Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 304, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1956 Page: 1 of 8
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
5c DAILY
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
10c SUNDAY
DAILY AND SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press, — World's Greatest News Agency
51ST. YEAR, NO. 304
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CLEBURNE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1956
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8 PAGES
Three Charged With Smuggling Gold
Farmer Slays Wife, Son; Takes Own Life
Bodies Found
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INSPECTION CONFERENCE
Three
New Hospital Addition
Officers, Crewmen
EDITOR SAYS NEWSPAPER WILL
NOT IGNORE JUVENILE CRIMES
$
Dulles Proposes Naming
“packaging”
passengers
into
LAFF - A - DAY
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Weather
British cabinet, gave a strong in-
Sunset Sept. 20—6:29 p.m.
Daniel And Shivers Take
Positive Political Stands
ver, Colo., geologist was charged
in El Paso and released on $3,000
bond Tuesday. The other three
were arraigned before U.S. Com-
missioner Richard Toll in Pecos.
safely
studies
s
%
-0
.Maximum temperature
ago 93 degrees.
Minimum temperature
ago 75 degrees.
Member—Texas Press Asmoolatlom
Texas Daily Press Leazue
southerm Newspaper Fublkshere
(UP) United Press Telephoto Ploturee
(OP) Central Press Features
(KF) King Features
TEMPERATURES
Maximum temperature last 24
hours 74 degrees.
Minimum temperature last 24
hours 104 degrees.
Western Shipping Czar'
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Judge Jackson Named
Presiding Magistrate
District Judge Penn J. Jackson
was appointed by Gov. Allan Shi-
vers today as presiding judge of
the Third Administrative Judicial
District.
Judge Jackson was named to fill
the unexpired term of District Jud-
ge A. P. Mays of Corsicana, who
has resigned.
PULLET LAYS
MASSIVE EGG
Mrs. A. B. Calvery, Route 4, Cle-
burne, six miles northeast of Cle-
burne brought to the Times-Rev-
iew today a pullet egg that weigh-
ed one-fourth pound with an over-
all length of eight inches, six and
three-quarter inches around and
two and three-eighth inches in dia-
meter. The egg was laid by a white
leghorn.
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Jo(s
By PROC
a year
Staff Piioto by Jim West
ence during the tour. Left to right: Con-
rad Kroll, state architect, T. H. Seltzer,
construction engineer and County Judge
H. G. Littlefair.
( .a © 196 Kg FenuaSyodsemn. In. Weca nheressma4_T-22
"I thought you were going to
write Mother about our new
' swimming pool!” -
ganization,” Davis said. “I don’t
pay any attention to what the
NAACP says—now or any time.”
Truck Driver Misses
Injury in Accident
The driver of a pickup truck and
a trailer load of catle escaped
injury when the truck and trailer
overturned west of Alvarado on
Highway 67 Friday night.
Highway patroman Paul Busby
said the truck was pulling the trail-
er down a hill when the trailer
started whipping and turned over.
P,
■
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a year
Final inspection and acceptance
of new additions to Johnson County
Memorial hospital is expected with-
in a week after a preliminary in-
spection was completed Tuesday a).-
ternoon.
A check list of minor details to
be completed or reworked to meet
specifications, was made during the
inspection. Final inspection and ac-
ceptance will be made when these
details are completed. This is ex-
pected to take not more than a
week.
Added to the hospital is a two-
story east wing with 24 private
rooms, a six-room pediatrics ward,
a laundry building, new nurses sta-
tions, and improvements to the
snack bar and kitchen.
The inspection proved the hospi-
tal board of managers had plan-
ned well and their many hours of
work and planning was apparent
at every turn. The hospital is now
as modern and well-equipped as
any in this area. The improvements
to the hospital have cost the tax-
payer nothing. Half of the money
came from hospital funds and the
other half was furnished by the
State Board of Health.
British cabinet, gave a strong in- been purchased recently by CLE-
I dication of further disagreement. I BURNE birdmen?
