Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 13, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 13, 1940 Page: 1 of 36
thirty six pages : ill. ; page 31 x 23 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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F
TH* WEATBEB
Cents
10
Partly Cloudy
FINAL
r«n Detail* Fa** *
m
THIRTY-SIX PAGES TODAY
Vol. 4, No. 13
HARLINGEN, McALLEN, BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1940
BULGARI
H
Tom Mix Killed In Arizona Auto Accident
IN COMMAND
*
*
‘The Old Army Game’ Ousts Reserves From Army Jobs
1
Weaker
; I
1
A
*
maximum
Tom Mix. femoiis movie star and circus performer who
I ports that several points of friction '
*
(CeattnarS an Fa«* t. Cal. •>
j between the United States and Rus-
(Caatiaa** »■ F*«e ». Cal.
1
HARLINGEN — Arrest
of
Another Valleyite Is
4
Badly Hurt
in
(CaatinaM aa F«*» 1. Cal. *)
In Brownsville
742 To Register In
They Secede
reason it could not be approved the
WASHINGTON — oP — Mohawk
(CaatiaaM aa F**» ». Cal. •)
a written statement from the eigh»-
Deputy Slain; Thre~
i tensity of previous assaults.
Arvada. Denver suburb.
I “to force and coercion.”
(Cantina** aa Far* » Cat. 4)
Mystery Blast?
(Cantina** aa Pat* S. Cal. t>
«
A. S. Johnson, one of 40 assistants.
'beard.
J
I
A
J
A
A
Texas ...
Oklahoma
u
I
Arkansas
Baylor . .
Notre Dams ... 26
Georgia Tech . .20
Rice 23
Louisiana State 0
Fr nr?-r US Senter
From Illinois Dies
DYKSTRA TO
HEAD DRAFT
Chain Store Gambling
System Smashed
Insurance Racket
Probed Further
Two Largest Vessels
Are Charted
Renews Assurances
Of U. S. Strength
‘BET BARON’
CONVICTED IN
TAX TRIALS
Turks Say Bayonets
Facing Nazis
First Shipments To
Roll This Week
19
16
742 pens, ink bottles, blotters, desks,
chairs and other equipment by Wed-
Mc ALLEN—E. G. Marsh of Houston, federal game warden with
the United States Biological survey, and officials of the Texas Game.
Fish and Oyster commission, will conduct a meeting in McAllen Tuesday.
As head of the draft. Dykstra will
receive $10,000 a year.
be next Wednesday.
The 57-year-old educator, who at-
S.M.U 7
Pittsburgh 7
That the somber scene passing I
before his own eyes drew from
Lehrbas so poignant a description
of French despair tells more than
any factual narration of the trag-
edy of that moment for France.
Liberty Still There
Yet if the light of liberty is
dead in French hearts as well as
in defeat-dimmed French eyes,
history is a lying jade. Her in-
terpretations of the past are a
mock travesty of the truth about
man. which disclo H hyn sunk
to the level of the lesser beasts
with seif survival, the desire to
live on under whatever condi-
tions. the only law’ that guides
his action.
That is the cynical assumption
that seems the foundation stone of
c
English Train Wreck
Kills 3
Texas Aggie* .. 7
U.C.L.A 0
■ -X
Iji A' ei.- >
Northwestern . . 6
Ohio State 3
1
/
I
* |r ”
■
■ ‘
(An Interpretative Article)
By KIRKE L. SIMPSON
Not many men have witnessed
at close hand within a span of
less than three years what might
prove the death agonies of three
free nations.
Lloyd Lehrbas. roving the war
fronts on Associated Press assign-
ments. has done just that. He
watched China survive, bloodied
but unbowed, the irst dreadful
Japan-se onslaughts at Shanghai.
He saw Poland smashed by Ger-
many's massive war machine, and
fled with defeat-stunned Polish
refugees into Rumania. Then in
France he watched again while
“the light went out of a nation’s
eyes" in its numbed realization
of utter disaster at German hands.
Indian Nation Won’t
Be Drafted
I nesdav
Had $6,000 In Cash
In Pockets
REGISTRARS IN
DRAFT NAMED
FDR PLEDGES
U. S. DEFENSE
OF AMERICAS!
