Borger News-Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 287, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1946 Page: 1 of 10
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WEATHER
W»*t Tme Pattiy eioudr' tr.ctpt
Rio Grinds Valley this iftitncos cooler
tonight. i ri.iay partly cloudy, rooiet f>« -
cept Panhandle and South Plaint.
Borger News-Herald
Circulation Dept. Phone 82
Other Depts.: 6 and 7
Vol. 20—No. 287
★
NEA Service
THE CARBON BLACK CENTER OF THE WORLD
Associoted Press Borger, Texas, Friday, October 25, 1946
(Ten Pages I ou..j I
Prfce 5c
Britain Backs U. S. In Clash With Russia
Clark's Office 'Analyzes'
Mine Workers' Contract
As Deadline Draws Near
Student Vets'
Legal Tangle
Seems Solved
Ten Die in Connecticut Fire
By TEX EASLEY
WASHINGTON. Oct. 25 (AP)— The threatened coal
crisis was brouqht up at President Truman's cabinet meeting
today and Attorney General Clark later caid his office is
"analyzing" the government's contract with John L. Lewis'
united mine workers.
Clark told reporters that while he had not been asked
to study the contract, "we always analyze those things so we
will be ready if called upon."
The contract was negotiated last May after the gov
ernment seized the idle soft coal mines.
Secretary ol War Patter
Army Campaign
Enlists 298,517
More than 298,517 vnlunteci
have enl'sted tit the regular army
jfince thi- dart of the .army's t.
*ruiting campaign Inst Novcmbet
In addition, 500,006 men have re
enlisted from the army of t h e
I'nitod States and 108,972 from the
regular army.
Leading the enlistment parade
was the state of Pennsylvania with
58,859. Texas was second with
54,217.
Slightly over 50 per cent of the
enlistments were made without
preference for branch of service.
,♦ Those enlisting directly in a par-
ticular branch favored the a t r
force, quartermaster corps and in-
fantry in that order.
Releasing these fo ur. today,
tlie local recruiting ol'Rro a ain
reminded veterans that they h. ve
only until October 29 to re-enl st
in a grade higher than staff
sergeant. After that date no \o-
eran will be given a ratine " te h-
nical, master or fir t er.-eai ' n-
less he re-enlists dir; • ■ iy upon m --
7 charge.
The war department has also
announced that jinunot nn« to
those grades will not be made un-
til after completion of a survey de-
signed to show whether the army
has a surplus in those grade-.
m respon e to quo. Uon-
AP Special Washington Service
WASHINGTON. Oct. 25 —.AP'
—The legal tangle that held up
veterans adm lustration payments
to Texas state colleges for cx-GI .
student-.' tuition lees seem final-1
ly and definitely cleared. ,
A veterans administration I
spokesman, commenting today on
the stuuent program in Texas un-
der the G. I. Itill of Rights, said
a satisfactory plan for reimbursing
hi said T( xa . state educational institutions
merely 1 had recently been worked out aft-
that the coal situation had been
"mentioned” at the 4rt-minute cab-
inet M* MUtl
Krug is now mi a western tout
that is not scheduled to end until
Nov <i, the day after election
Lewis has demanded reopen
inq oi the existing wage agree
tnenl and has served notice that
lhe pact will be "void” unless
the negotiations begin Nov. 1.
The federal coal mines adminis-
tration has taken the stand that
the contract is good for the du-
ration of government operation
of the mines.
er a year of study of the matter.
"It seems to be working ail
right now," he told a reporter.
"We believe the mailer has been
settled once and for all."
Numerous practical difficulties
have beset the program in Texas
stale schools since passage ol the
G. I. bill.
Chinese Build
More Barriers
To Peace Hope
NANKING. Oct. 25—The
government’-; military offensives
in Manchuria and the Shantung!
peninsula are building new bar- ;
ici - to any pos-ibililv of lhe re- ;
sumption of format peace nego
tuition- here,
Soviet Bottle To Block
Veto Issue From Debate
Seems Doomed to Defeat
I John L
For instance, a Texas state stat-
ute passed after the last war giv-
ing veterans free tuition at state
schools was found to preclude
these institutions from receiving
federal reimbursement.