,/
up or play down stories about ju-
veniles in trouble.
“Keeping stories out of the paper
is no guarantee the facts will not
be known,” the editor said. “An ac-
curate news story prevents word-
of-mouth garbling of the facts and
we believe we may at least sound
some sort of alarm when we report
stories involving juvenile mis-
creants.”
Mrs. Brannon and Altaras agreed
that news of juvenile trouble was
handled satisfactorily in the Times-
Review, but they discussed and
questioned so-called “over-play” of
such stories.
Ratliff cited a letter-to-the editor
campaign conducted by a Dallas
newspaper recently in connection
tains and crews of the Stockholm
and sunken Andrea Doria give
their conflicting accounts in fed-
eral court today of the modern
world’s worst sea disaster.
The pre-trial testimony will be
used in fixing the blame for the
July 25 collision off Nantucket Is-
land which took the lives of 45
Andrea Doris passengers and five
Stockholm crewmen.
Millions of words of testimony
will be heard in the next three or
four weeks by four prominent at-
torneys who have agreed to serve
without pay as special masters in
the taking of the pre-trial deposi-
tions.
The pre-trial testimony will be
used eventually in the litigation of
an estimated $35 million in dam-
age suits against the Italian Line,
owner of the sunken Andrea Doria
and the Swedish-American Line,
with a wave of vandalism there. He
said the campaign had highly sat-
isfactory results.
The meeting was well attended
by parents and teachers. It was the
first joint P-TA-teacher meeting of
the school of the season. P-TA pre-
sident, Mrs. Marvin Cumbie, presi-
ded. Several parents and teachers
directed pertinent questions to the
panel members. Result of the
meeting was conclusively a gener-
al feeling that Cleburne at present
was without many of the juvenile
problems confronting school and
public officials of the larger cities.
It was also agreed that the press,
locally, was in fact doing more for
juveniles than it was doing TO
them.
■ 3
New Safety
Automobile
Introduced
NEW YORK (UP) — The design
of a “safety automobile” was
made public today. It places the
driver in the front center of the
vehicle, eliminates steering wheel
and column, and has a back-look-
ing seat for one passenger.
The design resulted from four
years of studying methods of
The snack bar is now big enough
to serve as a combination employes
dining room and snack bar. Each
of the 24 private rooms in the east
wing is individually heated and air-
conditioned and has private baths.
The furniture in the rooms is the
latest and most modern of hospital
equipment. Oxygen is piped into
each room and a communication
system is provided so the patient
may talk with the nurse at her sta-
tion rather than just ring for ser-
vice. The beds can be raised or
lowered by means of an electric
motor. A portable table stand is
provided so a woman patient can
apply makeup or a man patient
can shave while sitting in his
bed. Bell buttons are in the walls
of the private baths in case an un-
attended patient cannot get back to
bed.
A public open house is planned
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Partly cloudy to clear through
Thursday. No important temper-
ture changes.
Court’s segreration decision
brought Daniel over to his side.
Daniel made his announcement
after Stevenson mailed him state-
ments about his stand on these
two questions.
Held Up Support
Daniel had consistently refused
to throw his unqualified support
previously to Stevenson and Sen.
Estes Kefauver, the vice presi-
dential nominee.
His endorsement of Stevenson
was read in a telegram Tuesday
night to a big Democratic rally
in Greenville at which Gov. Frank
Clement of Tenneqsee was the
principal speaker.
When Daniel’s name was first
mentioned, a boo was heard from
one person in the audience vari-
ously estinated at from 5,500 to
7,000. But after the telegram was
read, the crowd applauded viror-
ously and there were no boos.
The Greenville rally, in House
Speaker Sam Rayburn’s home
district, kicked off the Texas cam-
paign to elect the national Demo-
cratic nominees. Clement assled
the Republicans, especially Vice
President Richard M. Nixon, in
a ringing speech.
Shivers Supports Ike
Shivers, in announcing his sup-
port of Mr. Eisenhower, said:
“Four years ago, I supported
him because he promised to re-
turn our tidelands, and because I
felt that he would find a way to
Timely tip. . . The next time a
panel discussion on juvenile prob-
lems is planned in CLEBURNE,
‘twould be appropriate to have a
couple of teen-agers on the panel
..Last night’s panel discussion on
the subject was apparently a suc-
cess... Congrats to able jurist PENN
JACKSON, on his appointment as
presiding district judge...HAROLD
RATLIFF and wife, long residents
of CLEBURNE, enjoying their re-
newal of a few acquaintances on a
brief visit to the old home town,
last night.
The difference between PRICE
DANIEL and ALLAN SHIVERS, IS
that SHIVERS sticks to his con-
victions and makes no deals with
anybody politically...Pretty NELDA
MARCUS over from DALLAS to vi-
sit a friend...Lotsa people plan to
journey to HIGHLAND PARK to-
morrow night to watch the CLE-
BURNE freshmen in their 1956 grid
inaugural...New mother, OLIVIA
REESE showing off tiny daughter
to a group of friends...Did you know
that several new airplanes have
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P 1
Jack Proctor, editor of the Cle-
burne Times-Review, said last
night in a panel discussion at Ful-
ton Junior High that his newspaper
could not ignore juvenile crimes or
misdemeanors and added that he
knew of no other newspaper in the
nation which would do so.
The remarks were made during
a panel discussion moderated by
Harold Ratliff, former Times-Rev-
iew editor and now sports editor
of the Associated Press. Mrs. Bon-
non, teacher and' mother and form-
er district and county attorney Jack
Altaras, were other members of
the panel.
The subject for discussion was:
“What the Press is Doing to Teen-
Agers.”
Proctor said the good news stor-
ies about Cleburne youth would ov-
erbalance by at least 80 percent,
the bad news during any year’s per-
iod. He said it was the policy of
the Times-Review to delete names
of juveniles involved in most mis-
demeanors and even felonies, un-
less the charge was one of major
consequence. He said it was not the
policy of the paper to either play
By UNITED PRESS
The positions of Gov. Allan
Shivers and U.S. Sen. Price Dan-
iel, the Democratic gubernatorial
nominee, were clear-cut today in
regard to the presidential race.
Shivers will again support Dwight
D. Eisenhower, but Daniel will
back the Democratic nominee,
Adlai Stevenson.
The two announcements came
within a short while of each other
Tuesday. Daniel’s was a reversal
of his stand in 1952, when he also
voted for Mr. Eisenhower, as did
Shivers, when Stevenson refused
to back Texas’ claim to its tide-
lands.
Stevenson’s statement in Wash-
ington Monday that he considers
the tidelands issue “ended” and
his stand in regard to use of force
in carrying out the Supreme
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at the hospital soon after the final
inspection and acceptance is made, owner of the damaged Stockholm.
stop the Korean War and restore
। integrity in the Washington gov-
ernment.
“If for no other reason, a sense
of gratitude would compel me to
vote for President Eisenhower
again.”
Daniel’s guvernatorial opponent,
Ralph Yarborough, who was also
at the rally, said:
“I congratulate him on his de-
cision and welcome him back into
the Democratic party. I urge all
Texans to support the Democratic
party and help us win in Novem-
ber.”
In another major political de-
velopment, The Constitution Party
tried to place Mirs. W. Lee O’Dan-
iel on the November ballot as its
gubernatorial candidate. But Sec-
retary of State Tom Reavley
barred her from the ballot be-
cause she voted in the August
Democratic runoff for governor.
The Constitution Party previ-
ously nominated her husband, the
former governor and U.S. sena-
tor, for governor. But the Su-
preme Court refused to let him
run. The court ruled that he had
disqualified himself by running
third in the July Democratic pri-
mary.
Amarillo Main is
Free on Bond in
Burglary of Home
AMARILLO, Tex. (UP)—Albert
Meyer, 38, of Amarillo, was free
on $5,000 bond today after sur-
rendering to police to face charges
of being an accomplice in a $13,-
000 burglary at a friend’s house.
Meyer, a used car dealer and
member of a prominent family,
surrendered Tuesday. Charges
were filed against Meyer when
Wylie Dub Wade, 19, implicated
him in the burglary.
Wade, an auto mechanic, was
along with his 17- year- old wife.
Authorities confiscated most of the
loot from the Joe E. Evans home
in Amarillo when the couple was
picked up.
Police said Wade’s statement
charged Meyer with master-mind
ing the burglary. Wade said
Meyer pointed out the Evans’
home to him, and took the Evans
family out to dinner so that Wade
would have free access to the
house and that Meyer set the time
for the robbery with a telephone
call.
Police said Wade told them he
and his wife were to take the loot,
mostly jewelry and bonds, to Mex-
ico City, and that Meyer was to
pay them part of the proceeds.
The Wades were arrested at El
Paso after they were denied a per-
mit to go to Mexico City because
the car they were driving was
owned by Meyer and they had no
car title.
Meyer was charged with being
an accessory after the fact and
accomplice to burglary.
BEING LOOKED FOR —
Theodore Rija, a New
York garment industry
executive, is being looked
for by the FBI in connec-
tion with the acid blinding
of labor columnist Victor
Riesel. FBI said he is
wanted for conspiracy to
obstruct justice “by caus-
ing an assault to be made”
on Riesel last April. (NEA
Telephoto)
members of the inspection group tour-
ing the new additions to Johnson Coun-
ty Memorial hospital Tuesday were pho-
tographed as they paused for a confer-
PECOS, Tex. (UP)— Four men
faced charges today in an al-
leged conspiracy to smuggle $2
million worth of gold from Mexico
into the United States.
Thomas W. Anderson, a Den-
automobiles. The
Of Sunken Ships
Toured By Inspectors SetforTestimony,
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Staff Photo by Jim West
to discuss “What is the Newspaper Do-
ing to Teen-Agers?” It was the first dis-
cussion of its type ever held in Cleburne
and the response was heartening, ac-
cording to both parents and teachers
present.
were made by the Cornell Aero-
nautical Laboratory of Buffalo,
N. Y., under the sponsorship of
the Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
underwriter of automobile casual-
ties and liability.
The steering wheel is replaced
by two yoked levers, one for each
of the driver’s hands, which, steer
the car on the push-pull principle.
They are incorporated in a rigid
harness that is recessed into the
dashboard when the car isn’t in
use. The driver pulls this harness
over himself. It locks into place,
fixing him into his seat by a
webbed belt across his lower ab-
domen.
Over the yoke of the steering
lever is a well-padded cushion. In
case of collision, the driver can’t
be thrown out of his seat; if his
torso is thrown forward, it col-
lides with the cushion. The steer-
ing wheel and column are prime
sources of death and injury for
drivers involved in head-on colli-
sions.
All six seats in the “safety au-
tomobile” are individual bucket
seats. The driver’s is flanked by
two passenger seats which are a
little lower and a little behind his.
Back to back with the driver’s
seats, is the seat for the back-
ward-riding passenger, who faces
two forward-looking passenger
seats.
The two front seats are pro-
vided with harnesses like the dri-
ver’s. The rear seats are equipped
with conventional safety belts.
There are no interior projections;
if any strapped-in rider’s torso is
thrown forward in any kind of ac-
cident, there is nothing within
range for his chest or head to
smash against.
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Britain and France wanted
to reject what the called a loaded
offer. The United States was re-
ported to consider it dangerous to
turn down a possible opening for
further concessions from Egypt.
Previously Egypt said it would
have nothing whatsoever to do
with the association.
Work On Details
The conference, made upf of 18
nations which backed the original
Dulles plan for placing the Suez
Canal under international control,
hoped to work out details of the
new plan acceptable to all and to
study the new Egyptian offer
made by Col. Mahmoud Younis,
Egyptian canal chief.