ONE MAN DIES
IN CAR CRASH
CLARKSVILLE. Ark.—<*»
—A sneezing attack that
started Oct. 3 and then sub-
sided with a treatment of
garlic, came back to Juani-
ta Lollis and made her much
weaker Saturday.
None was injured in a fender
brush between a Stotler-Burdette
ambulance and a Rio Hondo school
teacher's car at Four Corners as
the ambulance raced to the scene
of the crash. The ambulance
brought Cantu and the dead man s
body here.
served on th* World War draft
f when
Seago distributed copies of regula-
tions governing the event. Several
attorney members of the advisory
board explained legal points that
registrars may expect to decide.
The 22nd precinct at San Benito
had the largest list of workers in
the county, appointments totaling
53. while the 23rd precinct at Ran-
gerville had the smallest with only
6 The problem of getting together
Mix Visited Valley Thuge liners
TO EVACUATE
ORIENT YANKS
Insists On Peace
He said that this country, as in
1798. insists on the peaceful use of
the Atlantic and Pacific for trade
and commerce. He said the Amer-
ican nations were united in their
determination to resist the threats
of dictators and rejected the doc-
trine of appeasement
He renewed assurances that Brit-
ain would receive all aid short of
war.
He voiced confidence in the ability
of the Americas, bound together in
the spirit of good neignbors. to re-
sist any infiltration of "alien politi-
cal and economic ideas which would
destroy our freedom and democ-
racy.”
ALSACE GERMANIZED
LES VERRIERES. Franco-Swiss
Frontier — — Travelers reaching
here from Alsace Lorraine reported
the Nazis are “Germanizing" that
region by r oting up thousands of
French families and replacing them
w’ith Germans from as far away as
CAR CRASHES
ON DETOUR;
STAR ALONE
Draft Board Member
Ha* War Experience
HARLINGEN - Chief Registrar
J. A. Seagrove revealed Saturday
he would have at least one expe-
rienced man helping register
draftees in precinct 30 her* Wed-
f VALLEY SUNDAY £*71 4 4
far - monitor -3terald
Cat**** a* Mann* «•*•* ■»> at gaatom** la *arliar»a Tcaaa
same old game that it practiced
in 1917 of discriminating against
officers of the national guard. .."
Later, after telephone conver-
sations with war department of-
ficials. Johnson telegraphed
headquarters of the eighth corps
area. Sam Houston. Tex. saying
that the department had advised
him the corps area commander
could make waivers "where
physical deficiency is trivial and
not serious as is the case with
most of thes« guard officers if
I am advised correctly.”
The German army rolled int®
Bucharest. Rumania. Saturday, with
Swastika banners flying and band*
playing Deutschland Uber Alles
and the Nazi rallying hymn, th*
| Horst Wessel song.
By nightfall the capital had th*
j
the car. Bello Luna. Harlingen, and
Alberto Chavez. La Fena. suffered
minor bruises.
State Patrolman J. O. Musick
said the car went out of control
when the two men in the front
seat attempted to adjust the wind-
shield. The vehicle came to rest
30 feet from the highway.
WASHINGTON- up) -President
Clarence A. Dykstra of Wisconsin
university accepted Saturday the
post of director of selective service
I and it was expected efforts would
be mad* to have the Senate eon-
• firm his nomination speedily inas-
i much as the draft registration is to
1 • We include the right to the peaceful
use of the Atlantic and Pacific
Oceans. That has been our tradi-
tional policy.
"We of the Americas still consider
oceans
makers met so fruitlessly, the I
“big three"—Wibon. Lloyd George
and Clemenceau—faced a propos-
al by the allied generalissimo.
Ferdinand Foch. for a “cordon
samtaire" about Bolshevist Rus-
sia to imprison the virus of “Red"
world revolution. Foch planned
a military quarantine of Russia
to save democracy, otherwise
made “safe" by the war.
Wilson called for General Task-
er Bliss. No. 2 American soldier
in France. Bliss was a profess-
ional soldier who loved his trade,
and was more accustomed to th*
lurid language of the barracks
and saddle-blanket bivouacs than
to the use of diplomacy. But h*
was also a thinker, a deep stu-
dent of history.
night en route to San Antonio. Tex.
