The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 3, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 6, 1881 Page: 1 of 4
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PANOLA WATCHMAN.
Stoex.
|KNTS, *e.
WlWlAlAi
; Jainm II. n*v,’, I
■ It!'. I'otKtHIMen • •Jj0_
■*M. Kentucky'it., I
r*a,
■> '•'•Hinp, Tm pUto
t till. iy. CtaSS
h,*vv“ry ***3
1 "I orders eai^Jj
<Kr.!,K h*
U»*
s
VOL. 9
M IS* Ll.l-A Nl ot >.
1000
jfon 1’H*towrrs in Tf.tas
PIMCK* or | Nos
Will j.ltico kip I A s’l't in I s i l.
EASY TERMS
ORGAN*, WI SH AND
iirsM’Al I nsi I:I mi:nt
IVIrSK'AL INSII I.MKNI
Fiftv |>'r <«*!«•. ..ft In Ilif.lnuU'.
I’ftliil'Vuo i'*iilh*il mi iij.|.) i .itioii.
Address
P. WERLEIN.
(,:< Ciinitl 'i. Now <»ileans.
May I'•••
^llLSl.I.V V. AHA MS,
fttlorucg at taw,
(tfVLIt T. ittVM.W )
MARSHA U<. - TEXAS.
HptTial ntt.'iitloii given !»» tIn* nil*
tction ol claim*. M'*h. ‘.I M- ly.
CARTHAGE, PANOLA COUNTY, TEXAS, JULY 0, 1881.
I NO. 3.
MI UKVKit HIT AHVLKTISKMKNTs.
__—
•LOITI8UMA,
c. A. tint OI.AS 1,
1,1'S MIN l it
[jlicmicalsl Douglass & Meyer
Patent Medielm,
. iiml Spice., p»jn
l,l<|iinr<, for Meiid i
ISetib, Window OUi
lHyo StulN, etc.
Lirei’f) /mil Fre/t •V/«Wc
. jnns i Jacobs,
—DKALKU IN-
Sliiplo and Fancy Dry (goods,
NOTION^, a,,.,
ul?"JXu'TSrn W‘“*,h*
Dry Goods, Notions, &c.
i^r*,r7,,Khl to Shreveport. Don’t fall (ocull on mo. yon willenve tnni.ev
„i',i c'li'i’v otwr Htweiul lii.lucenienW m wiiolosal* buyer*. gui.r-
"lie.lly? 1 r am‘ “^rlmont lietler tlmu any other house in
mmUM'
l'Miuim-ut citizens of Tyler
favor Houston for the location
of the im dical branch of the
State.I’uiwndty.
The Comptroller juiyn no
attention to the opinion of
Judge Hal linger on tbe.liuiii-
tilers' tax law, and hold** to
hi* previous ruling.
The Houston Ihiptiit-Herald
.lorn not like ike new Revision.
No, nor neither does any one
also who really desires tb« 8*1 v a
tiaa of tbeaoulaot all the |h>u|iI«.
**11^18,‘SO Jy
Julius A, Jacobs,
H TEX AH Street.
J as. f. rr*.
JOS. It. SMITH
UTS & SMITH,
•PHALLUS 1N-
(Sueri ''•nr** t<* It. It.
enn t:mHy on I
lot of UiL '/>• , I l;i* •!.«* :
nicr's .-•iiu|i!<' ua40c
|,i. j .Hi • I In Im '<i'li t*: ■ •
vcynnc't > tmy ;
Ns i.« try,)
iini n fine
1 dnMii-
I'licy 1
('Ill— Cl l|
rl net ii» *»*;•«•! id.
Hardware & Machinery,
ES,
|> LASIAN A.
^iBisn
:CD 6A8N,
IN'DS.
Ji.u*3,IMy
ItHK K >'f A LI.!’ .-'•-utl. KI I.T,
lIKNHKKMiN, - Ti a.' .
E.c. 1 1: vwr-.i >. .1. w. < 1 s - * • it;n.
TI’.XAS CnV. i K, TLA AND
Sl’li i: < T*. '
rol l ;.r. 1 ,< L\ 1 i ■!. -•. MM< I.
'I' N DEALERS,
A Nil 1MM f *.s lit I: I .Us Ol-
(’llAWI mi.'D'S' LAUI Mi i’n’.v
PER, mill ( ItAW! «ms.
cm t-nd WTUY I'oVVHKl:.
J‘r..ii if; ii'i • t, «.. .iii r LuiMiu
I,.„ 7. ..IS,
N. 1!. We oil', r |- c cl i• :i 111.....
nicul* I" llic iiii-i'i-li;ini* in (Im iill«*»
rior wlmi .tii ului'V* |ii-(it]i|«tly tr‘ t
pulsilini't 'Voiii to. or nny whole*
wlf ilcs !cr in Hoiislou.
“Kept.l.v.
Ni^. K, 10 12 Skiing St*.
s IinEVEPORT}
3l.
ilAvr.V'i
Saddles
fi’.MioNS
Vi
lor Its
Hsrnssst
AMJ
I^amdadnrcrs Aft'cnfs lbr
I.ltnWX Lo’IToN (i 1 NS, Al.f.TM S ('nTi<>\ I'Jtl'.sSLS,
AM I-;* LNiilM.S, ■ mi.LM AN'S .MluA
\ 1' 101: < A Mt Ml! LH. SlitALU MILLS,
' LKA I 'Vi ir-rii LANK MILLS, (MILKMAN'S I’UKS-LS,
A\I.UY I’l.unJnNIN \VA<;o\ Sm!(*k,
N. l.-NAMK!, PAIN 1', <Mm»K s 1.va|iorntor-<.
Tio Cho«04t and Eest GIr. in tho Market.
\\ i- oflt-r lli(‘*!'rii'.vii l Jin fur (ho coining wn-.no rnncli lni|>r.>v<*tl;
l uvi'i;,'.: l ull y mid li -'I nt ci.cli 1 ml of 4ho linr-li. which in*
Mi.-t j • r.'i" ( mid miiiooHi mnning ; ni-o, (lie* Itrii'li is mndo
uilju.- t.iliii- (o lilts n.'vs, so that it i-:iii ho movi-d op tu or
nwny from the i-.tw s :m may |,c r*-«jniroiI.
t'.vii’;) <;;»» Is i'ie Hi) i-ur nut fait,
A F U L !. LINE OF
II!ark'«miili s*nd (.upfnirr.'t’T00K Iron, Wagon-work. Y.lk Hrat)
SInif»Mil lluiidcis llariUtar.*. I'liHery. Iron Pipe ;ui<l In lings,
I.ligiiicii.s Siij jiiii'. Ihliing. (.am Pa. king, Cordage,
Path VHrfccAr.. \r.. Ar.
Si tid 1 mi Tor 1 Vices and C'iiruhirs of (Jins, Mills, Presses,
Pali--liiill-. .1 nne 27. '81 Jy.
Rev. J. W. M. Kettxie. one
<if the oldest citiseiis of tile
Slate, and best educator* Tex
a* ever had, died at his resi-
dence, near Clarksville, a few
days ago.
Jitdirin^ front the tone of
the Nacogdoches News, the
l»eo|)le of that connty have
“soured” on Col. Paul Hre-
luoiid, and his ability to build
ltisro^il to that plneo.
A Texas Publlshlnf House.
Twthe Kditerurof (be Post;
Msk-iiai.l. June 17.—Six
and a half y.<nrs ego, the firm
of Jennings lln>s. puo hns<d
the office of the defunct Iron
Age. previously published ut
Marshall, Texus. The mate-
rial was then being used for
job offiee, doing a merely lo
cal trade and ein]doving but
four nu n. I p to tiiis time,
most of the railroad, couutv
and legal job printing ha.
Igti offie*
w*r-
•ru.
J * I'iMMIIIK IIHV
been done by forvtgtt offiees; St
Louis getting u large pr.»|
t ion' 011 he work. The Musi
Jeiiiiittgs set to work to show
that all this money was going
out of the conutrv for nothing
— that the printfng could b«
ns neatly, oxiiedicUiuidy an*
cheaply executed hen* as else
where, stivim; the cost of ex
l.ressage and building up a
iiome institution.
With two small job presses
and a hand press- two of them
of little value—and a compar-
atively small amount of mate-
rial. they Itegun to solicit
work. Leaving a go.nl mar
gin for profits, they offered to
. , , duplicate tin* St. Louis work
In a railroad wreck near t ie .|f n considerable reduction on
a:
es,
I-rockery, glass !