A general demand for presenting
the crisis to the United Nations
appeared to be gaining strength
throughout the world. Ceylon, one
of the nations that opposed the
earlier Dulles plan, today rejected
Egypt’s call for a rival conference
on the Suez and suggested U.N.
Security Council action.
The Scandinavian countries,
among the larger users of the ca-
nal, Japan and several other na-
tions favored U.N. action. Egypt
has hinted it would ask for Secur-
ity Council debate if the users’
plan is adopted in London. In Aus-
tralia, Herbert Evatt, leader of
the opposition, today demanded
U.N. action.
May Outline Boycott
One of the chief points to be
outlined by Dulles was a possible
boycott of the canal — although
he did not use that term. This
would send ships around the Cape
of Good Hope and require out-
lays of American dollars to buy
U.S. and South American oil.
A top U.S. official said in Wash-
ington the odds were better than
even that American plans for by-
passing the canal would have to
be put in effect.
Disagreement on the new turn
of Egyptian strategy — even if
only temporary — was one of sev-
eral Anglo-American differences
evident at the start of the new
conference.
A leading conservative member
of Parliament, who said his re-
marks had the approval of the
Another Colorado
River Dam Studied
AUSTIN (UP) — Another new i
dam on the Colorado River, cost-
ing an estimated $20 million, is in
the preliminary planning stage.
The proposed project was re-
vealed Tuesday by G. E. Schmitt,
chief engineer for the Lower Colo-
rado River Authority.
The dam would form a lake
above Columbus in Colorado coun-
ty, impound water for municipal,
industrial and irrigation use, and
add another recreation area to the
chain of Central Texas water
playgrounds, Schmitt said.
Kentucky Edict
On integration
Cheered Loudly
BY UNITED PRESS
A short-lived and riotous experi-
ment in integrating a high school
in Sturgis, Ky., ended today
amidst the cheers of a white
crowd that gathered to witness
the return to strict segregation of
the school.
In Washington, an all-southern
congressional investigation into
integration of public schools in
the nation’s capital got under
way today. The two northern
members of the House subcom-
mittee making the study failed to
show up for its beginning.
Eight Negro children came to
school at Sturgis as they have for
two weeks under protective cus-
tody of National Guard or state
police. Today’s arrival was dif-
ferent. They were met by school
Supt. Carlos Oakley who read
them an order from the school
board saying the Negroes were
attending that school illegally.
Negroes Leave Quietly
The Negroes, who had been es-
corted to the school by Lt. Col.
Clarence C. Burch of the Ken-
tucky National Guard and two
other Guardsmen, left quietly by
automobile.
As their car moved slowly
through the crowd, a middle-aged
woman ran close behind beating
on the trunk with her fists. An-
other woman cried out to the Ne-
groes: “Don’t you ever try that
no more.”
Nearby Clay, Ky., set the pat-
tern for the Sturgis action by bar-
ring four Negroes on grounds the
school board had not approved
the integration.
A crowd of more than 200 as-
sembled in a cold, drizzling rain
to see whether the same plan
would work at Sturgis. It did, al-
though there was a chance Negro
groups might go to court later to
fight the decision.
May Cost Votes
Clarence Mitchell, NAACP
Washington director, charged that
today’s race hearing there, head-
ed by Rep. James C. Davis (D-
Ga.) was in the hands of “big-
ots.” He warned that it may cost
the the Democratic party votes of
northern Negroes in November.
Davis, Rep. John Bell Williams
(D-Miss.) and Rep. Joel Broyhill
(R-Va.) conducted the hearing in
the absence of Rep. A. L. MILLER
(RNeb.) and Dewitt S. Hyde (R-
Md.) who were aligned on the
northern side. The southerners all
signed the southern manifesto op-
posing racial integration.
State Attorney General Joe ML
Ferguson backed up the Sturgis
school board’s action by ruling
that integration there was pre-
mature because local school offi-
cials had not voted to integrate.
Wanted Hearing Canceled:
The NAACP tried to get Con-
gress to cancel the Washington
hearings.