Mexican immigration officers
brought the Minneapolis. Minn,
man to the border. He remained
here only a few minutes.
LONDON——Three persons, or
more, were killed Saturday night
any many injured in the mysterious
wreck of a London-bound express
which railway workers thought was
caused by a bomb.
There was some doubt, however.
JM to whether the express—speed-
f frig toward London in the blackout
—had in fact been hit by a Nau
bomb or had t en wrecked by some-
thing else.
One possibility discussed was that
aome such implement as a wheel-
% barrow had pitched from a loading
platform and become entangled in
the wheels of the engine.
Porters at a nearby station said
they heard a loud screech followed ,
by a crash that “sounded just Uk* I
a bomb.” I
j German sources officially announ-
DENVER —(A*!— Undersheriff C. ced wuu
A quantity of lumber was set past
Wilson knew that The scholarly
statesman and the hard-bitten
soldier met at elbow touch on a
common ground in the history
books.
Bliss brushed aside discussion of
the Foch plan for a military
standpoint t He approached it as
a philosopher, an interpreter of
history. The Russian world re-
volution dream would die of its
own weight, by the verdict of his-
tory. he said, unless it embodied
a new idea that would better
man s relations with man and the
common lot in life. If it did con-
tain such an idea, he said, the
Foch quarantine would not halt it.
“Bayonets never stopped an
idea in the history of the world.”
added thu life-long man-at-arms
October 29. for civic leader-sportsmen interested in preservation of the
white wing. McAllen chamber of commerce officials announced Satur- i
day. traded national attention as city
Chinese Say 7,000
Japs Slaughtered
HONGKONG — ij» — Chines*
sources reported that Chinese mili-
tary forces had "annihilated" ap-
proximately' 7.000 Japanese troops
in a six-day battle south of the
Yangtze river in South Anhwei
Province.
<Picture At Right)
FLORENCE. Ariz. • - — Tom
Mix, 60. cowboy-actor and hero of
scores of western thrillers of the
silent film era, was killed 18 miles
south of here Saturday w’hen he
was pinned under his overturned
automobile on a highway detour.
Mix, whose colorful career as a
circus performer, soldier, law en-
forcement officer and motion picture
star made him the idol of millions
the world over, was traveling alone
from Tucson, Ariz., to Florence and
Phoenix.
Coroner E. O. Devine said Mix,
apparently died instantly after los-
ing control of his car. There will
b* no inquest The body was
brought here.
Two highway employes John Ad-
ams of Oracle, Ariz., and E. A.
Armenta* of Casa Grande. Ariz,
discovered the overturned vehicle.
Local investigators said Mix. who
left Tucson at 1 pm., was serving
as advance agent for a circus sched-
uled to show in Phoenix shortly.
The cowboy star was carrying $6,000
in cash. $1,900 in travelers' checks
and several valuable jewel*.
Mix worked as a cowboy in Texas.
Arizona. Wyoming and Montana
and won national riding and roping
contests at Prescott. Ariz.. and Can-
on City. Colo., in 1909 and 1910.
During the years when he was
(Onttnar* an Fao t. Cat. •)
British Bombers Do -----—— - - -
Berlin Little Hurt Indians of the St. Regis Reserva-
tion in New York state Saturday
disclaimed citizenship bestowed up-
on them by Congress in 1924. and
joined the Seneca nation in resist-
ing registration for selective mili-
tary service.
They said the Mohawk braves
would volunteer, as they did in
1 wars, if this country were
1 conflict. But
agree
the Baltic States.
Officials said no
taken on the proposal and it was
Deoorted Man Stops
Briefly At Laredo
LAREDO—The Laredn Times
learned Saturday that Marlow*
Merrick. American business man
deported from Mexico Saturday,
passed through here late Friday
ARMS RUMANIA BORDER
GERMAN ARMY
North Carolina .21
T.C.U 14
SPRINGFIELD. Hl—Wil-
liam H. Dieterich. 64. former
United State* senator from I’l<-
noi*. dropped dead Saturday night
of a heart attack tn his hotel
ro***.
Broadens Scop*
•’When we speak of defending
this western hemisphere." Mr.
