Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 76, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 14, 1949 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gregg County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lee Public Library.
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% ttANMTII (TUI DAffi.V I
Tuesday, June It, 1919
We're Not Flattered
An I nulish writer, »yndhan> Lewis, writing
fo* his fellow Englishmen, describes ihe An.eri-
esn as the "cosmic man" of the future. Out
the reasons he gives for making this selection
are nor too flattering to us. And die chief rea-
son they are not flattering is because they are
large!) true.
• Lewis praises the so-called typical American
because, unlike the average Englishman or
native of an) other Old Hoc Id country, he has
no abiding affection for any one place. Ameri-
cans, he says, will fight for an idea such as
a or Id brotherhood, but not for any patch of
land. Ihe Englishman loves England, the
Frenchman loves France, the Spaniard would
die for Spain; but the American, when he goes
to war, fights for an idea. K>aybe he is out to
make the world safe for democracy, or to stop
Nazi aggression, or possibly, in the nest war,
to halt the onward march of Communism, but
he is not standing above "the green graves of
his sires," rifle in hand, ready to die for some
sacred piece of earth, some historic shrine
where n en once poured out their blood for a
chosen cause.
America, says Lewis, is not a place; it is
a state of mind. Ihe Americans are a rootless
people, without abiding ties, hence owe their
allegiance to ideas rather than geographical
areas. therefore, the American is due to be-
come the "cosmic man” of the future, since
the "cosmic n an" cannot afford to hold too
much to any country.
Lewis finds the United States and Russia
very much alike in their worship of bigness,
in their materialistic approach to the problems
of life, in and their devotion to technology and
abiding faith in science. Except for their dif-
fering political ideologies, he says, the two
great nations are very much alike, and even
the political differences may decrease as Rus-
sia grows more conservative and the United
States becomes note socialistic.
Lewis is right in his appraisal of the Ameri-
cans as a people not rooted to any spot. The
Americans are a restless race. But he is wrong
when he infers that Americans do not love
America with a passionate devotion. People
of other countries who had contact with our
Gl’a during the war should know better than
that.
Also, there is a strong regional movement
underway in the United States at the present
time. If anyone doubts that Americans of dif-
ferent sections have a strong love for their
‘home states, let him rub up against-a Tesan,
a Californian, a Kentuckian, or a Virginian.
'Ihe American of the future may become the
"cosmic man" who will owe his allegiance
to a world state rather than a single nation,
but we doubt it. Americans today are the strong-
est advocates of world brotherhood of any
people of the world, but it is largely becauae
their own nation exemplifies, to them, what
a true "federation of man” should be like.
sonnel, but technicians will be more in demand
than other types of employers.
These are only two of the fields in which
new jobs are being created by the thousands.
The field of electronics is being developed
rapidly and there are many openings in this
branch of work. A similar condition exists in
the faat-espanding field of plastics.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics, which deals
in cold figures and makes no effort to embell-
ish the facts, merely calls attention to these
4Mw- openings. At the same time that it is
pointing to new opportunities for employment,
the Bl-S releases figures showing that unem-
ployment is rising rapidly in this country and
is already far over the 3 million mark.
Putting these statistics together, one is im-
pressed with the fact'that there is a growing
need for trained and competent people in al-
most all lines of work, but the person who "can
do most anything" is finding it increasingly
difficult to obtain employment. Maybe, it is the
trend of the times.
R£VOLUT)OIO/h£ck mcl
JUST THE ANNUAL.
ROONO-tlP
RODEO.'
fm,
New Jobs Created
Government experts ptedict that new tele-
vision and radio stations will employ several
thousand persons during the next year, but
that competition for the jobs will be keen. Both
radio and television are expanding at a rapid
rate.
In making this prediction, the Bureau of La-
bor Statistics pointed out that more than 100
new TV’ stations are due to go on the air-during
the next twelve months, and 522 new sound
broadcasting stations whose applications were
before the Federal Communications Commission
in late 1948 will begin operating this year or
early in 1950. Both the TV and sound broad-
casting stations will be in need of trained per-
The Dangerous Age
The scientists sav the average lifesran has
been lengthened considerably in the past few
years, thanks to advances made in medical
science. An actuary of a large insurance com-
pany, however, puts up mite an argument to the
contrary, claiming that it isn’t true that people
lire longer nowaday- -<re of them reach middle
age thin formerly, which brings up the average.
The elimination of disenses of childhood,
which fotmerlv took a heavy toll, and the re-
duction in the number of deaths ftom such
diseases as typhoid, smallpox, diphtheria and
other similar maladies, has raised the average
lifespan approximately twenty years in the last
half century, savs this statistician. nut there are
not anv more old people than there were fifty
years ago, on the basis of population, he asserts.
In the future, there ate likely to be fewer than
there are now.
This idea is interesting, since it is exactly
opposite to what we have been hearing all along.
But whether or not this writer’s conclusions are
valid on general terms, he certainly is right about
one thing: there are more middle-aged men drop-
ping off these davs than ever before. Or, at least,
we hear about more of them.
While epidemics have been halted and many
diseases almost eliminated, the growth of the
degenerative diseases during the past few years
has been alarming. Heart disease is now out
Number 1 killer cancer ranks right along with it.
Diseases of the nerves are increasing; brain
tumors are mote numerous than formerly. The
majority of victims of heart disease ate middle-
aged men. The period from 40 to fit) might be
called "the dangerous age.” The newspaper
columns carry numerous stories each day of men
who have died prematurely from heart attacks.
Most of them are in their forties and fifties.
The reason for this development is apparent.
The pace at which the average modem business
or professional man lives is more than the human
body can stand. The physicians ate worried over
the situation and are trying to find a remedy for
it. Most medical men will tell you that either
modem men must learn to adjust themselves to
our system of speed, or else do awav with the
system. It is taking too heavy a toll of men in
the prime of life.
• • • • •
Woman magazine writer savs men are de-
clining in moral stamina and women will soon
rule the world. Since when have they failed to
rule it?
• •••••
Those who are strong for showmanship in busi-
ness usually wind ur with showmanship but no
business.
Looks Likt A Finish Fight
ANYHOW ITS jv
PROGRESSING'
MY AMERICA
HARRY BOYD
with a lunr In his tlmat and levs
In his eves, the typical evangelist trx
govisnment-iHSue medical caie vavns
a tiHK-htm: rtatlrtlc In the faces of
lll'*vty-leajntis skot*lcs
•* i'wri <>ut of every three people," he
says, citing the Am«ncan Mattes 1
Association, r» less, as aittxTtty.
"ms*i heir to meet the eng of serious
sickness."
So 'Miat’ TWO nut of every three
peorle, I daresay, also need help to
meet the cost of serious legal "r repair-
shop trouble In cam* they should inad-
vertently run their automobile* nwr
some careless redestnan or lush In
the front end of somebody's con-
vtvtlble.
So they grudgingly dig up the coney
pwtodjeally to hire an ins trance com-
pany to stand by as a he|p*».
Probably "'ire than two out of ev«ry
'.tew people need hell' to meet the
cost of srrlrus taxation, nut no oig-
slde help Is readily available for such
exigencies. The und<rwnt*Ts are
willing to gamble on death out they
don’t mens around rcsich with the
actuarial hazards of tax tnsifance.
Sr> people sit up mgttK and ftgigr
ways of helping then,selves out of the
tax dilemma They ktxiw from exp*rl-
once that the tax cnllnrtr* Is by rv>
means as to]opart as the family
doctor In the natter nf delinquent
aorrmts.
In exactly the same anil-trying
fashion tiiey dope ot* ways to help
thtv»i»lves nest the coat of stoking
their families with groceries, clothing
their rokednsa* and pmvtdtng places
for them to gri In out of the rain.
TV grocer, the dfthnv and the land-
lord an* In twain ess to make a living,
the same as their ctatMMM. They ran
be stalled off temporarily but eveitu-
ally tl*y will refuse to be rf firth*
help micas they get their money.
Pi* the toctiv la of anther lreed if
at*. i'e is professionally txsrri to he
helpful In serious Illness wtwther he
tmdx any show of getting paid < t net.
So a certain nunlxr of people «ig of
i*v*tv three flgire that the dorter can
whistle for his irwtiry. lie Is simply
-aught In an mf<rit*iat»' naliral
atasto’phe and will have to tie natiert
util things work out.
It's emtamtaalng. though, to be
sponging off the dortrr all the time.
one geta to white Ids tirilyaches have
to lie I Titty Ini tefite tv feels |Ultr
rigIt slant discussing them with a
creditor.
It would he nice If sianebndy would
ease Ufa sitiaitlin so a person m«i|d
nui to the dnctir whema-* the spirit
mines him. wtttaaK feeling sheepish
ib at It. And who onuld onat In hand-
ler as an easer than Old Whiskies, the
bny with tile InexIniMtllie mineylngsk
What we need Is sari allied medicine'
Hash' Why do we need our lull zwl
medicine any owe than we need
snnallwd pork chips or w visit zed
uivlerwear '* socialized cocktail
parties’
What we really need la a ertnmon-
sense :ippntl*al f the tuaUth iv»h|i«n.
We need to r«mgniw that a Failed
ippendlx Is no m<r»> an Act if 0*1
har, a frozen rank shaft. We need to
make <ug l-uigets cover i vernal upkeep
on tV old --weans. inrlixtln* repair
bill* as well as furi tails.
It's going to t» in the ludcrt.iw way
or anrtlar regardless.
(Copyright, 1940. King Fettiaw* svn-
dlcWe, Inr.i
HOLLYWOOD*
HOLLY WOOD, June 13-UNSF-
Oood morning I ! hope you are as
glad to have rr.e home as 1 am to
be here. American coffee and
California grapefruit taste so
wonderful, and evwvthlng In
America looks super'
However, I must admit It Isn't
possible to be lonely In Fwope
these days with literally dozens
of familiar face*, most of whom
are intent on spending the Yankee
dollar.
Expected in Fart* soon are
Gloria Vanderbilt, Jr., and her
white-haired husband, Leopold
Stokowski. orchestra leader.
Stokey, as he Is called in musical
circles, goes there not to apond
his Tanker dollars, bit to make
a few francs himself.
lie Is to appear in 26 television
shorts with the Farts Symphony
Orchestra-each one to coat only
1115,000. Hem Lavorel. Made-
line Carmll'a estranged husband,
la Ihe producer.
In Furls *tls said that Lavorel
will divorce Madeline, reason:
aha wants to live In America,
while he prefers his native
Franee. I hear Madeline has her
next selected.
• • • • •
Anna Magnanl, whose name la
often mentioned In gossip columns
as Ingrid Bergman's rival for
Rossellini's Interest, la planning
to hrlng "Nlnotchka," Greta
Carbo'a one time comedy, to the
stage.
I don't know how the company
for whom she's now making a
movie with William Dlelerle was
able to obtain the rights to
"Nlnotchka," since only last
summer MOM was showing It In
foreign countries. But Anns will
do both the play and a movie.
I had luncheon at the Hltz In
Paris with Walter A anger and
Joan Bennett, wiho were headed
for Italy to talk to Bergman and
to make arrangements for Ugftoo'a
movie, "The Duchess U# Lange-
als." the Balzac story.
• • • • •
• • • • •
In London three newspapermen
called for an Interview. I must
say they shot questions al me
al a-mlle-a-mlnute rate. But there
were a few thousand questions
I wanted to aak them, no I reckon
the score was even.
One question they asked was
"Is It true or false that Holly-
wood razzed Douglas l-airbanks,
Jr., na being made a K.B.t. by
King George
"False," 1 said. "Young Doug
has done a great lob with care,
and I haven't heard any raz.zing.
Besides, he Is an American
citizen and cannot use a title In
America."
t hatter in Hollywood; Jennifer
Jones la due in London July to
to start work on "Gone to Earth."
Meanwhile, she and David helz-
nick have been In ban Renos,
the Italian Riviera, motoring with
Anita Colby (The Face) as a rha-
n erone.
The talk that Jennifer and
David were quietly married Is
not true beta use you must reside
a month In F'ranre, mat mat as
long In Italy, before a marriage
license Is grafted. I don't lie
lleve David and Jennifer have
lighted in one spot Mat long
since I learned they were in
Faria together.
Snapshots of Pari*. London,
New York, and points West
In Fwls I went to • gala party
at Maxim's, which Is celetrallng
Its 50th anniversary.
hitting next to me was the
Marquis De F alulae, who was
once married to Oliela Swanson
and Constance Rennert. He must
be doing all right now, for he
spoke of his aumiM* home, and
I understand his ctgrerg wife has
plenty of money.
Maria Monte/, and Jenn Pierre
Auinonl witi* there. It seems they
were only separated for a couple
if days, when Maria changed her
mind and returned to his waiting
arms.
I seem to have gotten In on a'.l
the galu function*, for I wan Invited
to a dinner at the lour D'Argent in
celebration of the rooking of the
200.tMHXh duck. At this time ot
year the French celebrate every-
thing.
In London It was wonderful to
see Hebe Daniels olid Hen Lyon,
Stevie and Muster Collier, the
Ben Ooetz.es. i Seneral and Mrs. Ly-
man Miinsnn. and many old friends.
Richard W i dm ark has arrived In
New Yolk. In London, where he Is
expected, they w<tc making great
preparations.
Marlene Dietrich goes there, too,
to make a picture, hut she lingered
n Faria long enough to have her
•lothes made. The Furls clothes
are lovely this yew.
Robert .sterling, devotion Itself
to pretty Eva Gabor. FYownan
Gosden receiving congrabilaU"ns
on the graduation of his daughter,
and the expected arrival ot a new
baby.
I hat's all for today. . you
tomorrow.
FACTOGRAPHS
A new highway, scheduled for
completion in IWWi, is being
paved from l&l Faso. Tex , to
Mexico City. It Is graded
throughout, but 3N0 miles re-
main to be paved
• • •
To Dent* Papin, a French
physicist IM7-mr be-
longs the honor of having Brat
con at rue ted a steam engine with
a piston
• • •
The flrst recognised (latent
for a thermostat waa laaued In
1N3I to Dr. Andrew lire, an
felngllahman
• • •
Swans hiss like geese and
strike with their winga In at-
tack or defenae
The Gila National feYirest.
which Is less Utan 200 miles
from fell I’aso, Ter . contains
Nome of the wildest snd moat
unexplored areas of Ihe United
States primitive wilderness
It's open to campers, and entry
is made through Sliver City,
N M
» • •
‘"Fifth Column" originated
with Gen Francisco Franco's
advance on Madrid during the
overthrow of the Republican
government Fte said he was at-
tacking with four columns out-
side the city a "fifth column"
within
• • •
The sturgeon sometimes grows
to a length of 10 feet.
In IH45, .'1,70S, IWi pairs of
boot* and I7.I2N.4II pairs of
shoes were made In Massa-
chusetts With the aid of ma-
chinery, 10 years later, produc-
tion had risen In ll.Nft2.320
pairs of hoot* and 33.174.4IS1
pairs of shoes
• • •
A Is ml 500 B C. Pythagoras
propounded the Idea that vision
was the result nf the formation
In the eye of an image built up
of material particles emitted by
the object.
• • •
In Texas. 10,613 out of 24N.M4
applicants were denied driver’s
licenses because of inefficient
vision Most obtained licenses
after visual corrections
on ThE line I
t*-l|Nffi»"lf
you plan to write anything about
MADRID, June
«aln." an old tfeanlah hand aald.
gloomily, "do U immediately.
After a weak Toe bate enough for
a book, but after two weaka you
dec Fla It would St hotter In a
magattne place. After a month •
lettiv to the editor will aufflca.
and. beyond a month, you won't
write anything."
It Isn't the aun thffi drains It
steadily out of you...the eternal
sun that haa parched the land
ixmo- white, dried the rivers, still
•d the turbines and brought the
nation to Ihe brink of economic
chaos. It is *iain Itself that b#>
wilders (he visitor after a time.
lw» hi a preconceived notion j and
leaven him with Insufficient sub
aUUites for those beliefs.
For Instance, an I write these
words, below me the toirenta of
Nunshine Illuminate the open sir
restaurant of the plushy old Ititz.
The spotless tables are filled with
the elect, and the elegant waiters
carry to the tables great riches in
food and drink. A 10-ptece oichen-
tr* softly plays "Just s Little
Love, s Little Kisa" All Is
*c-*ne.
d ol < on trust*
Bui the other day. on the pave-
ment lust beyond the chsate badge
and the soft music, a aUrvtm:
beggar, ragged and filthy beyond
belief, limped along wkh his
Hcvecmw wife and psOiettc,
riaperleae baby. Fhe men and
woman held out their hands plain-
tively. The man was so saunned
by the 3 peseta offering that, as
If wonting to offer aomrthing In
return, he reached Into hie ragged
pnrket and nmught nut a tattered
-kictimcnt--site Ming that he and
his wife and the baby were under
free government care tor ayphUla.
The superb square that Nfretchee
from the HltZ to the Palace Hotel,
hums with many fine car*, mostly
American. The afreet la being r»
paired by modem machinery and.
almost wherev« the eye wenderv
new buildings are gnlna up. Rut
the workers cannot Irwom of one
day owning one of the care that
paaa, nr of living In the buildings.
TtMdr worry is how to buy enough
fond with their meager wages..and
of course, there con be no thought
of a strike tor a better living
wagm-fnr sulking ts a crime com-
parable u> treason.
Hie dictator. Franco, haa »»
timaled that he could restore the
v of -Spain with gjoo.ooo
000. make It an even greater lose
•t of strength against Onremunlam
In Western Europe, make U a
llkalter base for our military opsru-
tlons again at Russia in tha event
nf the war which an many paopte
In Spain take for tiaalad.
At the moment a loan of that
size seams remote, yet hi a ainglr
building that fronts ns the square
where these words are written
hangs an art collection which
poveriv-ladm Spain could sell for
that much money.
The Muaen Del I'radn 1* Ihe
greatest In the world greater In
xnme respects than the Louvre
and Metropolitan combined. It haa
whole wings, not rooms, filled
with the greatest works of fe]
Greon. Goya, Murillo. Hubena.
Ribera. Velazquez, Rafael. Titian.
Van Dyck. Botticelli and other
masters.
%antairia Aik fwtt
Rut evaa tha hungry ffiwntard
would rffikkt a proposal to save
his nation'a akin by aalllag one
of Uiaen. Tha Hepalure* and tha
ftourtoas wittarud Into nothing-
ness through Inbreeding and cor-
ruption but the spanlald* they
ruled remain strong and filled with
pride. R la a pride that la often
Incomprehensible to a visitor.
The Spaniard admires strength.
The Hlght of Franco, handsomely
uniformed and racing along behind
screaming motorcycle* and pro-
tective cars with Mg. tough, armed
> too re- Me guard of honor- will
set thousands to cheertna. Anb
yet the asm# ripontard la so *e
asalnal heins bossed that he ell.
lend hlmaelf to any of a dozen
societies constantly ploitlnr the
downfall of Franco and the seating
nf a new government or head of
state Yet for all the Spaniard's
Individual pride there seem to be
few open demands for a govern
ment baaed on U. N. type freedom*
This la a land where a man can
live like a king If he haa a autft
clent numl>er if American dollars
and where mailing ban an estab-
lished price In pesetas. Roughly,
the Spanish citizen’s peseta tr
pegged at about a time. Hut ru>m<
American firms doing business
here can huy peseta* at the rale
of 12 to the toiler other v ft
firms get 16 to the dollar. Th<
total si gel* 25 for hta buck. In the
black market you can get a* high
a* 4b for a dollar
I lie Is I w<mate
The American who gets 40 f<»r
the dollar pays the equivalent of
only ITS Cent* for a pack of aim*
gle-1 American ctgaretn. The
Spanish working man. shelling out
a similar 15 pewetaa tor a similar
pack, la In reality spending $1.50
for the some smokes, ftn he cannot
afford them
Pinner and innks tor three of
ua at the Jockey r*1ufe the other
night came to 500 peseta*, after
the laxea and service charges had
been added ua. At the tourist rate
that would have leen a stiff $32.
At (lie leal black market rate It
would have been a 2D. Put the
.'toantaM elm undertook to pay
the bill would have been paying
the equivalent of Mi). Ho there
were few Spanish customer*, and
those who were : resent ale apar
Inaly and trank little.
There wa* a glittering opening
of the Monte rarlu Pallet tha'
night, and laughtor and muair in
the open faced bar* and restau-
ranta. "ut to the North, a t»m;
had barely mlasad killing Franco'*
wife end daughter, and In the
huahed up prisons and camps many
men and women often casually
accused and condemned, mttei
for their opposition to Franco
whose soup «Itchens and mobile
clinics moved among the poor.
The concierge at the hotel was
The conclerae at the hotel ewe
apologetic about hta inability to
sell me a mpy of the European
edition nf the Herald Tribune.
"There waa an editorial against
the government, | mmpose." he
shnieaed. "ftn the paper cannot
im distributed today."
"«ayhe tomorrow,” he added, ft
laenmea easy to say sfter a bit.
PLAN SUPER AIR-BUS-
RAIL DEPOT
ky JOHN F SiMkOWIB
Central PreS( Correspondent
l III! ACHE— The wrorld'a great-
est tranapor'aliun terminal, de-
signed aa the Brat ink in a chain
uf •ii|MTterminaia throughout the
«*intry anal a orating near! for
national defense ,n the western
nemiapherr in any future war is
on Ihe drawing boards nere
Far from mat the dream of it*
prime motivator .as F M Miles
Jr, who Headed Ihe Army Indus-
trial college in Washing Inn D C
during the war and played a lead
mg role in national lranaportatki
planning nearly gllionon already
ha* been spent on plane
If ihe urogram goes forward -wi
schedule the Ihousanda of trav-
eler* who pa*« through this city
each year via mis. train or air
plane will Itnd every facility with-
in eaey reach in a to square mile
concent ration. 23 ulee wwithwea*
if Ihe midlown iaiop.
Die great passenger station will
im- served hv railroa.b running he-
ow ground levri. airplane-, wilt
pull up on runways fuel outside
Ihe great door* and huaeea will
route and go on thovr-level super-
highway* leading right Into the
terminal
Viewed aa the last word in en
gineenng for Ihe future Ihe ter-
minal will hr runner ted with down
lown Chicago hy a great system of
monorail trains, which Ihe iter-
mans. before Ihe war. demonatrw
ted could be Ihe 'a*lest and att-
est nualem public transportation
method
tl m ihi. lairi in i"i u v
ib Vn.sa "».i*,s" :m*
I l-Oilllgco lit I - H
i sg pivitwncnl Uliii* nil -itil ill
lovif's inertings to- let Mug i-Jslor
Irtlow Isi-g Irvine ui ball Mutt wan luul
novte money.
In uui- -ouigry you might i»- a* guilty
ax a i-gtiMidre wtlii i wet raicitiuip'
ihty can have Uic ii»>'l* on you like a
Innund ciiiuri.
.kg grt your .cil * iinud M«»ilbi'le< e
.gal Ui'yll lot you oft as lighUy a* a
.>.gl*A -liVKST on lot Ills toe
ilstt'i what we i-nti Ili-nragao
ue old Mild pig III :g*4iliT frenkVTI III Uli
lip-.S'ilie In tile ism .b-nuOiou iloti
Ule n .IS to l*4d the ben
Chr HlaiYrtantrr flatly Jflirmr
TbAkk'iNF'
I inlialied every -HOninq (eacepl ' ondoyl -ind J an Soy by Ihe Arlcralt
t’linling A Fubltehinq Co., Inr., I ongview Highway. Gferdewoler, Tosu*
'mile* I . Woodson, jeneral Isinoqei; I, WoMer >teep, I.<411 tj 1 am W.
-V||c'i«, klunoqinq I iih-r.
Any eironeoua reflect tow upon Ihe rheaclai or rei diillrm ol any
l era on lire » cor|K“«ol»«»n which may -ipiwie in Hue nee*|*i|ier will be
jpntly - orrecled open II bwmq called l» Ihe allenllon lo Ihe e-iltare.
SIIB8CRII TION BATES
Hy ( arner 20g e week. Bf per monlh. Three month# $2.25. Ufa
months $4.50 end $S.OO per yero,
Hy Moili 75* u month, or $5.06 per yei* All mall auhe< rlpimna ere
poyehle la edvence
(I
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Greep, J. Walter. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 76, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 14, 1949, newspaper, June 14, 1949; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008301/m1/6/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.