Sen. Connally (D-Tex) sponsored
Lewis' threat of a new an amendment to the G. 1. bill,
soft coal strike thi- winter loomed eliminating this difficulty, wln-h
larger than ever today—one week enabled the veterans administin-
betore the November 1 deadline. **on to use a llexible scale in de-
President Truman toss' d the term ning payments to schools, do-
prospectivo crisis hack t-> Secre- 'pending on the actual cost of edit-
ion* of Interior .1. A. Krug, who cation in each institution, so long
Ten members of the Edward Nelson family burned to death in this
five-room home at Lake Pocotopaug. East Hampton. Connecticut.
Only person escaped the flames, Edward Clark Nelson, who
smashed lhe windows above his head when he awakened to find
the flames above his head. (NEA Telephoto)
Churchill Lauds Attlee's
'Break With Communism'
del. .v.111•. declared the American
del. i.atiuu tilt that the a- cinbly
had a light to di-cu-- any matter
within the cope of the chiutei
and that it clear that the
veto mid - hi the fi\e permanent;
members of the security council *
i nine within I he charter
Austin declared, however, that ;
in opposing the Soviet proposal
the United States •■doe- not ex-
pie - an> attitude with regard '*,
the sub-lance of the item-” deal-
ing with the veto.
He said that he felt a complete
airing would help to "explain
and clarify” the voting provisions |
; ud clear up "apparent mi-un-
Reserved Seals No
Longer Available
Tor Amarillo Game
Thev arc all gone; no more arc
left.
That’s the summary of the re-
served seat situation for the Bor-
ger-Amnrillo football game to he
played here Saturday afternoon,
Nov. 9.
G. M. McKeel, business man-
ager, said that Ivs last reserved
seat ticket for the gridiron classic
Wivas sold this morning.
However, C. A. Ctyer, superin-
tendent, said that the Phillips high
school has made a loan of an ad-
ditional 1,500 bleacher type gen-
era! admission seats for the game.
"This generous offer from Phil-
lips will make it possible to ex-
tend general admission seats across
the west end zone,” Ctyer said.
Bulldog Stadium is already
equipped with approximately 2,
500 general admission seats on
fportable bleachers on both sides
of the field cast and west of the
reserved seat grandstand. The ad-
ditional seats loaned by Phillips
will make total seating capacity
0,500 and evrey -cat is exi oi.I
to be filled.
General admission ducats will
not be placed on sale until the
day of tin* game, McKeel pointed
out.
There was some talk that some
»/• the Borger merchants had
. gited they may close their store
for the game, indicating that the
whole edy, oi us much of it as can
find room, will turn out for the
remained silent. So did Lewis.
Govcntfhierit 1 a b o r official ,
i rowing more anxious by the
hour, ptivalely expressed the opin
ion that another round of strikes
would bring down the wrath of
congress and might provoke severe
labor legislation when the law-
makers return in January.
But these oliicials are treading
! warily. They are not talking for
pools o i in—cither about legisla-
tion or about the possible effects
a paralyzing coal strike four days
before the November 5 elections
might have on the makeup of the
next congress.
Two facts, they said, stand out:
!. Members elected to congress
on November 5 will be seated in
January.
2. Many of the nation’s leaders
have warned that a "second round"!
ol strikes would be a body blow j
to the postwar economy.
Meanwhile, coal i n d u s t r y
spokesmen in Pittsburgh said a
general mine strike next month
would cut off home supplies of
coal almost immediately.
Coal retailers already are be-
hind with orders, the industry
said, and a work stoppage would
catch them with little or no
stockpiles. A 20-day backlog on
hand for industrial uses would
be suitable only for homes
equipped with stokers.
Mr. Truman’s refusal at his
news conference yesterday to be
dragged into the coal controversy;
handed a political as well as an;
economic hot potato back to Krug,
who made the contract with Lewis
which ended last spring’s strike.
Ed S. Stephens, 51,
Borgan Since 1926,
Dies Early Today
as the fees did not exceed $500.
23 Nazi Doctors
To Be Tried for
Medical Killings
LONDON. Get. 25—MM— Win-
ston Churchill and Prime Ministci
Attlee captured Britain’s head
line- today with almost simultan-
eous verbal blasts against Russia
in what appeared to be shaping up
as a solid British trout against
communism.
Churchill told his conslitigenls
i
NUERNBERG, Germany, Oct. 25
—iVPi—Twenty-three nnzi doctors
were indicted today on charges
that they “murdered hundreds of j
thousands of human beings" in *
Germany's war-time program of!
medical killings and brutal ex-
periments witli living prisoners.
A woman, Herla Obarhauser.
and Dr. Karl Brandt, one of
Hitler’s pe*?onal physicians,
were among lhe 23. who will be
tried next monin in lhe firs!
of a series of war crimes trials
by special American military
courts.
Brig Gen. Telford Taylor, chief
counsel for the courts, said be-
tween 250 and 500 former nazi
military, industrial financial and
governmental leaders would be
arraigned during the trials, which
are expected to last through 1947.
The doctors were charged on
three counts—conspiracy to com-
mit atrocities, participation in war
crimes against enemy nationals,
participation in war crimes against
humanity involving German civil-
ians and the nationals of occupied
countries.
Ten also are accused of member-
ship in the SS 'Elite Guard' which
the international military tribun-
al declared was a criminal organ-
ization.
Girl Scout Week
To Begin Sunday
Girl Scout week, celebrated an-
nually by more than a million
in ,ri i nnnhiM, ii.» J..,,, Giil s Mils throughout the nation,
that'he hac. "fact/ and '>1^ ‘ October 27 'designat-
ed as Girl Scout Sunday) and con
dence" fo support his suggestion
—made in the form of a ques-
tion before lhe House of Com-
mons Wednesday—that lhe So-
viet Union now has 200 divis-
ions — more lhan 2.000,000 men
on a full war footing in Russian-
occupied eastern Europe.
tinue through November 2, ac-
cording to Mrs. C. A. Cryer, pres
idem ut the Borger council.
Theme of the seven-day pro-
gram highlighting Girl Scout ac-
tivities and ideals will be “Citizen-
ship in Action Around the World,”
which was selected since il tyj i
lies the widespread interest and
effort of the Girl Scouts in bchall
of world friendship and under-
standing. ,
Borgei Girl SrAuts will join
with others in more than 8,000
American communities in obser-
vance of the week. According to
plan*, now being completed for
the celebration, Vesper service;
will be held in the First Baptist
ar.'(’ church Sunday afternoon at 4:20
Mrs. Cryer pointed out that the
del 'standing
Austin was backed by Sir
Hartley Shawcross. British rep-
resentative. who said the British
delegation was in agreement
with some of the observations
taised by the Soviet Union but
that this committee was not the
place to accept or reject such
items,
Shawcrn urged that tlu com-
mitter pa-s it on without making
any recommendations.
He
“should be likely to oppose «mr
amendment to the charter” but
game.
Accordingly,
it is anticipated
Ed S. Stephens. 51, a resident of
Borger since 192ti, died at his
home on the Empire lease early
this morning.
He is survived by his wife. Mrs.
Alice Johnson Stephens; five son.-,
Dale of Uljsses, Kansas, Robert oi
Amarillo, and Douglas, Donald,
and Billy, all of Borger; two
daughters, Mrs. Wilda R ley of
Shelton, Wash., and Lucille Steph-
ens oi Borger; his mother, Mrs
that the largest single gathering John E Stephens, Ashland, Okla
.•ver to assemble in Borger will be three brothers, Jim Stephens ol
present fm the game.
•'One disappointed man told me
this morning he would he at Bull-
dog Stadium at daylight on that
•day
mission seat since lie was too late
to get a reserved seat,” Ct yer said
U. S. Troops Worried
Not To Take Pictures
In Russian Sections
BERLIN,
AP
rm v
Illino - Rollie of California, and
Cecil of Ashland, Okla : two sis-
ters, Mrs. Lloyd Thacker, Oklaho-
ma City and Mrs. Billy Mnlkey of
California.
The body is resting at the Hlack-
hnrn-Shaw-Urown funeral home
pending completion oi arrange
merits
CORRECTION
Yesterday's article on the re-
tirement of Dr. [. C. Morris in
correctly identified his partner
as Dr, Weatherford. The dc*
lor referred to was. as many oil
timers are aware Dr. H C.
Rutherford
f F A CLASS CONVENTION
An 18-page indictment de-
scribes such experiments by the
naxi physicians as:
Deliberately inflicting wounds
* and infecting them, then forcing
: ground glass or wood shavings in-
to the wounds to aggravate the
infection in order lo test the ef-
fectiveness of suphanilamide.
Immersing the victims in ice
water or making them stand naked
outdoors, then experimenting with
various means of reviving them.
Transplanting bones, muscles
and nerves from one living vic-
1 tim to another to study regenera-
tion.
Infection with such diseases as
malaria, spotted fever or epidemic
jaundice to test remedies.
Mass sterilization by X ray. sur-
gery or ding
He lauded Attlee's speech before
the trades union congress at
Brighton earlier in the day in
which the prime minister bluntly
accused Soviet leaders of erecting
i a "wall of ignorance and suspic-
ion” between the Russian people
! and the rest of the world.
"The fact that the British gov
ernment has decisively broken
with the communists and
fronted with them, although it
doos not immediately affect the ,VuVgc7‘to"attend.'
course ot affairs m tins island.
{ said Churchill, "has an important
and beneficial result, abroad, be-
cause there are countries on the
j continent — like France — quiv-
ering under the communist at-
tack."
t
Attlee, in his Brighton speech,
I sharply accused "communists,their
dupes and fellow travelers" of
practicing "misrepresentation" and
said he "deeply regretted" the pol-
icy by which "the Soviet govern-
ment appears deliberately to pre-
vent intercourse between the Rus-
sian people and the rest of the
world."
Six-Months-Old Strike Ends;
Break Indicated in Others
According lo the Russians, he
declared, whoever was not a
communist was necessarily a
fascist.
Legion To Sponosr
Merit System for
Veteran Employment
AUSTIN. Tex. Oct. 25— T —
A bill designed to plate veto nigs
under a merit system instead el
a "spoils system" in then emp! >v
ment by state, county and city
,, ., , , units will be sponsored by the
1 ."J’.c u,cend,ar-v b"mbf American Legion during the nev
state legislative meeting. Dr. C. H
Brownlee. Legionnaire, said yes-
terday.
The state chairman of the Amer-
ican Legion s veterans’ uflair- md
• mploynicpt Committee aid tha;
under present state laws the jo',
oi many veteran- on the ouLla
or mustard gas.
Administration of experimental
poisons, including shooting pris-
oners with"poison bullets
Norman Murder Triol
Goes to County Jury
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The threat of a shutdown of the
nation's -ufi pool mines remained
today but there were a few bright
-pot- mi tile labor front.
()n(> strike nearly -x months
old involv ing 900 workers at th"
Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co.
plant at La Crosse, Wis., wa<
ended and there were indications
°1 break - in the national mari-
time walkout, the work stoppage
by Trans World Airline pilots and
hi the AFL jurisdictional dispute
in the Hollywood movie studios.
The ending of lhe walkoul
at the Allis-Chalmers plant a!
La Crosse left only two of lhe
company's factories still strike-
bound, in Milwaukee, the firm's
largest, and Boston. Strikes at
the company's plants in La
Porte. Ind„ Springfield, 111..
Norwood. U.. and Hiftsnurgh
already have been settled. The
CIO Industrial union at La
Crosse ratifiea a contract pro-
viding a 131 : cent wage increase
and other changes.
Observers watching minority
party ellorts to woo some com-
promise from the Kuoinintang
(government party) and the
communists are amazed that
the government's military lead-
ers would set oft these cam-
paigns at a time when the pos-
sibility ol negotiating some new
ceasefire agreement hung in
the balance.
Sum m 1,11 ci v t*i ;uv *m lhe *
developments proof of reports fre-
quently heard m N.inking th.it
nmo military leaders are run
' dig tin guvei nrnent rating than
'he government running the mill
taiy, I’hey declared the-o com
manders are so tilled with the
1 surer-- of their North China earn
paigns that they are heedless of
the peace efforts which more mod-
erate Kuomintnrig leaders are
pursuing.
The communist- Yenaii radio
today called the government’s land
dfensive against Anlung and its
i combined sea and land assault
on C’ltefoo lhe first Iruits of .
military conference conducted in I
Peiping a few days ago |>\ the I
government rhiei oi -1aft. Gen i
Chen Cheng
The broadcast aid that the very
l av Nanking government leadei ; !
were ploying up new peace offers, i
three government ai inic * began j
converging on Antung,
In Peiping, the newspaper
Hsin Sheng Pao reported a
government army had reached
rengchengsien, only 35 miles
from Anlung, in its drive to-
ward that important communi-
cation center on the Manchuria-
Korean border.
The newspaper said another
column, moving east through i
Liaoning province, reached Hsin
yen. 7.1 miles west of Antung. Th*
paper is owned bv Gen Tu Li U> " ' 0 !’aid ,th,! bovl.et
Ming, commander of government ! '^n" w<‘rc w,thuut M,b'
torces in Manchuria. ‘
The communists, suffering set- , A",dri‘ Y’ Wishinsky, Soviet
hacks on all Hunts, turned ' '';u'v "r|'Pn mi"‘s r, tol.a**!
guerilla tactics. Two .......- pent* ' '"Vi/ r' v“ " P'n
Rate,) suburbs ol Tient-m but 1 {'f lh<' ‘ , N ter would
wen* driven off a«er capturing ^ ,rlfV oru’.n^-,i on ' ’“'"l
a village chief. A third liarrnsseri 0Ih*am/ation
illage near Peiping. • lhe committee held its in* t
Government troops captured | ^Mt’issSes.'^us1 "Vupp£S!Ii
li t. la-t night, hut became in-
volved in a legali-tic snarl over!
n row between India and South ;
Africa and tailed to get to the
veto dispute,
Tho^ India-South Africa fight
was settled only after Britain'
Sip Hartley Shawcross asserted
j I lot I v that "We are in danger of
i reducing this committee to a
laughingstock” by failing to de-
i cidc a relatively minor question.
Committee Chairman Paul-Henri
Spaak of Belgium said he was not,
quite sure about the meaning of
two votes taken on the question, ,
; but added that the assembly could
! figure things out for itself.
I Meanwhile the assembly itself!
j was pushing forward
! lengthy general debate which to
day was scheduled to include ad-
dresses (,'5 p, rn., C.S.T.) by Philip
Noel-Baker of
ol Argentina, Dr. Carlos Stolk of
Venezuela and Mrs. Viajava Lak-
shmi Pandit of India.
There was some expectation
that
forth Britain's policies for this
session of the peace organization—
might present directly to the as-
sembly recently expressed Brit-
ish government views favoring
eventual modification ol the Big
Five veto power.
NEW YORK. Oct. 25 (AP) - The United States and
Groat Britain clashed with Russia today over a Soviet at
tempt to bar discussion of the voto question from the United
Nations assembly.
While tnakinq it clear that they were not committing
themselves on the issue of whether the veto provisions of
the charter should be changed, the two biq western powers
i insisted that the assembly must not be denied the riqht to
, discuss the question.
The clash occurred at an open meeting of the general
committee after the Soviet representative formally demanded
that the items dealing with the veto be stricken from the
assembly's provisional agenda.
: W’ai 11*ti R Austin cliipf ft. S
Murder Charges
Filed in Death
Of Amarillo Man
AMARILLO, Tex., Oct. 25—(A’t
—A charge of murder has been
filed against Laurence He ry Boyd
in connection with the fatal shoot-
ing of C. M. Westherby, 33, driver-
mechanic for the Amarillo Fire
department.
Westherby died yesterday in an
Amarillo hospital, 20 minutes af-
i ter the shooting in an alley east
ot the downtown fire station.
Boyd, a veteran, surrendered to
an Amarillo detective at the po-
lice station several minutes after
the -hooting occurred, with the
words. ”1 have just shot a man.”
He refused to make further
comment.
Westherby had left the fire sta-
tion by a rear door, walked down
the alley and was a few feet from
his ear when slugs T.-pm a .45
calibre revolver felled ._;m. He
was -truck in tl* thigh
i" '' in' '"t .kreaf Brit i . -hoi'lder His death was attrib-
uted by hospital attendants to loss
of blood.
that tin- committee ha- no right, A 1942 Chevrolet sedan which
tn (icli te Such items or take post- f,;K) Been rented by Boyd was
parked across the driveway at the
the action on them.
Paul M i-luck ol Australia
in-
trnops
\ ankao, 50 miles southwest of
Kalgan, the last city tiie Red-
had held on the Peiping-Suiyuan
* railroad. In South Shansi pro-
vince, they took Kuohsien, 100
mile- from Taiyuan, the provincial
J capital.
rear of the city hall, facing east
and nosed into the curb. Occu-
pants of the sedan eould have a
commanding view of the drive-
way and rear entrance of the fire
station.
Mrs. rnez Westherby, widow of
the slain man. said, "I knew it.
I’ve been expecting this all along."
She made no explanation of her
statement.
Grand jury action in the case
is not expected until Tuesday
when the panel re-convenes.
German Girl Killed
As G. I. Shoots Lock
Off Friend's Door
<f fleer* h
ix>n i
mac
AFL
• i
ptann
DALLAS. Oil
(>P>-
VVit
if**
but negotiations are not being
imessed until settlement of the
East and Gulf coast dispute.
In the five-day old strike by
1.400 TWA pilots, which has
made idle some 15,000 company
employes, company and officials
of lhe AFL Air Line Pilots asso-
ciation resumed discussion in
Washington before the national
mediation board. The pilots are
demanding wage increases and
revised working rules.
In Hollywood, a spokesman fo
the AFL Screen Actor- Guil
-aid leaders of two rival AFL
groups promised to arbitrate the<r
month long dispute by telephone
with members of the 15-man AFL
executive council in Chicago. The
two unions have been at odds per-
iodically for 18 months over which
has jurisdiction in building film
-ets.
A strike affecting Pennsylvan-
ia - entire brewing industry wa
called today by the AFL Team
-ter- union in Pittsburgh. The
Teamsters challenging bargaining
j.eht-x held by the CIO Uniti t
Brewery Workers, u-ked local- in
Maryland, West Viigima and
Nev Jer-ev to cooperate in a beer
Riuckagc of Pennsylvania by re-
fc
BERLIN, Oet. 25 —'AP' —The
U. S. army provost marshal said
today a German woman was kill-
ed last night by an American
soldier who fired a bullet at the
lock of a friend’s room in order
to gain admission and get a cigar-
ette.
The soldier, whose name was
through a withheld pending completion of
winch to- the investigation into the incident,
was confined to his quarters. A
Britain Jo-c* Arcc P^'minary report of the inventi-
on tain, Jo-t An* Kat;on into the incident, was con-
fined to his quarters. A prelimi-
nary report of the investigation
termed the shooting accidental.
, t, , , The provost marshal's blotter
licitnm'........... f. ,h,: gave these details: The soldier
-aid he went to his friend's room
in an American billet to get a
cigarette, and, lacking a key, fired
a bullet at the lock.
"As the soldier fired," the police
report said, "the door was opened
and a German girl, Gertrude
Schwarzloff of Berlin, emerged
from the room. She was shot and
killed."
Doctor Kills Wife
And Her Mother
GARDEN CITY. N.
-'4*i—A prominent
Y..
Ne
Oct 25
. York
JCtOi
nth*
Ttie
illetl his wife
thi
Jap Civilian Guard
To Be Tried Monday
YOKOHAMA, Oct. 25 — (>P) —
Matsujiro Nakasai, former civil-
ian guard at Nagoya prisoner of
war camp So. 1, is scheduled for
trial Monday on charges of beat-
uig. burning and otherwise tor-
turing Americans, including;
Ptc. George A. Snyder, Van
Horn, Tex . Sg* Clovis M. Lee.
307 Heed St., Clovti, N. M.; CpL
.11')in 1i Leppard, Box SU4, Little-
field Tex ; S-Sgt Richard J,
oTllien, H07 N /.tings Hlv*^ Dal*
TODAY'S U N
SCHEDULE
Art H iJh— To-
« Hie Liuii.l Ne
Cent* at *~l Hiilifrl
i u«g
■ ' ■
aMM
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Phillips, J. C. Borger News-Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 287, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1946, newspaper, October 25, 1946; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth738512/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.