Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 186, Ed. 1 Monday, February 25, 1952 Page: 1 of 4
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24. 1952
(, . l > OC.'iAXt1
791
CV.ty
Partly cloudy
dia&mat^r Bmlu fflirrnr
City Edition
Four Pages
VOL. Ill, NO. 186
United:
GLADEWATER, TEXAS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY L5, 1952
Station KSIJ—1430 On Your Dial
Sc PER COPY
Young Love
Suit Filed Against City
Void The Expansion Election
New Agreement Designed To
Stop Materials Reaching Reds
John H Manning. 23-ycur-old service station attendant of Jack-
son, Miss., embraces his 13-vcar-oUi child bride, Dec, at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Fallon. The young couple was
married in Mendenhall, Miss., recently, where the former drive-
in waitress said she easily passed as a girl of 18. Dee's parents will
not contest the marriage, they say. <NEA Telephoto)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (U.R>—
I American officials predicted Mon-
day that a new 11-nation agree-
ment will dry up the last trickle
of strategic materials reaching
Russia and other Communist na-
tions from the West.
After months of negotiations,
the United States and 10 Western
Euro|>ean countries reached agree-
ment on a joint export control
plan which is expected to dose
MacArthur Assures Bob Taft
He Favors His Nomination
the "trans-shipment" loophole
through which Iron Curtain coun-
tries have been able to obtain
U.S.-made machinery and other
items of potential value to the
Red military build-up. 1
The ten European countries
agreed to certify that any strategic
materials whicli they import will
be used within their own borders,
or will not be re-exported without
official authorization.
In announcing the new arrange-
ments Sunday, Secretary of Com-
merce Charles Sawyer said they
He pointed to the trans-ship-
ment loophole as one of the main
causes of the situation.
Under the new plan, which will
become mandatory in 45 days,
U. S. shippers will be required to
obtain government-endorsed cer-
tificates from European impart
ers, who will then become liable
to punishment by their own coun-
try if they re-ship the material to
an unauthorized Communist des-
tination.
The co-operating European
countries are France. Italy, Bri-
tain, Western Germany, The Noth
Wetback Bill In
House For Last
Ditch Fight
f Claim Annexation Included
Two Different Land Areas
The State of Texas, on behalf of eight Companies and In-
dividuals, and with the permission of the court, have filed
suit to declare the Annexation Election and concerning city
ordinances void.
The suit was filed in Judge Fred Erisman’s 124th District
court after the court had granted the petitioners permission
to file it.
The suit is a quo warranto pro-
ceeding testing the legality of the
election, brought by the State of
Texas on behalf of the eight in-
dividuals and companies who sign-
ed as petitioners. The suit asks
that the court declare null and
void the election and each of sev-
eral ordinances passed in connect-
ion with the election.
The election was called for De-
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (UR>—.value, and therefore is not con-, total includes 40 from among the
Gen. Douglas M.icAithur has |ht- : ceruod about the growing specula-! 70 delegates from the uncertain
sonally assured Sen Robert A ! lion that the general might be-
come u candidate for the iiopubli-
can presidential nomination in
his own right.
While Taft has been campaign-
face | mg intensively for the nomination,
' MacArthur lias publicly discour-
aged moves to make him a can-
didate. According to reports here,
he has privately endorsed Taft to
many callers, although he has
made no clear-cut public cndorsc-
, mont.
A MacArthur candidacy would
Taft that he favors him for presi-
dent, friends of the Ohio senator
said Monday.
They said Taft had accepted
MacArthur's assurances at
Bond Mothers To
Hold Womanless
Wedding March 7
. damage Taft's prospects
both men have support in the GOP
i wing opposed to the nomination of
An event that promises to top I Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
all entertainment presented here | Among most Republicans here,
in many days will be the "Woman, i MacArthur is viewed as a serious
less Wedding" scheduled for Fri-1 possibility for the nomination pri-
day evening. March 7, at eight I manly in case of a deadlock bc-
o'cloek in tiie high school midi-! tween Taft and Eisenhower at the
torium, sponsored by the Band
Parents club.
The following itnmninrcmcnt
was received with cordial interest
nominating convention next July.
Strategists in the Taft campaign
headquarters already have added
up delegates to show how the Ohio
today: Mr. and Mrs W. B Battle- senator might win the nomination
ux announce the approaching mar*! 0,1 the first ballot. This analysis is
provide “additional assurance that nu,.
goods exported by the United Jnd¥ortuMl Denmark’ Nor*
States and the nations co-opcrat- j wjy and Portugal.
ing with us will go where they j
are supposed to go, and stajr:
there."
The United States has long had j
export controls forbidding direct |
sale of strategic materials to Iron j
Curtain countries. But there pre- j
Traffic Accidents
Total Three
Over Week End
state of Pennsylvania. On the
other hand, it counts none from | viously has been no way to guar-
thc even more uncertain state of antee that goods shipped to Eu-1
Michigan/ rope’s free ports would not be re- 1
While Eisenhower is at his mili-1 L^tolron Curtain countries. j Thrcc millor automobUe acci.
tary headquarters in Europe, silent I *overnn^ta ron- ( dcnU occured in ciadewater over
on campaign issues, his supporters have taken the wsition m thc week cnd_
are trying to show that his stand
on current issues is no mystery.
Senate investigation into trade
with Communist countries* re>
ported last month that “substan-
tial amounts" of strategic mater-
ials from the West were ending up
in Communist countries.
Half Million Paid
To "Patriotic
Stool Pigeons"
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 <U.R>— j
The government paid "patriotic'
stoolpigeons" $500,000 in fiscal
1951 for tips which helped it col-! . .
Icct $9.7 million on unpaid taxes. Attend I flO Church
revealed Monday It gave rewards whllc Wayne Pollard sat in
ranging from $25.92 to $62,000 to church services Sunday morning,
Chevrolet
thc past that they could not be i , , ,
responsible for the end use of A four-car collision occured late
products shipped into their free Friday evening on U. S. Highway
ports on orders of private import-' 80, near Bill Allen Motor Com-
ers. ; pany. The four cars involved were
Sen. Herbert R. O'Conor <D.-
Md.), who conducted a lengthy
Car Stolen While
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (U.R>-
Texans opened a last-ditch fight I
on the House floor Monday against'
President Truman’s demand for I eember 26 in an ordinance passed
powers to search private property 1 on December 11 last year. The
| for illegal aliens. I election was held, and on Decem-
The battle shaped up as the her 27 the city commission can-
I House started debate on thc con-! vassed the votes and found that
I troversial "wetback" bill, already 182 votes had been cast for an-!
! named bv the Senate 1 nexation, 30 votes against annexa-
i1 The bill, due for a House vote I “on , and .nine votes were not
! Tuesday is intended to tighten up counted because of mutilation or
' safeguards against illegal immi- ?*j'cr reasons> the l)1<?admgs al-
I gration, especially by Mexican | . ..__.
■ rs a,ross ,ho' as; sras, ms’s ss
Tho marnjj ."power th, "M/SSXr, S
Immigration Service to issue war- i and east of the city of Gladewater. i Under normal procedure cita-
rants to its agents lor inspection ; -phis area includes 179 houses and ! tions will be issued in the case and
of private property, except dwell- bas tbc total population estimated a temporary restraining order
ings, to ferret out illegal immi-| at the time of the annexation of might be asked by relators. If
grants. | 900. The city services were ex- j such is the case in this action.
House Texans claim the provi- tended to this area on December however, it appeared likely that
27, 1951, including lower utility I hearings on both the restraining
rates, and fire and police protoc-! order and the case itself might be
tion. held at thc same time. Judge Eris-
Plaintiffs in thc suit allege that I man last night, however, had set
the petitions circulated calling for I no dates for any hearings.
the election to be held did not ful-
fill the legal requirements as to
number of qualified voters in the
affected area. Further, the petition
claims that thc area added to thc
city was actually two areas, not
one, and that lor these reasons
the ordinances should be held in-
valid.
The suit was filed by the seven
individuals and companies and
named Mayor Carl Bruce, Com-
missioners W. M. Phillips and
Dick Hunnicutt and City Secre-
tary H. I. McAfee as defendants.
Complaintants who signed thc
state's petition include R. L. Saul-
tor, Stanolind Oil and Gas com-
pany, Magnolia Petroleum
company, McAlester East Texas
company. A. P. Carr, Mrs. Kate
Richey. Sigler and McCall, and
A. S. Genecov and Bennie Roosth,
sion would be an invasion of the
constiutional rights of property
nx announce tnc approaemng mar- ‘"v m informers in thc twelve ia«t
o. the,, ..uu,,;,;.,, ,r tint- «• l.h" SVj,J£V' I S.,“rw„* *•»
r"a',V MiSh'T Ul «1“m lowclok'„U>' li.vf The number ol Up, the bureau UkoI polio, b,B0„ Invcllp-
T u‘ h,i.w!,,l' rnmeltv 'will in- • chosen vet has l,ureuscti in recent years tions immediately after receiving
dlStadh‘by Sid Hufwit/ with The appraisal shows Taft with1 al°»R with taxes, one^official said, the report. The ear was found
a 1950 Chevrolet, driven by Mrs. own--*. They argue that immigra-
J. B. Blalock of Gladewater; a t101 »*» should be required to
1947 Ford, driven by Bennie See. Set . rants from a U.S. court.
Gilmer: a 1949 Ford driven by
L. C. Lancaster Jr., and a 1991
Chevrolet, driven by Alice Jean
Mainer of Gladewater. According
to investigating officers H. L.)
Gaddis and Robert Willeford, Mrs.1
Blalock made a left turn in the1
wrong lane causing Bennie See to •
make a sudden stop. Lancaster
bumped the rear of Sec's car. mak-
ing car No. 4, driven by Miss
Mainer, ram the rear ear No. 3.
There were no injuries.
Blast And Fire Damages
Longview Skelly Plant
LONGVIEW, Texas, Feb. 25 (U.R> i on thc eastern outskirts of town.
A huge distilling tower at the I All city fire trucks sped to the
scene, and several ambulances
by Sill Mm Witz Willi I »nc appraisal snows tan *iui | inunction
Ralph Prince as emcee. The cast I <*40 votes—well over thc 603 need- Thc current tax scandal mvestiga-
will be composed entirely of well-1 «• to win the nomination. The
known Gladewater men I '
The lovely bride and brides-1-, • . ■ ■
maids, adorable little flower girls. OTOCK AAOTK©!
cute ringbeurer, amt Jilted Lil will
make this an affair long to be re- At A OlfinCP
membered. Also present will In* ^ ” wimmvu
some of the screen and top radio
entertainers including Lana Turn-
er, Kate Smith, the Andrew Sis-
ters, and Betty Grable. A recep-
tion will be held in the school
cafeteria immediately following
the ceremony Meet the bride and
her party on March 7.
Tickets may be purchased at
Ritz Pharmacy, Day Drug. Dubose
Pharmacy, Uptown Shop, Johnston
Newsstand.
tion is expected to raise the num-
ber even higher this year.
Total rewards will not exceed
$500,000, however, because that is
the limit set by Congress.
The informer who cashed in for
abandoned at the edge of the
Longview city limits in Harrison
County late Sunday evening.
According to unofficial reports
from church Pollard parked his
car near the drive way of the
Stocks firm in quiet trading.
Bonds irregular.
U.S. government bonds firm
quiet trading.
Chester Higgs home, and went into
$62,000 last year led the bureau i the church. Thc Higgs said the
car was not there when they left
for church services about 9:30 a.m. • Gaddis and Robert Willeford.
to a taxpayer who had been keep-
ing two sets of books for a num-
ber of years. Thc set which tax
collectors had been allowed to see
omitted or underestimated sales
Curb stocks irregularly higher. | imd 'grossly misrepresented" cx-
M id west stocks irregularly high-1 penso accounts, according to of-
cr. ! ficials.
Cotton futures higher. The going rate for fruitful tips
Grains in Chicago: Wheat, corn, I js about 10 per cent of the money
oats, rye and soy bean futures ir- collected, but this varies greatly
depending on how much informa-
tion thc tipster provides.
regular.
Auto Accidents Claim
13 Lives Over Weekend
tr uhiiep runs
At leust thirteen persons died
In Texas automobile accidents dur-
ing the weekend and another was
killed in an accidental shooting, a
United Press survey showed Mon-
day.
The worst single traffic accident
occurred near Dallas Sunday night,
killing three women who were
driving home from church.
The victims were Mrs. Nora
Gentry, 53 of Mesquite, Mrs. C.
A. Kirkgard, 6U. of New Hope,
and Mrs. Bertha Bergoon Motley,
58, of Mesquite.
The car in which the women , , . _ , ,
were riding was hit broadsides as ^own*own Galveston.
MENINGITIS
DALLAS, Feb. 25 (UP.)—One
baby was dead and another grave-
ly ill Monday from a hlghly-con-
tafious form of meningitis dis-
covered in thc Union Bower com-
A hit-and-run incident in Dallas 1 munity Sunday,
county Sunday night killed an un- Ten-months-old Barbara C. c c r
identified man whom officers do- ' died at Parkland hospital while
scribed as between 60 and 65 years being transferred from the cmcr-
old, bald and with no teeth. K‘'ney room to an isolation ward.
P,„, ............ r____ Described as critically ill at the
*• i tirli i - >i ,'i - old Eddie L» i bospd.,| w«s Charlene Mayes, 18
Hamilton of Sweetwater was fat- m
ally wounded late Sunday when n .__!_- __
.22 caliber rifle thought to be I
empty discharged in the hands of I
his friend, Ray Kennedy, 12. I
Other traffic victims included: |
Hugh Paul Haney, 42, Texas City,
killed at Galveston early Sunday
in a two-car collision,
John Ferro, a fisherman, injured
fatally Sunday in a collision in
Heart Fund Stolen
In School Robbery
Saturday about 1 pm, a 1935 skelly Oil Company refinery, lo
Ford driven by Luther Freeman. cated at the center of the world's
Gladewater Negro, and a 1950 [argcst 0jj fields, exploded Sun-
Ford driven by Mrs. Glonettc i dav in a shower of fire.
Frantz collided at the intersection! _«
of Quitman and Main. Officers
Wayne Jones and Chief O. W. J?®* m*° a.lr> nn<* r<-P®r<s °f 'he
Odom investigated thc accident. I *n /XeVvo3 mifo - 3S
Five hours later a 1947 Ford.! Glddew Jter> twehc mUe!* iast'
driven by Duane Mitchell of j An 8-man crew was working at |
Gladewater, and a 1951 Cadalliac, i the plant when the explosion oc-
driven by A. Christian of Haw- curred at about 1:30 p.m., but a
kins, were involved in a minor! Skelly official reported to Sheriff!
mishap near Pigglv .Wiggly stoic. Noble Crawford that all escaped j
Investigating officers were H. L. injury. Not even a minor burn ;
1 was reported.
Thousands of spectators gather-1
ed at the scene. Off-duty police I
and reserves were called out to j
handle the traffic.
The refinery is located on a hill
were called out. The ambulances
left when it became apparent that
no one was injured.
Firemen had found no cause for
the explosion, but they speculated
that a spark from a pumn or spon-
taneous combustion set it off.
The flames were confined to the
area immediately around the
tower. Streams of fire shot out the
top for an hour after the blast.
Firemen said the flow of oil and
gasoline to the tower was cut off
by closing a master valve.
The pool of flames at thc base
of the tank was expected to con-
tinue to burn for hours. Firemen
said it would be impossible to ex-
tinguish the blaze, and said it
might burn for as long as twenty-
four hours before going out.
Thc Gladewater Elemen-
tary school was burglarized Sun-
day evening with the thief stealing
the Heart Fund money, a small
amount of change and stamps.
The theft was discovered late
Sunday night by Kenneth Skin-
ner, teacher, who entered the
school to place a telephone call.
Skinner had picked up his mail
at noon Sunday and the burglury
had not occured, thus setting the
time of the theft at sometime be-
tween noon and 9:00 p.m. Sunday
night.
The robber used a rock or stick
to breuk n window in the passage
between the old and the main
school buildings. The window was
unlocked and the thief gained en-
trance to thc building. The glass
pane in the door of Calvin Bran-
nen’s office was broken in the
same manner, with the door to his
office opened by reaching inside
through thc broken glass.
A steel bar was used to pry open
the steel locker in thc office where
the money, stamps and the dona-
tion to the Heart Fund was kept.
Several stamps were dropped or
thrown away by the thief on the
bus loading platform behind the
school.
The local police arc investigat-
ing thc crime.
Henderson Facing Fraud
Vacations In Mexico
Funeral Services
Set For Tuesday
TORREON, Mex., Feb. 25 (U.fi»—
C. M. Henderson, mayor of Far-
well. Tex., and wanted in Kansas
on a grain loan fraud charge, was
reported on a "pleasure trip" here
Monday while officers from two
states awaited his return to the
United States.
Mrs. Sally Davis, 83, mother of | Henderson, Farwell's most re-
Mrs. Gordon Grayson of Glade- spected citizen, is wanted in Kail-
water, died in a Teague hospital sas, where he is charged with pre-
about 7:30 p.m. Sunday after a senting worthless warehouse re-
lengthy illness. oeipts in getting a $45,000 loan
Funeral services will be held j from the Garden City, Kans., Fi-
Tuesdav afternoon at three o’clock ■ dcllty state Bank Nov. 6.
at the First Methodist church in Authorities learned Sunday that
Teague. Burial will be in Teague he was in Mexico with friends.
in the Kansas firm, Wayne S.
Martency has been charged with
issuing fradulent warehouse re-
ceipts and is free on bond. He
will get a preliminary hearing
March 1.
School Busses
Will Go To Paris
Memorial cemetery.
Survivors include one daughter, warehouses at Farwell and Lariat.
Mrs. Grayson: three sons, nine a*j!“ *1:'s been sued by the
grandchildren which include Jean Gonimodity dj[0^,d'disa°pptfai''
a<4(l Grayson i f Gbiiewflter, ...,... ,i,.,. ...,,.,v, „,,, ui.
and four great grandchildren.
Gladeites are planning to back
thc Gladewater Bears, champions
of District 4-AAA. one hundred
per cent in the first bi-district
Thc mayor, who _o\vns ^ grain game in Paris Tuesday evening.
High school officials are plan-
ning a bus convoy to carry all
students who wish to go to thc
a-Jf that much grain from his SH
warehouse.
Russia Is In Better Shape To Start
War Than Nazi Germany Was In 1938
it pulled on to highway 67 shortly
after the victims left church in
the White Rock community. Driver
of the second car. Marvin William
Jueobs, 32, was injured.
A seven-car pileup near Shel- j
don Saturday killed two persons .
and critically Injured another. The |
crash occurred on U.S. 90, a mile
west of Sheldon, and involved two
sheriff’s department cars.
Killed were Benny James Cat-
roll, 29, of*Lake Charles, La., nnd
Bernard Brown, 38, of Birming-
ham, Ala.
At Houston, Wallace L. Hnzcl-
wood Sr., 42, was killed Sunday
night when his truck collided with
a ear and overturned. Twelve-
ycar-ol.i Helen Marie Marx was
fatally Injured at Austin Saturday
when thrown from her mother's
Annie Bell Williford, 26. Hous-
ton, killed Saturday near Stafford '
when a ear crasnhd into an cm-
By PHIL NEWSOM
United Pr*M r»ral«n gnalytt
While the nations of thc North
bankment after missing a turn in i Atlantic Treaty organization are
the road.
East Texas
Cloudy with showers and colder
Monday afternoon. Cloudy to part-
ly cloudy and colder Monday night
and Tuesday. Low Monday night
26 to 32 north und central portions,
car, involved in a four-ear colli-) Fresh to strong northerly winds on
sion on raln-slickcncd joads. 'the coast,
dunning their European army,
iet's see what the Russians are
believed to have.
As opposed to thc 1,430,000-man
European army planned for some-
time in I95\ officers at Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower's headquur-
| ters estimate thc Russians to have
2 million men under arms now.
United Press correspondent
Kenneth Miller talked to French.
British nnd American officers ut
Eisenhower's headquarters und
from them drew this interesting
comparison: Russia is in better
shape to start a war now than the
Germans were un thc eve of
World War II.
Reds Hava Big Forces
Here is how these officers broke
it down:
Army—Russia has more than 2
million soldiers in 175 divisions—
including 65 armored and mecha-
nized units—plus 40 artillery divi-
sions. Germany had only a little'
more than half this number.
Navy—Russia has 300 schnor-
kel - equipped submarines com-
pared to 50-60 for 1939 Germany,
although their techniques are
weaker.
Air—-The Soviets hove upward
of 20,000 planes, not ull first line
but including an improve '
of their excellent MIG-19
or. Hitler had 7,000 when
into Poland.
Steel—Russia's production now
is 31.5 million tons yearly, accord-
un improved version
* Jet fight-
i he rolled
WABHINOTON, Feb. 23 (U.R)
Rep. George H. Mahon (D-Tox.)
warned Monday that tha nation
must pay heavily for air power
or fact the possibility of “an in-
credibly greater Pearl Harbor."
Mahon, who is chairman of
iho House Military Appropria-
tions subcommittee, said Russia
holds a "numerical air aupar-
iorliy" ovar tha United States.
"If wa art going to have air
power, wo have got to pay a
high price for it" he said. "This
is a part of tho price of our
quest for security."
sion, the Allied supreme head
quarters hopes to oftset the dis-
V. H. Houdyshell, u Kansas Bur-
I cau of Investigation agent and one
of the officers who took a Kansas
warrant to Texas, said he had not
decided what to do about attempt-
ing to arrest Henderson,
j The wife of one of Henderson’s
companions said the mayor was on
a pleasure trip to Mexico with five
persons, Warren N. Bowcll, Frank
Wiley, J. D. Birkmeyer, W. Wool-
ley and an unidentified man.
A clerk at the San Salvador
parity in numbers with this for-' hotel in Torreon said the men
ing to latest published Soviet re-
ports. German output was 22 mil-
lion tons in 1939.
As of now, and not what he
hopes to have at some future date,
Eisenhower has some 25 divisions,
some still mostly on paper. The
whole emphasis of Eisenhower’s
army is being placed on its de-
fensive nature.
Screen and Hold
In the event of Russian aggies-
mula:
Strong covering forces along the
German - Austrian contact line
with Russia, backed up by Strong
air power. These screening and
holding forces would resist long
enough to allow mobilization of
thc free-world reserves.
About 18 divisions now are in
the occupation zones, and a high
were registered here and were ex-
pected to return Monday from
visiting mining property near Za-
catecas.
It was the wife of Birkmeyer.
district munuger at the United
Bankers Life Insurance Co. of
Amarillo, Tex., who said her hus-
band und friends joined Hender-
son "for a pleasure trip to Mex
SHAPE officer described them "as j ico." Mrs. Birkmeyer said she ex-
good as any in the world." They 1 ported her husband back Wedncs-
faee about 25 Communists units j day.
in Germany and Poland. i Henderson asked that both his
So far, one of the weakest points i Texas warehouses and a Kansas'
activity counselor, said the school
had received 250 tickets for the
game, und if enough students
could go, they would have five
or six busses making the trip.
This.is the first time in the his-
tory of the school that Gladewater
athletic team has won district
honors, with the exception of
track. The Bears will play Paris
here Thursday night and a third
game, if necessary, will be played
in Commerce on Saturday night.
in the plan is Allied air power
Through his deputy. Gen. Alfred
Oruenther, Eisenhower warned
thc NATO powers at Lisbon some-
thing must be done at once to
build up Allied airfields, now sad-
ly lacking.
grain firm in which he is a part-
ner be declared bankrupt. A bank-1
ruptcy hearing for the Texas
warehouses was scheduled tn Am-1
arillo for Saturday, but Henderson !
did not appear.
Henderson's 40-vcar-old partner
FOOTBALL POSTPONED
The football clash scheduled
lor this afternoon between the
Orange and th# White has been
postponed until Wednesday
afternoon, woather permitting.
This Spring Training grid-
iron bottlo that highlights tha
Gladewater High schools foot-
ball training schedule is suffer-
ing from "wot field" troubles.
The contest was ariginaliy sat
for last Friday.
Starting time for tho gomo.
that will ha playsd according to
regulation rules, is set for 3:43
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 186, Ed. 1 Monday, February 25, 1952, newspaper, February 25, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008230/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.