TAl.E, HTOVE8
I Stir c
toT.C. Lfwix’ftn
M'YKI’ORT, LA.
- - .
lion’s Honli
iuui street,
j • , . m .tl MiMffi
l\K8 IN EVrat H
spr.cT.-
\mpte Mma J
niniierelml
, « nr.s
MRSTON, 1W*" 11** II
____ LA ■■"kail
y B O OilS
Ue a n.-'-or,. |(|,
4^rbc\v'i<ro
*5"r"r«' ■’•tying
IFOBT.
Il b.tcl in Hhrevepwk
iRTEL,
-. 1 # .“Ir
loajrr Wfk • .
**■
. «♦]
HT STOVtt
<-• • , v
Kii«. him is 1 ti ti n:sr.
nttiti n:s:; t
The l.irgi i-hi-i.jwst fed ’ C(-t
iJOfk of 5i!.y(;ic*< for tin- money, cv-
*f#tTerci| f.,r •:.!«• in *!•»-' «eetini. of
country. CjiJ! ..nd t>« <-onviu-
W. 3 HAVEH,
« A HI TKX A J, t-TKLCT,
wild *<>!* SfirevcporJ, I.a.
hyistssoimS’"
\l*0.Y .ft O t .YT.U.Y
SPRINGS.
■Siwilc* W(*i of Mnrdisdl, Texn<*.
C. E. I/r.YMLV, 1‘mprirlor,
7W* CvU-hn.trd hci.lfli and ph re*-
*J**e»rtw ill Is* «.i;Cn for invalids
*• visitors on nr.d after Apr. I, *M.
A Hus of daily hacks will run
JHjnJon'* l.Kcry Ktnhic in
**Wll, to and from the Springs,
^•jUng with oil (rains on (lie
Car. Railway.
»prings urn cchdirntod for
wcsrc nf tho following illswss.
JJyvolids -iiouhl conic and be
EOOS,
__ WIioli.'HaTe Dealer in
TOBACCO, CIGARS and LIQUORS,
BJaER AND 1033.
sou: mu:sr nm the c*lee.hateu amweseji
HE EH.
Abo fine* rcMaumnt and saWu next do«*r to wholesale nonce
„V»*. 1'* a tul 21 Tcjhm Mni't.
Attg. 13*soiy. FUEEYEPOHT, LOblSlANA.
city of Mexico, tiie oilier day,
about 9tKI jieople, most all
soldiers, were killed. It was
the saute old tune, (lie bridge
gave w ay and I he train was
•dumped” into g large
stream.
Dr. Seiss, the gi.-at s.*h ntist,
has been examining the great
Pyramid, and in his “Miracle
in Slone,” published in 1S?7,
bethinks he discovered, from
signs on fids wonderful stiue-
tutv, that either I lie world
would collie to ait end ill 1881,
or else the inhabit ants of earth
would w itness the second com
iug of Christ.
Titer.* is one consolation
nb.nl all this business, and
that is, when th«*ae smart
Alcxs talk this way. (hey are
only “guessing. ‘ They know
no mole than other people
about when the world will
come to an end .; Holy Writ
bears ns out in this assertion.
JpTiS joy*
COTTOy FACTOItS, COM IMS ION MKItCHAHW.
Au.i fJcncrnl Dealer* in
Groceries and Western Produce
So. 30 «1 A a* REVISE.
Shreveport, La.
—o—-
powder
1 in ;i
or
“ypiu. Hrop-y, l.iver c»ni
IKidney <li -'*..-e, or lierangc-
l?***lli‘'Uriiii.ry organs, *«»-*-
|M * ffeneral d'biiiiy, Hiarrlm'..
•Ow.wel dj-e.i-e ; i'eumlc «ii-**
I "*«a«l rlii!«lren’scoiApiaints, He.
I*‘"*1,ler-I nrc m)i| r» l>c tl'C
. ’erativ.** bii'I np|*e(ixers.
rn IX
and TI5WA»
i»KT.
10>X and
WORK.
Guturiaf
ilooeGl
MB PEOPLE'S
Agents lor Amertmn iv.w.ier t omrany; aVo far DANIEL
RATT’S
Improved Revolving Head Cotton Gin t
PRICE REDUCED TO M PEU SAW.
\ccnts for George P. Plan* * CW» Honring Mill*, 8t.
T1IB CELEBRATED ARROW TIES, MILBURy WAGONS
A full stock alway* on hand. Order* tolicitod wbicn
will liars prompt attention.
Baling and 1 ies a Specialty.
Mav 1 I880.1y
HOG8b
,epob*»**a*
in ■■
TRY IT
nn4
pirmi
I
Wr* m .m
w*trp. Go, U.M.JL
p. k. *
> HI'*
** <
e |
THK
AMD
SAVE MOHET!
FOR sal* by
STarr^A. sour,
SIILPTTTX. U •*-1
Tln* Kadieal jiress of the
North, is assailing Mr. Davis*
liidon of the hue war with
an energy that was not ex
jus ted, considering that the
war closed some fifteen ( ears
ago, and which settl' d all the
disputed points between the
North and South.
(Jen. Joseph K. Johnston
also takes umbrage at some of
Mr. Davis* statements, but
this we conceive he hasa right
to do, an his conduct during
the war has been called in
question by Mr.. Davis.
<J* n Longs!reet also comes
in with a word of censure for
Mr. Davis, but nothing that a
renegade like Longstrect might
say, would be calculated to
give Mr. Daria much of a set
back. Honorable people both
North and South have a su-
preme contempt for Long-
street.
flood Lord Deliver li f
One of tlie Honaton Post's
Austin correspondents, has
been Interviewing Col. Joe.
Stewart, of Anstin, one of the
“Ood-fathers” of the yonng
Democraey of Texas, in which
the Colonel expressed the
belief that the isones between
tiie old and yonng Democracy
would not necessarily split
the jierty, when the Reporter
asked:
Reporter—Yon do not anti-
cipate a meeting of extremes
such as was illustrated in the
case of Brick Pomerr»y and
Ben Butler I You hardly
hope to find Bob Taylor, of
Fannin, and Xonr-Bowers, in
tandem f
Now, aee bore, Mr. Repor-
ter, we are a ^uh* man, and
try to be a Christian, bat if
you link onr name with that
old Radical, ladepeadeat.
Greenback body of death
again, there will hare to he
another revision of the New
Testament, mad at least two
hslls clearly set ap to pre-
vent aa from riolabag the 7th
The idea that we coaid ever
homoligate with Boh Taylor,
is soaaethfng too preposteron *
lot contemplation.
8t. Louis juices ; and when
was found that their proposl
tion was no vain boast, but*
that lIm printfhg uml tin* pa-
jht, of as good qualify ustuut
purchas.’d nbromi, could net u
ally be had in .Marshall for
less money, their trade began
to rapidly increase.
Dresses, type, fit ini t tire and
material of ail kinds were ad-
ded as the business demand
required, until they have now
a large and well cqtiijipcd es
tablislimeiit.
About four years ago they
underliMik the jiuhllcafiott of
the Messenger, a pftjier that
another parti had tried in
vain to establish. This, lik«
their job otli.-e has also proved
t .atecess, and the Messenger
lias a very large local circula-
tion, which is constantly in-
creasing.
The Messrs. Jennings now
stt|iply u very large number
of tlie counties of Texas with
books of record, lax bonks,
legal blanks, etc., etc. They
also print (lie Christian Advo-
cate, the organ of the colored
.Methodist Church. A large
I'lnjioittoti of the work for
three railroads is executed in
their office. Among other en-
terprises, they are publishing
tie* t'ychqvedia of the New
West, wlncli will contain 1<ksi
jiages and steel engravings of
the finest character to the val-
ue of 82o,<8h>. They have also
in jiress and will soon issue
Rieves* Cotton Book, which
w ill prove of great benefit to
cottwii buyers.
They have also a ruling es-
tnhlisfiuioiit and a bindery,
both of which turn out tirnt-
.•lass work. Last year they
built a large luick office, at
that time thought to be eufli
oient for their requirements,
but this lias already grown
too small, and w ill have to l>e
extended and greatly eitlarg
ed Their work is now distrib-
uted in Texas from Texarka-
na to Brownsville, and from
Marshall to Kl Paso. Instead
of four jiersons, as six years
ago, the establishment now
employs twenty-seven persons
regularly, besides giving s-ork
to others at entervals. Four
steam presses an: in active op-
eration to fill their numerous
orders, while many hundred
tons of paper are used in the
coarse of the year.
In pvitt deportment- rul-
ing. binding, printing and
publishing- -only the very best
agencies are employed. The
work is in every particular
strictly first-class. Tiie pro-
prietors are liberal and pro-
gressive, and expend money
freely in the improvement of
their business. Orders «l»
continually arriving for work,
and there is little need to go
abrtiad to solicit patronage.
Ird -ed, the bouse endeavors
to In* prompt to the minute,
and as foreign orders received
are sufficient, with the home
trade, to keep all bands busy,
a “drummer'' is hardly need
Kite Shooed It Away,
Kium the San KrancHco Fuat.
There was a party of four
couples coming oyer ou the
steamboat Han. eeto last Shu
day, and the prettiest girl of
the gushers htoked at uiouuL
Tamu I |Mii* and said : •
Oil licit horrid, horrid mouii
taiu ! 1 hud the most fright
ful adventure up there last
summer you ever heard of,
It's a wonder my hair didn't
turn white.
What on earth was it f asked
(lie rest.
> Well, you see, 1 was up
titer.1 with a private pienic pur
ly, and I wandered oil by my
self about a mile picking (tow
ers. After a while 1 sat down
to rest in n lonely canyon, and
Itefore long I heard n queer
rustling Hound in some bushes
right Udiind me. I knew at
once, somehow, that it wus
grizzly. ’
Great Scot! and you nil
alone! shuddered her escort
Not a soul within a mile of
me. 1 was just paralyzed
with terror, (did not dare to
stir, but in a minute I heard
tile bettst routing toward me
thiottgh the thicket.
oh, if I’d only been then.*,
said a young titan breathing
hard.
I knew it was no me to try
and run, and I had lieaid
somewhere that bears never
touched dead jtrojtlo. So
just shut my eyes and held
my breath.
Gracious !
Fretly H»»on the groat brute
walked up el use and began
snuffing me ail over. Oh, it
w as terrible •
•Should have thought you
would have fainted.
Oh. I didn't dare to, said
the heroine.
Just then, I suppose, the
party rushed up ’ml rescued
you, said the audience.
No, thev didn't. Pretty
soon 1 felt the great Iteust
•tilling at flic (lowers on niv
nit. so 1 just got up and
shooed tho horrid tiling away.
What thegrizzD f
Oh, it wasn’t a grizzly. It
was a nasty old c >w. But just
NiipjM»se h had been a grizzly !
But tin audience refused to
HUjqwMo, and l-hepnrt.i looked
ike a (Quaker funeral until
the boat stuck the wharf
The Ram at t'hairk.
Mollh* had a little
tlee**e us ruhlier shoe,
ram,
. and
everywhere that Mollie went
he emigrated to.
He went with her to church
oue day —the folks hi-la rious
grew Ut see him walk ds-intuw-
Iv into D» aon Allen’s pew.
The worthy deacon quickly
let his angry imssion rise, an
give it an unehristiau kick be
tween the sad brown eyes.
This landed raitttny in the
aisle; the deacon follow ed
fust, and raised lii* foot again,
but ah! that first kick was
his last.
For Mr. Sheep walk, si
slowly Itack ubout a rod *tis
s;iid, and ere the deacon could
retreat, it si.mm! him on his
head.
The congregation then aro*o
and went for that ere sheep,
hut several well directed butts
just pilled them in a heap.
Then rushed'they straight-
way for the door with curses
long mid loud, while rummy
struck the hindmost mail anil
shot him through the crowd.
The minister had often
heard that kindness would
subdue the fiercest I vast—
“All!” then lie said, “I'll try
that game on you.”
And so he kindly, gently
called. Dome rummy, mutiny,
mm; to see the people abuse
yon so, I grieved and sorry
am!
With kind and gentle words
lie conic from dial tall puljdt
down, saying, rummy, rummy,
ram; rain, rummy, rum, best
sheep ill the town.
The ram look.-d meek, and
on lie on mo with, rummy tum-
my, ram; ram. raniiny, ram-
my, lummy, rummy, nun; the
nice pretty ram.
The ram quite dropped its
humble air, and rose from olT
his feet, and when the parson
lit lie lay helicalh the hind-
most seat.
As he shot out (lie open
door, and r!osi*d|it with a slain,
he named a California town, I
lLink 'twns, “Yottha dam!” —
Modern Argosy.
The 8m A»lo*Io l.ifkt,
lika “h
politicians, owl says i
•Dsn isdepi
atwapnpers ars lbs
■sal arwils slaves
■sr. TWy bars an party to
l|kl far, and ■ssi Uw m4
Ituilnmil Notes.
Jnv Gould spent last week
in Chicago, endeavoring to
form a Southwestern jiasscn
ger jHM.I, The matter was r*'
felled to a committee of three,
with power to act.”
Worn on the Southern Pa
citic from Kl Paso down the
K!o Grande to Fort (Juilimiii,
whore a junction is to be iorm-
e.l w ilh ftie Texas and Pacific
track, in progressing rapidly,
and will be completed to that
station in a short time.
It is expected that the New
Orleans and Pacific will Itc in
running order by the 1st of
ScptemlsT.
The Morgan road has con
tracted with the Phranix Iron
Company for bridgea, which
will oe used in the extension
of tiie C4»mjinny's lines.
The Texas-Mexican Railway
Company state that they will
make Galveston tiie eastern
terminus of their line, provid-
ed the city will give ♦1/50,000
in cash and a right-of way in-
side the sea wall. The com-
mittee of citiaens hare asked
for twenty days In which to
consider the proj)ositian made
by the Texas-Mexican.
A Happy Woman.
Home one who knows where-
of be writes has this to say of
that household treasure, a
bright and hapjvy woman :
A happy woman ! Is not she
the veiy sparkle and sunshine
of life t a woman who is ha|>-
py because she cant help it—
whose smile evea the coldest
sjwinkle of raisfortnns cannot
dampen. Men moke a terriWe
mistake when they marry for
beauty, for talent, or for style;
the sweetest wives are those
who possess the mag dseeveTof
high or low!
tain of W bs
musicaflj i
■ poor,
no dlf*
bright liltlt loan-
■boles ap just as
The P*sou Wvtmtutt non**
M««wOwlfav*a*tli»faM» 9m ans
SSSSffiS
Mtiiionc, Ilio N'argiiiin rciirgielc,
is in a pr. k of trouble. Ilia pat-
ty coutiols only ubuilt .‘Ki,000
votes, and the Kcpubliuaii party
alMHit K.MNIII; it requires a lit*
sioii ol llii’so two eleineuta to de-
fc.rt tin! Democrats, tmt the Re-
i.'tjiisters anil Ibqiublicanii can't
ngreo npon a plalforiti, the Ito-
publicans baiug opjio«<Ml to ropu-
dialion, unit if tlireo tickets are
placed in tho Oel.l the Democrats
are sure to win. Ilcncc, tlio
trouble of Mr. Malione and the
des|KHiilriicy of tlio Itepublicmis.
H ti said that the President
and G<*n. Wickham, the leading
Republican in the state, aro bit-
terly opposed to • anion with
the Itepadiators, and it this bo
true, nu.1 the Republicans make
nominations for state officers, tbs
IIemocr.its will carry the otato
try a largo majority.
Hud. wsris as Bill Msbono
should be promptly sal from tho
body of the Houth and kioked out
of t lie lend ol “DW*."
Paul, excisimcd tho fair
daughter of a California bo-
nanza king, addressing one of
h<T suitors, paw has settled
(A00,!W0 on out, and 1 thought
there’ lie no harm in telling
you. Plorinde, he said, am- *
oust/fingering a few nlcklee
in his waist coat pocket, and
striving to hide the evidences
of the profound Interest which
the communication excited.
Plorinde, do yon think I'm so
sordid as to let such s consid-
eration affect me t Hcl she
added, nonchalantly, I didn’t
appose you’d care mack, so
engaged myself to Mr. Sfoker
ist night! D was a teu strike,
and be flopped, but she was a
cool girl, and summoning j>
servant told him tosstthsmrf-
few out on the .beck steep
until he IsH tiffin.—WaUis.
'J
f
I
bs «H
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Bowers, Tom M. The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 3, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 6, 1881, newspaper, July 6, 1881; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth895745/m1/1/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sammy Brown Library.