Roosevelt declared, “we are speak-
ing not only of the territory of
North. Central and South America
and the immediately adjaent islands.
WASHINGTON Repre-
sentative Johnson <D-Oklai pro-
tested to the war department
Saturday against “what I am
convinced is a well-organized,
nation wide scheme on the part
of regular army officers" to re-
place “’valuable and efficient
national guard officers" with
regular army men.
In letters to Major General
Emory S. Adams, adjutant gen-
eral. and to the war department
surgeon general. Johnson said
that “unless the mattar is in-
fl. Fugate was shot to death and r _
three other persons were wounded afire, and one bomb crashed near forced ipto armed .....
early Saturday in a tavern melee at a hospital in a raid lacking the in- i they asserted, the; would not
BROWNSVILLE— T‘ ----
registrars, appointed by County
Clerk H D Seago Saturday, com-
The conference, which will be for Hidalgo and Starr counties, will mana$rr °T Cincinnati, agreed to
-------------------------------.1 J p.m .1 th, chamber o( ■ that tht. d.t.ns, th«e
versity board of regents granted the western hemisphere against
It was dis- j acts of aggression is the first factor
our
re-
affirm that policy lest there be any
Love Of Liberty Will Yet Help Defeated Nations Throw Off Yoke Of Conquerers, Says Expert; History Recalled
<C«nlin*»* Fa*» t Cel. S>
McRay Returns
DAYTON. O —President
cials said there were about 16.000 Roosevelt enunciated a policy of
Americans in the Orient. !total defense* of th? Americas
A suggestion has been made, it a««'nst a total attack from any seg-
or 17 600 compared tn 17.500 acres
last fall. There h no charge in th*
Texas change in the Florida acreage
but Texas increased firm 2 500 last
fall to 2.600 to the pre<ent time.
Plantings were still incomplete
when th* report was compiled
October 1.
near | Most of the Texas bean crops ar*
in fairly good condition but a good
general rain in th* Valley would
materially increase the probabl*
yield and Improve the quality. A
few beans are coming in from the
Eagle Pass district but the main
'Bayonets Never Stopped An Idea In The History Of The World’
nesday presented the county clerk s _ _____
By The Aseociated Press
SOFIA. Bulgaria—Bulgaria was
reported Saturday night to be
strengthening anti-aircraft defenses
on her Danube river frontier facing
Rumania and on the Plovdiv rail-
way line to Turkey.
Especially strong installations
were said to have been made across
the river from Giurviu, Rumanian
oil port where German trewps ar*
being garrisoned. Anti-aircraft
equipment made in Germany, com-
i plete even to sound detectors, was
reported appearing at other Bul-
garian points.
Authoritative source* pointed out
that Germany has been selling Bul-
garia considerable armament re-
cently in a plan of “military co-
ordination" among Bulgaria, Hun-
gary and the Axis.
The first Briton expelled from
| Bulgaria in years left Sofia Satur-
day. He was Snowden Hadley, a
garage operator, who in 1912 was a
flying instructor m Bulgaria's army
in the Balkan war against Turkey
and was reputed to have been th*
first military aviator to drop bombs.
identified as house managers.
Found guilty on three counts was
Stuart Brown, portrayed as the op-
erator of the syndicate's currency
exchange.
Three co-defendants — Edward
Wait. Andrew J. Creighton and
Reginald MacKay—were acquitted
at the conclusion of the biggest
trial involving gambling gentry in
the city’s recent history.
Johnson Is “Overlord"
Judge John P Barnes set October
17 for arguments on a motion for a
new trial.
Prosecutors contended that John-
son was the “overlord” of a chain
store style system that rivalled the
the projected German-Italian-Jap-
anese new order in Europe, in
Asia, and in Africa. It is the the-
sis of the law of the jungle, of
sheer force, abroad in the world:
but it challenges every lesson of
the recorded or legandary history
of man.
Symbols Of Hope
Britain's sturdy fight and
China’s stubborn refusal to be
vanquished are symbols that the
apostles of force have misre?d
history—and c hope t al' e lig 4
of liberty will ag.un ku.dle in
French eyes.
The seme in conquered France
which Lehrbas reports recalls an-
other ’norrent in a French setting
two decades ago At Versailles,
wiser* th* World War peac*-
Wisconsin President
Accepts Post
12
..... e
two
more person* Saturday brought the
total number charged so far in
connection with the alleged life in-
su ranc* policy racket in Cameron
county to four, said Arthur Klein,
assistant district attorney. The end
was still not in sight with county
officers and U. S. postal investiga-
tors continuing the probe.
Pedro Banda. 65. and his wife.
Felipa Banda, were being held
Cameron county jail at Brownsville
Saturday in default of $500 bo nos
set by Peace Justice Menton J
Murray in Harlingen.
Charges had previously been filed
against Francisco O. Garcia and Mrs.
Guadalupe G. Gonzales of La Fena.
It is claimed that Fermin Garcia.
* candy peddler and sheep herder,
died in the Banda home November
5. 1938 and had been buried under
the name of Juan Garcia. Mrs Gon-
zales was alleged to have collected
on an insurance policy issued on
the life of Garcia who was found
alive in Lyford by Deputy Sheriff
4g Boynton Fleming. The Bandas in-
sist. however, that the man who plctes the personneFof Voluntary
died was named Juan Garcia. workers assigned to register eligible
Francisco O. Garcia is charged draftees Wednesday. Oct. 16 Of
in connection with the collection this number. 35 are chief registrars,
of an insurance policy on the life held responsible for the registration
of Refugia Garcia. Officers have in their respective precincts.
a written statement from the eigh»- More than 100 registrars attended
V year-old child saying that her baby the instruction meeting held in the
sister. Esmerlinda. died last January <™rt house Saturday when Mr ;
and that she was buried under the
name of Refugia. Refugia said that
she was withdrawn from school and
told to assume the name of Esmer-
linda.
All the policies involved were
written by the Commercial Union
Lif* Insurance Company of Waco.
was said, that the emergency ves- ment nf th« world Saturday night
seis first make a series of shuttle and P*«*S*4 the United States navy
trips between Honolulu and Far and air forc« ,o the defense of all
Eastern ports, leaving their pass- lh* western hemisphere
engers to be brought from the Th* presidents address, one of
Hawaiian city to the mainland later, his most momentous declarations on
— action had been international conditions and foreign
policy, was broadcast to every na-
j indicated taht 'the department did . th* hemisphere.
; not look on the idea with favor.
I Silent On Russia
Officials had no comment on re-
.... Jk
Solon Charges Army Replacing National Guard With Regulars
vestigated and rectified at once"
he would seek a congressional
inquiry.
"I am advised." he said, “that
national guard officers who have
spent many years in service,
and who have taken many rigid
physical examinations at regu-
lar intervals, are now being told
that they have suddenly become
unfit for service and are to be
kicked out of the army as a
result of one examination . . .
the regular army is up to th*
was killed in an automobile accident in Arizona Sat-
urday, is shown here with his daughter, Mrs. Howard
Cragg of Raymondville. She expects to attend the fun-
eral in California, Cragg said. Mi\ visited the Valley
several years ago with his circus. (Staff Photo.)
commerce building.
A similar meeting for sportsmen I.. , . .
- — - ------ ' him a leave of absence _
j closed earlier this week that Pres- | m the defense and protection of
: ident Roosevelt had asked him to own territorial integrity. We
; take the post.
It was anticipated in military cir-
cles that Dykstra's nomination
—-----—— I ”. -----" ----------- -" would go to the Senate Monday
CfUTIPl’fin Cnuntv I *h‘t* wing* tn th* Valley are urged Unless opposition developed, in-
th* f°P^<ren^e' has formed sources said, there was no
Names of 742 of the various Upper Valley cities
2 MORE HELD
k IN CAMERON
Is Upper Valley Maps Drive
To Preserve Whitewings
Sportsmen To Meet Tuesday; More Wildfowl
Sanctuaries In Section Urged
WASHINGTON—In order to
speed removal of Americans from
the Orient, the state department ar-
ranged Saturday for the Manhattan
and the Washington, two of the na-
tion’s largest liners, to make special
trips to the Far East.
The two vessels, formerly in the
trans-Atlantic service, have a pass- I
enger capacity of between 2.5Oo and'
13.000 each. Secretary Hull said
they would sail on their mission as
soon as possible.
Other Ships Slated
In addition. Hull said five other
American passenger liners were now I
in the Pacific, a number of freight-
er* were available for some pass-
engers. and that efforts were under
way to arrange for other ships to
transport Americans from various
Japanese and Chinese ports. Offi-
BROWNSVILLE—John A MrRay
former Brownsville police chief was
back in the city Saturday after
having been missing for several
months, asserting that his “mental I from which the earliest new crop
blackouts” or amnesia had been movement of the 1941 season wfll
caused by a fistula which he hoped come, is expected to equal the
to have removed soon by operation acreage grown for harvest last year
McRay said that he started upstate “
on business May 27. that he felt
himself “slipping away " He said
he remembered having been in El
Paso and later of having been on
the Golden Gate bridge at San Fran-
cisco. He said his memory returned
when the fistula was drained in a
Newburg. Oregon hospital
Pendleton.
The former police chiefs ankles
were still swollen as a result of
the infection and he could walk
only very short distances when he
returned here.
Also convicted on five counts
were Jack Sommers. James A 1A1A i TTY
Hartigan. John M Flanagan and 1 1 VlVlA 1 V
William P Kelly. They were charg- . —, . _
ed with aiding the evasion and ; CROP READY
BERLIN— 'Sunday!—<i?)—Bntisa
| raiders dropped explosive and fire
I bombs on Berlin Saturday night
and early today causing casualties
Others Are Wounded i but no important military damage.
* him of failure to pay $1 887.864 in eral* and other officers who wore
I taxes on a 1936-39 incom* of $3 -! the red-striped trousers of th* gen-
377.615 The maximum penalty erai staff, were in Rumania osten-
! would be 22 years in prison and a 1
$50,000 fine.
CHICAGO -dP>— The govern-
ments campaign against bet barons I RUMANIAN CAPITAL LOOKS
was capped Saturday by the convic- LIKE GERMAN CITY
tion of William R. “Big Bill" John-1
son. alleged “czar" of Chicago's
gambling, and five of his aides
| A federal court jury convicted
them of conspiracy to violate the
income tax laws.
Face* Frit** Term i By nighttall the capital ha* th*
Johnson. 45. tall, suave and dap- appeal ance of a city dominated by
per. was found guilty on all five j an invading army, save that in thia
count* of an indictment accusing ease th* Nazi troops under two gen-
LA FER1A—Primo Sanchez, about
30. La Fena. was killed in an auto
accident one and three-fourth*
mile*" west of here on Highway 4
Saturday at 11:45 p. m. uhen the
car in which he was a passenger
left the road and rolled over in a
ditch.
Juan Cantu. 26 Harlingen, driver
of the Model A Ford, suffered a
skull fracture. He was in a serious
condition at Valley Baptist Hos- j
pital early Sunday. mcreass
Two other, in the rumble lent or Missing Police Chief
HARLINGEN—The Valley. w»h
on* of it* best fall tomato crop* in
years, probably will begin ship-
ments in small lots this week, ac-
cording to John Moms, Jr., a lead-
ing tomato shipper.
The crop is in fin* condition in
spite of the droughty weather and
has been doing well with warm days
and cool nights, he said.
California is now in the midst of
its fall tomato movement and the
local man stated that November
was always the Valley's best month
for shipping this fall crop.
Acreage Increases
The fall tomato acreage has been
increased in all Texas districts, ac-
[ to a U. S. department of
agriculture truck crop estimate.
Morris said that the stand is not
so good in th* Laredo and Winter
Garden area.
Other fall crops also are nearing
maturity in the Valley. The fall
bean crop in Texas and Florida.
of Cameron and Willacy counties
is expected to be held at Harlingen
after the McAllen session.
Attendance Urged
Marsh said all citizens interested
in preventing the extinction of
white wings in the Valley are urged
to attend the conference. He has
asked the chambers of commerce i
-- t -----same day.
to send a minimum of two sports-1 - -
men who are civic leaders to the
i conference.
The federal and state game offi-
cials will recommend th? creation
of additional bird sanctuaries in1
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Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 13, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 13, 1940, newspaper, October 13, 1940; Harlingen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327179/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .