The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1906 Page: 2 of 4
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The BatesYille Herald
A Weekly Publication.
trKo. C HERMAN. Editor
LEADER-NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
Official Organ of Zavala Connty.
Subscription $1.00 a Year.
Advertising rates on application.
Entered in Post office of Bates-
ville, Texas, as second class mail
matter. _—
The subscription price of the
Herald is SI 00 per year.
Announcements.
We are authorized to announce Jno.
T. Briscoe, as a candidate for the
Legislature, subject to the action ot
Democrat primaries._
Announcements.
The undersigned hereby announces
himself a candidate for re-election to
the office of Sheriff and Tax Collector
of Zavala county, subject to the ac-
tion of the Democratic primary elec-
tion. if held, and, if no primary elec-
tion is held in Zavala county, then
subject to the action of the voters at
the ensuing November election.
C. M. Nratherlin.
I hereby announce myself as a can-
didate for re-election to the office of
county judge of Zavala county, sub-
ject to the action of the Democratic
primaries, in case such primaries are
ordered, otherwise subject to the votes
at the General Election next Novem-
lM>P o. A. Mills.
The undersigned hereby announces
himself as a candidate for the office of
District and County Clerk of Zavala
county, subject to the action of the
Democratice primaries of said county,
in case such primaries are ordered,
and in case such primaries are not or-
dered, then subject to the votes at the
general election next November.
T. H. TAYLOR.
The undersigned hereby announces
himself as candidate for re-election to
the office of District and County Clerk
of Zavala county, subject to the action
of the Democratic primaries of said
county, in case such primaries are
ordered, and in case such primaries
are not ordered, the subject to votes
at the general election next November
W. T. CHILDRESS.
For County Treasurer.
I hereby announce myself as a can-
didate for re-election to the office of
County Treasurer of Zavala County,
subject to the Democratic primaries,
if anv are held, and, in case such
primaries are not held, then subject
to the action of the voters at the next
general election in November, respt.
Being strongly solicited by a large"
number of citizens of Zavala county,
1 hereby announce myself as a candi
date for the office of County Treasurer
at the ensuing November election.
Respectfully,
D. A. Harrison, M. D.
For Sheriff and Tax Collector.
I herewith submit my name and an-
nounce myself as a candidate for elec-
tion to the office of sheriff and tax
collector of Zavala county, subject to
the Democratic primaries if any are
held, and, in case such primaries are
not held, then subject to the action of
the voters at the next general election
in November. Respectfully,
Clint. Mathews.
For Tax Assessor.
At the solicitation of a number of
Zavala county citizens, I hereby an-
nounce myself as a candidate for the
office of Tax Assessor of said county
at the ensuing general election.
Respectfully, J. B. KING.
* hereby announce myself as a can-
didate fcm selection to the office of
tax assessor of Zavala county, and
respectfully solicit the support of all
voters in Zavala county at the ensu-
ing November election.
J. H. SAWYERS.
Resolution?! of Sympathy.
Whereas our sister and co-worker
Mrs. Edith Hooper is bowed in grief
over death of her sister. Miss Emma
Bates, who departed this life July 31,
1906 to meet her Saviour who said:
“Come unto me all ye that are hea\>
laden and I will give your rest”
therefore be it resolved:
A SILLY TOY.
The Way the Toothbrush \Vn* at ■' «r»t
Heirii rtletl.
Colouial diaries and letter* m^ke it
plain that our unfortunate ancestors
suffered much from jumping tooth
aches, swelled faces and the early loss
or forcilne extraction of teeth which at
a later period might have been saved
1 That in her death the community I to render their owners many years
has lost a noble friend, and Mrs.
Hooper has lost a devoted sistei
whose place can never be fiiled.
2 That we, the W. H. M. S. of
Batesville, extend to Mrs. Hooper
aud family our deepest sympathy in
this hour of bereavement and com-
mend them to God who is able to com-
fort in the deepest distress.
3 That a copy of these resolutions
be sent to the Batesville Herald,-one
be spread on the minutes of the socie-
ty and one he sent the sorrowing
family.
Mrs. M Martin
Mrs. O. A. Mills
Mrs. J Vainright
further service. No wonder, since the
care of tiie teeth was little understood,
and that little often but negligently
practiced.
