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, June 12, 1908, newspaper, June 12, 1908; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth881432/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Stephenville Public Library.