Mitchell said he feared the in-
quiry would be used as a “forum
to promote the kind of strife that
has brought disgrace to Clay and
Mansfield and Texarkana, Tex.” ,
“The NAACP is a radical or-
I
■
PANELISTS — Jack Proctor, Times-Re-
view editor; Mrs. Bonnie Brannon, teach-
er and mother; Attorney Jack Altaras
and Harold Ratliff, Associated Press
sports editor, formed a panel at Fulton
Junior High’s P-TA meeting last night
IN P-TA PANEL DISCUSSION
LONDON (UP(— Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles asked
the second London Suez confer-
ence today to appoint a Western
shipping “czar” with powers to
divert traffic from the Suez Ca-
nal if this proves “necessary.”
Dulles put the new Suez users
union proposal before the 18 nation
conference after British Foreign
Secretary Selwyn Lloyd warned
there would be “no compromise”
on international control of the
waterway.
But Lloyd, elected chairman of
the conference, said “we want to
proceed by peaceful means.”
“We do not want to settle the
dispute by force,” Lloyd said.
“There has never been any doubt
in the minds of her majesty’s
government to go before the (UN)
Security Council at some stage.”
Would Seek UN Action
Prime Minister Anthony Eden
told Commons during the Suez de-
bate last week that he would seek
Security Council action if Egypt
blocked pilots of the association
from moving ship convoys
through the canal.
The U.S. secretary of state was
given the job of “selling” the as-
sociation to the participating na-
tions, divided among themselves
and taunted by Egypt that the
meeting was “absurd” and
“doomed to failure.”
Diplomats reported the Western
Big Three differing on strategy
and three of the Dulles plan na-
tions—Iran, Sweden and Spain—
immediately called for new ne-
gotiations with Egypt.
Dulles introduced a tentative
blueprint for the users association
at the morning session. It called
for:
1. A “small operating staff.”
Expert Agent
2. An expert “administrative
agent” to head it.
3. A “small governing board”
selected from the Dulles plan na-
tions to set policy and report
back to the 18 powers.
Dulles took the Western plan be-
fore an 18-nation “second Suez
conference” today shortly after
Egypt softened its line and agreed
to let ships of the proposed asso-
ciation pass through the canal if
they used Egyptian pilots.
On Death Pyre
ELK CITY, Kan. — UP —
The bodies of a prosperous
Kansas farmer, his estrang-
ed wife and their 22-year-
old son were found today in
the smouldering remains of
a funeral pyre into which
the man, Harvey Toews, 51,
apparently leaped after kill-
ing the other members of
his family.
Authorities said Toews was shot
with a .22-caliber rifle. Bodies of
Mrs. Tena M. Toews, 47, nd the
son, Van, were so badly durned
autopsies will be necessary to de-
termine the cause of death.
Wilson County Sheriff Charles
Spohn said he believed Toews
placed the bodies of his wife and
son together on a brush pile,
poured gasoline over them, then
leaped into the flames himself at
the instant he pulled the trigger
of the gun that killed him.
Finding of the bodies ended a
search begun after a son-in-law,
Bud Baker, Chanute, Kan., found
no one at home at the Toews
farm, near the community of La
Fontaine, although doors and win-
dows were unlocked and $826 in
cash was in a wallet on the ta-
ble.
Later, officers found Mrs.
Toews’ car abandoned near Elk
City, and discovered blood stains
in a pickup truck at the farm
home.
They believed Toews killed his
wife and son, hauled their bodies
to the brush pile, returned the
truck to the farm, and then
walked back to the spot, about a
mile and a half away, where the
three bodies were found.
They, were unable to determine
immediately where Mrs. Toews
and Van were slain.
Officers said Toews’ watch
stopped at 3:30 and expressed be-
lief that probably was the time
at which he leaped into the
flames. They theorized it probably
was 3:30 a.m. Tuesday.
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 304, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1956, newspaper, September 19, 1956; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505679/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.