Toothpicks were known: ihe tooth-
brush was not. although rough substi-
tutes were employed, made of flatten-
ed sticks, split and pounded at one end
to a stiff, fibrous fringe. Toothbrushes
when first introduced were regarded
as by no means important accessories
to the toilet, hut rather as minor lux-
uries and suitable for women only.
The diary of a London merchant
trading to the colonies has this entry:
GOOD PROMOTERS.
Tllty 3! nut PoRNeKK I lie Power of In-
ttpirlnff Con tide nee.
A story is told aliout a young fellow
who applied at a lug banking estab-
lishment for a position aud who upou
being-told that all tie clerkships were
filled said quite confidentially, “I've
never worked at the promoting busi-
ness, but can't you send me to some
frieud of yours who needs a pro-
motor'/'’
Strange indeed it is that almost ev-
ery one of the successful promoters of
the present day is a man who went
into the exceedingly difficult work
with scarcely more preparation than
bad gone the venturesome youth of this
yarn.
F2LKS
THE PHANTOM VASE.
An FnsIlT Mnde Toy Thnt Will Af-
ford I.o«* of Amownnil.
Hare you ever seen a potter's wheel?
It is one of the oldest, simplest and
most interesting of human inventions.
It is merely a round, level table which
is rotated rapidly by means of a
treadle. The potter puts a lump of wet,
soft clay on the center of the wheel
and sets the wheel going. Then he
iru- ... . , . presses his hands on the whirling lump
Gifted with good address, control of ^ uml lo u KroWS i,efoie your
eves into a eolumn. a bowl or a beauti*
the English language, fluency of speech
aud determination, a uiau who em-
barks in the fit-id lias in his possession
the qualities that have made many
promoters rich and powerful. Many of
them were lawyers to begin with.
Others were life insurance agents.
‘Bought a Toothbrush for my wife, j Qne or two sold stock in a small way
The Plain Plucker.
If a burn or a bruise afflicts yon, rub
it on.
Then before you scarcely know it all
the trouble will be gone.
For an aching joint or mussle oo the
same.
It extracts all pains and poisons,
plucks the sting and heals the lame.
Hunt’s Lighting Oil does this.
wheh, used together with salte water,
very strong, and a wasshe of Herbs, j
she is told will keep her Teethe from !
Committee, falling out or getting bollowe. The |
salte and Ilerbes may well prove ■
strengthening to her Gtimines well. |
are teuder. but for the brush it soemes
hut a silly Toy. hardly like to ware
the worth of its price and scarce clean-
ley save when new. But she must
have it. being a new- thing late from
France.”
In the famous collection of the let-
ters of the Verne.v family, as well, the
toothbrush is referred to as “an ele-
gant trifle, now used by the ladies of
Paris,
Do You Itch.
If so, you know the sensation is not
an agreeable one, and hard to cure
unless the proper remedy is used.
Hunt’s Cure is the King of all Skin
remedies. It cures promptly any itch-
ing trouble known. No matter what
name or place. One application re-
lieves—one box is absolutely guaran-
anteed to cure.
I have for sale several thousand
acres of excellent farming land, in
one body, in the best part of Zavala
county, well improved, also about
500 head of cattle, all at reasonable
prices.
Tins is a fine bargain. Write or
see me at once.
Geo. C. Herman, Batesville, Tex.
John Zachman visited Batesville
Thursday.
L. O. C. Byrd was a visitor to
Batesville this week.
M. E. Burkhalter, of Loma Vista,
visited Ratesyille Saturday last.
C. Vancleve made a trip to Loma
Vista Saturday returning Sunday,
C. N. Carmichael made a trip to
Uvalde the latter part of the week.
J. D, Mayberry and his son Johny
were visitors to Batesville this week.
Herman Gilbert was a visitor to
Batesville the latter part of the week.
Pat Vivan passed through here on
his way to Uvalde and other points.
Gradually each of these meu came to
see that carving out a new way for
himself would give biui a wider and
more substantial future. And then at
that moment the promoter was horn.
But whether these promoters have
won their spurs by organizing big con-
cerns or corporations or by selling i
those already in the field there is not j
one of them hut will tell you that most i
of his success was due to his power to i
inspire confidence. A promoter that
can’t make "the other fellow" believe
in him and in his proposition might
better be cleaning the streets. Ho
never will succeed.
The successful promoter must he
But when Sallv Annis. a colonial able not only to look men in the eye
. , . . . . i • , . : but he !iuis;t also he able to face the
belle, wrote of it to her sister she had, j ................n„,t
like the London merchant's wife, good
ful vase, according to the way in which
lie handles it.
Now I am going to show you how to
make a little machine which may he
called, fancifully, a potter’s wheel, be-
cause you can make vases on it, but
you will not have to muss with wet
clay, because the vases will be phan
tom vases.
The wheel is a round card fastened
to one end of a smooth, round stick,
like sr pencil or penholder, which forms
the axle. Now open a large English
hopes of its proving of more than
trifling value. Her seafaring father
had just brought her one, along with
other gifts.
"Besides these, and ye sum lie
combe, he hrt. me a new mouth-brush
made of eyvor.v,” she wrote, "the hack
parte inlayed very pretty with silver:
and ye brissles long and stiffe anil sett
very Brine: wch lie is assured will in Ip
nie of my Tooth Akes: wch. you will
guess deer Judy I do pray it may.”—
Youth’s Companion.
most discouraging circumstances and
fight his way through them. “Fail” is
a word the meaning of wb'.ch lie must
never learu.
And the rewards? They range from
millions to a fee of $7 that was once
paid to a promoter who successfully
promoted the amalgamation of two
competing bootblaoking establishments,
—San Francisco Chronicle.
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles.
srutsssf'iTeSsssss*!^
fails to cure any case, no matter of How long
-standing, in 6 to U (lavs. First Application
Hives e.vse ami rest. 50e. If your druggist hasn t
itsend rule in stamps and it will lie forwarded
FOR THE HOUSEWIFE.
50c in stamps
post-paid by Paris Medicine
ill be lorwar
Oo St. I/mis, Mo
Feed Yard
Leave your horses with me
when you go to San Antonio;
at Hotel yard on North side of
Uvalde Depot.
W. EJ. Prop-
Dr. D. A. Harrison and N. W
Holmes aie Wi^turncd Mica mining is one of the greatest
from a visit of several weeks in Lavaca | industries in North Carolina. Mica is
county. j found in ail sorts of blocks of various
„ ,, , ! thicknesses and shapes and can be split
Mr. and Mrs. James Gravell passed am, resplit almost atl illflllitun) on unti,
through Batesville on their way to* q becomes the thin, flexible wafer of
commerce. The material is by nature
imbedded or scattered through the feld-
Loma Vista.
Ernest Butler visited his parents
Friday and Saturday returnig to the
ranch Sunday.
Mrs. L. K. West has returned home
from Sanderson after having spent a pf slate' From the mines It la taken to
THE HINDOO FOOT,
It Is Quite IlHTereut From Guru In Its
Format ion.
) Iii the native quarters of the towns
| of India the strange spectacle may he
! seen of a butcher seizing a piece of
| meat in his hands aud cutting it in
| two with a stroke of his knife held be-
tween the first and second toes of his
foot. The shoemaker uses no last, but
turns the unfinished shoe with his feet,
while his hands are busy in shaping it.
j So the carpenter holds with his great
i toe the board he is cutting, and the
i wood turner handles his tools as well
! with his toes as with his fingers,
i This use of the feet to assist the
j hands in tlieir labor is not, however.
the mere result of practice, but is
; principally due to the fact that the
! Hindoo foot is quite different from
ours in its anatomical conformation,
ant to pour down a sink is a small Tiie ankle pf the Hindoo and the ar-
quautity of charcoal mixed with wa- | ticulation of the back of the foot per-
mit considerable lateral motion. Then
the toes possess a surprising mobility.
The great toe can he moved, freely in
nil directions, and the first and second
_____much as five-eighths of
an inch across at the base of the toes
and two inches at their extremities.
The articulation of the hip is also pe-
culiar, and this renders it easier to use
the toes in handling the objects by en-
abling the Hindoo to sit in a squatting
posture much more comfortably than
we can do. A similar formation of the
feet and toes is found among the An-
amese. but it is not. as might be sup-
posed, a common tiling among barlia-
Melted butter will not make a good
cake.
Veal should be white, dry and close
grained.
The colder eggs are the quicker they j
will froth.
To make good pastry tiie ingredients !
must be ice cold.
Nutmegs should be grated at the ,
blossom end first.
A brush dipped in salt water should ,
be used in cleaning bamboo furniture. I
Good macaroni is of a yellowish tint, i
does not break readily in cooking anil
swells to two or three times its bulk.
A simple and very efficient dismfect-
suiall
Warm bread and cake should be cut
with a knife the blade of which hag
boon heated by standing it in boiling
water.--------—.
spar in masses large or small, close to-
gether or far apart, and is blasted from
the pocks by means of dynamite, the
purer veins being found between walls j rous savage tribes,
~ n____xi. _ ..... »x ____ nntiirjillv thinks;
month or so with her daughter, Mrs.
S. H. Martin.
Remember.
It’s not how you live, but how’s
your liver. If not in perfect order,
make it so by using Simujons’ Liver
Purifier,—tin boxes only. Its the
surest, safest and most agreeable aid
to that organ ever put up,
the shops, where It is split Into thin
sheets, trimmed into regular forms and
made ready for the market, the price
varying with the size and color of the
sheets. The average size is about
4 by 6. though rare sheets of 21 by IS
inches are sometimes found.
TOCURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refijipj the money if it fails to
care. W. Grove’s signature is on each
box. 25c. .
C. Vancleve and family left for
their ranch after spending two weeks
in Batesville. , J We have buyers for large and
Hon. John N. Garner lias presented farms and ranches. If you
the Batesville public school with a
One naturally thinks of the resem-
blance to a monkey which a human be-
ing using both feet arid hands In the
manner described above must present,
and yet the Hindoo foot is not at all
like the foot of an ape or monkey.
The great toe is not opposed to the
other toes like a thumb, as occurs with
the monkey, and accordingly the pedal
dexterity of the Hindoos is not to be J wind, and these winds nearly always
IHE PHANTOM VASE DEVICE.
walnut, take out the meat and cut
away a little of each shell at the ends,
so that when you put' the shells to
gether you have a smooth, round hole
at each end of the hollow walnut. One
bole should fit loosely the sharpened
end of the axle, while the other must
be large enough to take in the full di-
ameter of the axle.
Make a third hole, still larger, in the
side of the nut, put the axle in place in
one of the shells, fasten a fine cord to
it opposite the third hole, pass the cord
through this hole, put on the other shell
and fasten the shells together with glue
or wax. taking care not to get any in
the holes. Make a small hole length
wise in the top of the axle—if you have
used a penholder the hole is already
there and your potter's wheel is com-
plete.
To make the phantom vase, stick a
hairpin, bent into any shape you choose,
in the end of the axle above the card-
board and wedge it tight. Then, hold-
ing the nut in yotir left hand, turn the
wheel until you have wound up the
cord and pull the latter. The wheel
spins rapidly and on Vtp of it appears
the “phantom vase” formed by the
hairpin, which revolves so .quicj>jv„f}y},t
just as you see a circle of fire when
you whirl a burning stick. The ap-
pearance of tiie vase is peculiar and
very pretty. It looks something like
glass, and you can see through it. Its
form can be changed by bending the
hairpin, and so you can make a bowl,
a column—in short, anything round!
as the potter can on his wheel—Now
York Mail.
The Trade Winds.
Allusion Is often made in books and
in newspapers to the trade winds, but
comparatively few young people know
exactly what those winds are. Thev
are produced by the inrush of eold air
from the poles to take the place of the
column of heated air that ascends from
the equator. The daily rotation of the
earth toward the east makes the air
from the north a northeast wind and
the air from the south a southeast
taken as an Indication of simian de-
scent.—Pearson's Weekly.
fine Wall Map.
W. H. Brown passed through
Batesville with a bunch of cattle on
his way to Uvalde.
J. M. Williams has sold about
2500 head of steer cattle to W. G.
Johnson, of Cotulla.
Mr. Pentecost, of Devine, has been
in Zavala county for several days,
prospecting for a home.
Several of the candidates for coun-
ty offices have been out shelling the
woods during the week.
Charles Trebes. of Van Ormy, has
purchased section 23, G. W. T. & P.
Ry. Co., from William Cassin.
Mr. T. 1. Erskine has returned from
San Antonio, where he has been un-
der the treatment of a physician.
Rev. E. Y. S. Hubbard filled his
want your’s sold, list it with
| Address Stroinan & Hector, Uvalde,
Texas.
Plowing With Oxen.
There can be little doubt that the ox
| was the earliest beast employed for
the plow. A white bull and a white
| cow were yoked together to draw the
furrow for making the walls of Rome,
j Greeks and Romans employed oxen in
plowing: asses only for sandy soils
j When the plowman had finished his
day’s labor he turned the instrument
ppside down, and the oxen went Lome
dragging Its tail aud handle over the
surface of the ground, a scene describ-
ed by Horace.
The yoking together of ox and ass
was expressly forbidden by the Jaw of
Moses and is made the ground of a lu-
dicrous comparison by Plautus. Ulys-
ses. when be feigned madness in order
to avoid going on the Trojan expedi-
tion.
Other t»e» For Teeth,
The teeth, says the Medical Fort-
nightly, are said to have a higher of-
fice than that commonly assigned to
them—namely, that of merely crushing
or masticating the food. They are to
be regarded as endowed with a tactile
sense, a discriminating faculty corre-
sponding to that possessed by the mus-
cles and nerves of the eye and ear.
They have an extreme delicacy of
cernment both as to whether the ob-
jects comminuted be suitable as food
or such as will irritate the delicate lin-
ing of the digestive passages, They
speedily detect the smallest particle of
cinder that has found its way into a
freshly baked biscuit.
A TrnnxmIterator.
Black Sarah was busily employed
about our small northern kitchen when
I had occasion to go out there and by
way of being pleasant said, “You are
from the south, are you not. Sarah?”
Law, yes, miss!” was the answer.
Born in the south?” I continued.
J.G. Smyth & Co.
, »
Uvalde, Texas
Are headquarters for everything in
Wire, Roofing, Agricultural Imple-
ments Builders Hardware, Shelf
Hardware, Paints, Oils^jiarncss^
FURNITURE.
Get Our Prices Before
Buying.
I. CO. G. N.
THE TEXAS RAILROAD
la the most direct line from TEXAS to the
NORTH, EAST and SOUTHEAST. Fast
and convenient schedules, Excellent Dining
Stations, Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars,
Chair Cars and Parlor Cars. Only one night
ST. LOUIS and MEMPHIS. Making con-
nection with all the Northern and Eastern
lines. NEW LIMITED TRAIN to OLD
MEXICO via LAREDO.
V
I M
For information regarding rates and routes see l. ft- G. If;,
agents or write
: L “• J- rare*-. .»*
PALESTINE, TEXAS
******** l -l-1 !■ 11 I 1.1 It ■MUM I'M 1 11 H |-f-f , fm j j-
a. ::
blow ip the same direction on the At
•antic and the Pacific ocean, where
there is nothing In their way to ob-
struct or divert them. For this reason
they f’.’e relied upon and made use of
by sa.lors. Many persons suppose that
their name, “trade winds,” comes from
their value to commerce, but it 1^ more
likely that the allusion is to ihely trad-
ing or “treading” in cue direction.
Hon- Long frefore lie Catches Up?
Jolniny—When I was two years old
anil big brother six, was ho three times
as old as I?
School ma ster-.-Ves.
Johnny—And when I was four and
he was eight, was he twice as old as I?
Schoolmaster—Certainly.
Johnny—And now I’m eight and he’s
twelve, is he only once and a half as
old again as I am?
Schoolmaster-Yes. Why?
Johnny—Well, how long will it take,
me to catch up to him ?—Chums. j
Geo. 0. HEPjj AN,
attqrt ,ey.at.law
Laoidl y i Garner Abstract & Land Co
1T -nsiness a Specialty and
orrespmidence Solicited.
_ sville, - Texas.
Tk«r»«u*nov»
States than
iccount of t
v»AIoC*tl Pattern* told In th-Unlte4| »»
anjr 9l*cr make of bittern*. This ia on, j 7
r Style, accuracy and simplicity.
Fashiot^Jw*
resirs subscription (la numbers) coats AO cenim
lumber, a cents. Every subscriber gets
;e,rn If res. Subscribe today.
LUy fa Wanted. H.v4*om*Pri**f
iOeral cash commission. Patt>^»v (Jatalpcq^er
signs) and Premium Catalog ,sT*howinj? y
H*l lr»*. Mir«. JfcCAglf
S OT
de
JOO
.em turns
.'•w York
JEPOT hotel
Rate $1.00 per day. First
class service.
Miss V. M. Amelio, Prop.
This Will Interest
Ladies Only
wakT SISK 25*T*. OHANIT*.
guanm
»v> m
ud as
ud ent
Conn ml rums.
Why are fowls the most eco^^;
things a farmer can keep? Bee# use
for every grain they give a, peck
editor of thii
1)7 responsible
iu
1 . . . plowed with an ox and a horse
regular appointment here Sunday and together.
preached to a large congregation, I --—---—
Gladys, the little daughter of John Th® !'*orth &*«r.
Barnhart, had the misfortune to break norTb star is exactly in line with
’•Original,,. ' th^arW^Int?*f ,
HoL'camTanlom"5 re**'-Won“rt j ™ shooting and'tbe S
„-',VlieVVaS Ruth very rude to Boaz?
M hen she pulled his ears aud trod on ‘
If It Fails the Money’s Yours.
Thousands of boxes of Hunt’s Cure
are being sold by the Southern Drug-
gist daily, for tiie simple reason that
people are rapidly tindtng out that it
is the best cure for any itching disease
ever discovered. The first applica-
tion relieves, and one box positively
guaranteed to cure any one case.
her arm Thursday by a fall from a
donkey.
G. YV. Hamer has contracted to
purchase section ‘21, G. W. T. A P.
the poles of the earth—that Is to say,
It is exactly north of the earth—which
Is the reason why its position with ref-
erence to us does not change by the
revolution of the earth upon Its axis.
Onr AVay In Life.
It does not take much to determine* his corn,
the lives ,,f most of us. We naturally
follow the Examples about us, and, as '
a rule, we rise or fall according to the j
strongest current in which we live.— !
Success Magazine.
Ry. Co., east of Batesville, from reason its position does not seem
William Cassin. t0 chaB*e b-v the annual revolution of
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brown have L^maly billions of milcs^awav that
purchased a home at Uvalde and ex- the difference in direction from \lltter-
pect to move there about the first of ent points of the earth’s orbit is im-
the coming year. j perceptible.
Wipe out tiie past, trust the future
ind live in a glorious now.—Towne.
f To CureaCoIThTOnTDay
I Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, js m /,
Sev— Miffion boxes soM in past 12 months. This ftignafnr^ v2.
box. 25c.
SAN ANTONIO
HjTEBNftTiONftL FA j R
OCT. 31st ta m. nth
L<(R Salk Lot 1. Block •>, ccn*ocr
of Court House Square and Leona
Alley, town of Batesville, with im-
provements. Price $150. Avplv to
Geo. C. Herman, Batesville, Texas.
My Garden.
Each has a garden In his heart,
Jry mother says; the thoughts ar
seeds.
And soon or late they all come up
And blossom Into deeds.
I'd like mine to be beautiful
And not Just full of weeds.
—May Morgan In St. Nicholas:
FOR SALE.—5000 acres or
excellent farming land, with im-
provements, on Leona River,
cheap. This is a real bargain to i
the right man. Write or see i
Geo. C, Herman. Batesville,!
Texas.
I'lli SALE. — Eight high grade
short horn yearling bulls at my ranch
near Batesville. p. Faison.
W/NCHE
ACi)
ii
powoITr L°h£tguSnM°sKh Ells
Good shells in yor US
in the field or a „ ^ mCan a Sood b*X
Winchester «*i score « the trap.
Smokeless Powder Sh,.ii ^ “RePeater'’
Always sure-fi re S are good shells,
spread of shot and prT8 glV,ng an ev«n
rrin
dealers Keep them
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Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1906, newspaper, October 11, 1906; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974855/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .