The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946 Page: 4 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Freestone County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fairfield Library.
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from common
That Ha
Beware Coughs
colds
as On
teeJo^Li
VwflV.
• du, ro farigne. expo*
•are, cold, or overwork.
Contain. methyl .alicylate,
effective P«ir>relievitl«
■gent.
Money Bick 6uar»n:e»
U.4. to McKewee a kekMM
er Sale t, i.e lieulrt
Urlnst «“u* '""''-.nj
muscle pa»ns
a bottle or Crnomulsion with th« Tm-
derstandlng you must like tbe way it!
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
-•***
'a
.0
OT*»»0X
FOB QUICK RELIEF
— . Jv’’
> ’■j/Z-VEGETABLfS
LAXATIVE 1
IS GETTING UP NIGHTS
GETTING YOU DOWN?
Thousands say famous doctor's
discovery gives blessed relief from
irritation of the bladder caused by
excess acidity iu the urine
Why *uff*r Heedlessly from backache*,
run-dawn foaling from excess acidity in
the urine? Just try DR. KILMER'S
SWAMP ROOT, the renowned herbal
■ medicine. SWAMP ROOT acta fast on the
kidneys to promote the flow of urine and
relieve troublesome excess acidity. Origi-
i nally created by a practising physician,
Dr. Kilmer's Is a carefully blended combi-
i nation of IS herbs, roots, vegetables, bal-
‘ earns. Abso/utely nothing harsh or habit-
farming in this pure, scientific prepara-
tion. Just good ingredients that quickly
act oa the kidneys to fiUn^aso the flow of
urine and ease discomforts of bladder irri-
tation. All druggists sell Swamp Root.
A Soothing M b \t jm '
ANTISEPTIC O M Nr- V Cs
Used by thousands with satisfactory re-
; suits for 40 years—six valuable ingredi-
I ents.» Get Carboil at drug stores or write
.Spurlock-Neal Co., Naahvple^ Tenn.
n-Jloi
■ •
P jr -
i
<
IT
.11
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PENETRATES to
^■3
President of the United States.
a
A
I'M
Com
it
'llM. it
I
..
El
and
Amber
If.
GV
',7^!
I
The
32
bldg.
■EM
eVEREAD
‘ -fr-UV-* J
nuri of NaioaaFC.arboa Comp**
former Ass’t Sec’y of State, has.an
old farm near Babylon (L. I.) for
ing branch of the war labor board
—three able men—decided that a
16-cent pay Increase was fair and
»l
t roc
teavi’
brlie
fb rnj
tetthni
the
in
Above
was
muffin pans two-thirds full. Bad
moderately hot oven (400°F.) J
20 minutes. Makes 15 delicious J
fins. Why not try ’em today?
Th, Baking Powder
with the
Balanced
Double Action
To
!w
The word "Erw-vaTy- h a retliteret trade-
------- --------- -
OHM
»
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
bo.oo
Ldle.
RGJ
out
'! 1
■
I
s. -:-W
Lennon subjects and Scripture
‘ ‘ ’ ——lyrighted by Intel
; I
SB be
^Kxtrei
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W" 11
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MB th
du!
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N|n. t<
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..RUB IN
Sen-Gay
. lxT*3
lONG ij
•at Tin
"COR A TIME, you had to take
A whatever flashlight batteries
you could get!
But that time bat patted,
"tweedy" Flashlight Batteries
ere back. You can buy them.
Ask for them at your dealer's.
That’s good news indeed.
Flashlight batteries may look
alike, but that similarity is only
skin-deep. There are important
differences inside every "Eve-
ready” Battery—difference? that
mean longer life!
QUICK
• Ben-Gay acts last to relieve
muscular ache and pain—be*
cause it contains two famous
pain-relieving ingredients -
known to every doctor. Yes, 0
Ben-Gay contains up to 2 Vi
times more eff these tested in-
gredients — methyl salicylate
and menthol—than five other
widely offered nib-ins. No
wonder it’s so fast, so soothing!
Get gemline Ben-Gay.
is that they dealt kindly with her and
With the dead. That word speaks
volumes. There is so little genuine
kindness in the world.
Both Orpah and Ruth went with
her on the way. protesting their
loyal purpose to go with her all the
way.
Naomi met their kind offer with
the only Sensible answer. There was
no point in leaving their homes
1 and loved ones and going with her
[ to another country.
Logic is so conclusive and so final.
! Yes. and sometimes it reaches the
wrong conclusion.
ing to waste, or being fed to hog: J thinff *° say
iow
and
■
dow
■ b
D'
c h
hot
VuuaraM««l by**
.Good HouMk.tping
iwuiaw ffp'
Good Nutrition, too!
ALL-MAN ii made f rom the vital otm
layers of finest wheat—contain*
Cd>noentr&X&n of the protective £«
element* found in , •—
the whole grain. /
One-half cup pro / ,
vide# over V3 your / . j
daily minimum / J// /)ft 1
need for iron. //[IfWffJjll
Serve all-bran/
daily I
K. .,f
texts ee
rnational
*6v nii
I S
I’”
^Jlkhai
in w
)eri<><
s ac
Rlfi,
Ji •
TODAY'S BAKINGWAYS
h o home-baker's textbook ... a book of
basic baking recipes ... prepared in Hulman
& Company's labdratory*kitchens and tested
by experts. Use It to bring your favorite
baking redpes up-to-date.
Your name and address on a postcard
will bring you this new baking guide plug a
copy of the Clabber Girl Baking Book . . •
both absolutely free.
ADDRESS
HULMAN X 'COMPANY
D.pt. W Terra Hcate, Indians
debunking when H’wood hired two
British actresses to film the most,
amorous women — Amber and
Scarlett!
Backstage Vignette:
ln ■ •
room An old bore got by the
doorman and fdund Talu's retreat.
. . . Before she could say: "Now
I looka here!" he brought forth one ;
of those spellbinding ant villages '
in which the ants build tunnels and I
. whatnot. , . . The star wa, fasci-
nated by them. . . . “They are won-
derful little things," he kept saying,
"they really are. They never stop
workingxalways doirig something—
always keeping busy. They have
their own police force and their own
army, too!" . . . "Hmmmmm,”
hmmm’d Talu with her straightest
face, "no navy; 1 suppose."
I
1 -
■■■
^Bot I
■ i I
I ’)r<1
• 1
KI. K
™
fresh 'Eveready" Batterie
‘77
"I'm afraid he isn't quite reconverted yet!"
. 7 7 .-diMEl
Improved
Uniform
| International ■ — — —
UNO LESSON <7
B HAROtXll. LUNDQUIST. O. D.
L__ O« The Mood, mtile Institute of Chicago.
-Tx4yrtTT Releaeed t>y We.lern Newspaper Union.
■ ■ ■ w-.v. i.:.=
Lesson for March 17
■' ■■ __
PENETRATES to upper bronchial
tubes with its special medicinal vapors,
STIMULATES chest and back sur-
avw. rxuwi .via ._____
her." Such love expressed itself in a
III. Life (w. 15-17).
Literature knov<s no more beauti-
ful declaration of (aith and devotion
than these words, and nothing could
improve on it. Lord Tennyson said
of the book of Hulb that "no art
can improve on it." And of these
versea another *aid, "We cannot
hope to contribute to literature a
sentence so exquisite and thrilling as
that into which Ruth poured the
full measure of a noble heart, but
we can imitate her devotion" (Wil
3 cups Kellogg's
ALL-BRAN --
• % cup molasses
V/i cups milk
Add KIXLOCC’S ALL-
I
___k
•'•fuSb
.3 -«h<
hath
-thev are so,nel*ling drastic about it very express real love. "Ruth clave unto
shelves are loaded up with supplies
of bread in excess of what they can
sell.
The following day—sometimes the
same day—drivers pick up the un- i
sold loaves and replace them with
fresh stock, charging the grocer
only for the bread actually sold.
Idea is to prompte sales of a particu-
lar brand of bread because of its
“freshness."
This is a violation of war food
order No 1, but it hasn't stopped
: certain bakeries in Houston, Texas,;
build me and the German-American R'chr’10nd. San
Bund into something sensational sc Xleveland’ Kansas City
that their papers would sell! Even
my good friend Walter Winchell
spoke against me. and then the .
Dies committee investigated me."
Investigated him? It advertised
him asi a good American and de-
nounced me as “the leader of a
i sinister propaganda bund”!
Ach. Fritz! How times change I
i$inceJ9?3, qo?.Xqu are back home
tirgW^eToUMniMMilHV !!MT HW^
i Dies is back home in oblivion.
1*.
17“’
■ ■■
I wmvii uc .B v.va-vuao ...a..... eouitable for meat nackimr work- ,ife ®* Ruth in 8W'ful chaos °*
of the best informed State Dept equitable for meat packing wont
. . . ..... ' ers. But they added that only five
cents of this was "absorbable by
the meat industry without price or
subsidy relief.”
In other words, the fact finders
|W<|
Jbi
/ " 11 A
F
1 i
Relieve
Sounds in- the Night: At Leone’s.
"I love to stand at 42nd Street and '
Rrmdwoy nnd watch ttrf
by!" ... At the Blue Angel:
have a lot in common-they are the forthcoming atomlc tesU
hated by the same people.” At jn Pacjflc ,ejentigt8 -
the Latin Quarter: panning’ h turn out t0 be , gtud jn water.
a word that means the JBke was i r. aU,mic e
lousy but told by a very deal .
friend.” . . . At the Penthouse:
"Whata snob! Holds her nose so I
high she nearly drowns when it I
.-ains!" . . At WJZ: "Like all I
bigots, that Congressman has yet to :
learn you can’t lynch the truth!”
... At Club 78: "That Runyon is a
Damon in the rough” ... At the
Cub Room: “Nice teller. He'd give
you a bottle of milk for a cow.”
Nylons , are no longer the top
black market item. A $5 white shirt
in many spots brings 20 bqy. . . . Lili.
St. Cyr of the night clubs can’t
wear nylons. Allergic!.. . . W. Z.
Foster, chief of the U. S. Commun-|
ist Party, issued a rebuke io a>
headline writer on the local commyj
paper for “stupid journalism." • . •
Dorrs Lilly (no dunce, she) insert-!
ed a classified ad in*fi paper adver-
tising for an apartment and got 30:
replies next day. And an apt.!. . . . |
Sgt. Chet Skreen observes that the
legend about British women hav- Food
ing no sex appeal took a terrible George A. Hormel of Austin, Minn.,
a^nd others tn the Chicago area.
Apparently, the fact finders
„ did not take this into considera-
tion. Apparently also, they ig-
nored the fact |hat Swift and
company previously had agreed
to a pay boost of 10 cents an
hour without any strings at-
tached regarding increased
meat prices to the housewife.
For, despite Swift’s offer of 10
cents an hour and the smaller com-
wife bear the main burden of the
cost of increased wages in the meat
packing industry.
The fact-finding board; which in- I
eluded Dr. EMwin E. Witte of Wis-1
consin university. Chief
sale. A home is on the grounds. . . . Raymond W. Starr of the M.ch.g.n
- Interesting observation: That big Supreme court, and Clark Kerr,
-n page ad in which the N.A.M. at- former chairman of the meat pack;
FTtaeked Bowles was prepared by the
LlBenton & Bowles advert agency, of
I which he is vice-chairman. . . . One
-< 7 - j
ol • JM
T ■■
STIMULATES chest and back
faces like a wanning poultice.
Often by morning most of the mis-
ery of the cold is gone! Remember—
ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this spe- I
cial double action. It's time-tested.
UZ/W- ...___
M-ni-m muffins! No sugar,no shortening need
If you want to get compliments the
easy way—just whip up a batch of
these luscious, nut-sweet Molasses
all-bran Muffins. They're tender and
tasty, and they take no precious sugar
or shortening. Yet they’re packed
With good nutrition!
1 egg
1 cup Sifted flour
1 teaspoon soda
H teaspoon salt
,-asXN to molasses
and milk; let soak for 15 minutes.
Beat egg; add to first mixture. Sift
flour, soda and salt together; combine
with all-bran mixture. Fill greased
7s^
. Love has some-
thing to say about the matter.
Let us listen to its voice.
II. Love <v. 14).
Orpah doved her mother-in-law
That is evident. She wept at the
thought of parting, and was affec-
tionate in her final farewell. We
must not be too quick to censure
She did what Naomi told her
She responded to her love
for home and kinfolk. Rhe gave
up reluctantly, but she did give up
and turn back.
How glad we are that Ruth
showed a deeper love. “Orpah
kissed her mother-in-law, but Ruth
clave unto her.” There is a differ-
ence. Such love cannot be denied
It is the most precious possession
that a man can have, apart from
his fellowship w'th God. The love
of a devoted father or mother, of a
noble helpmate, or of a little boy
spouts instead- of atomic
On-the-surface atomic-bomb
explosions, the scientists claim,
will add nothing to the knowl-
edge already accumulated from
previous explosions at New
Mexico, Hiroshima and Naga-
saki, except that we .nay leara
the size and damage of the
world's largest water spout.
Administration lobbying to con-1 we can hnitate her de
firm Ed Pauley has reached white- ^enn'”ff* Bryanh
.. , „ hot pitch. Gov. Mon Wallgren of
ces no 8 pr Pid7 Washington was brought east to put”
geon, Naney Guild. H-eenan Wynn ( 1
and other H’wood notable. < at the Hu^ M,tchfe|L the ,a|ter hav<
Stork club) observmg that they w.U been Wallgren.g iecreury. Boti
be back b> Movletcrwn (via H. I now vote for Pau!
Hughes’ new Constellation r---
I “before yob columnists wake
' tomorrow!”
Theodore Dreiser’s "The Bul-
wark” (his testament novel on the
decline of 20th Century morals) will
be published by Doubleday next
month. Original publication date
was the fall of 1917. It will be the
April Book Find Club selection. . . .
Fred Allen and his agent are mak-
ing a money settlement after a long panies’ increase of 15 cents, the fact all too often lacking. Her own teste
. . Republicans finders recommended that only mony concerning these girls of Moab
5 cents bf the 16-cent increase could i
be paid for by meat packers. The1
remaining 11 cents will be passed,
on to the housewife—unless the gov. I
eminent votes a subsidy.
BREAD WASTE SCANDAL
DepkrtmetX of agriculture sfeuths
have been doing some quiet check-j
the people in the world could not ing of unscrupulous .bakeries which
read the Atlantic Charter if writ- ] violate bread sales regulations in
ten in their own language—that’s order to kill off competition,
how much illiteracy there is! j Despite the tact that the nation
a lhas bee'Ti forced on a “dark bread” ,
It happened (jjet to hejp fe'e(j war-starved peo-i
Tallulah Bankhead s undressing pjes of the world, thousands of
j loaves of good bread are still go-
! iiqs w WrtSie, u
and chickens. .
It works like this:
' If a big bakery is trying to grab
business away from e competing
bakery, it Will begin supplying gro-
cery stdfeS on a "consignment
basis," which means that grocers' JJer* !
to do.
Francisco, or these are the things that
really make life worth while.
Life has put Into „the hands of
many of us the opportunity of show-
ing just that kind of love in these
; postwar days. A boy comes home
■ crippled and disabled and a loyal
! sweetheart shows her undiminished
I love for him, even though he can
never again be whaj he had expect-
ed to be. That is love. A mother
and a father take to their hearts a
from overseas with a shattered
nervous system, and give their lives
anew to him. One could go on
< and on with sueh illustrations, but
officials complains that too manyp
of -the top men in Washington are
fiddling while the world burns—that
World War III has already started
e recommended that the^htg—-njeat
- packersjCouid pay only 5 cents of
i ?6/.?_nt_ *.ag.S ^CJ.ea.SL Into ’ute'a’c^fearmg
people who live right in spite of the
low standards around them.
Ruth knew life’s sorrows and its
bitter disappointments. .She was a
widow, destitute of all she held most
dear. Yet she, because of the
sweet purity of her life and her de-
votion to God and those she loved,
became an example for others.
As we read our lesspn wc first
hear how logic speaks, then love re-
plies, and finally a life says the-
final word.
I. Logic (w. 8-13).
Tragic misfortune had visited
j Naomi, who with her husband and
two sons had gone from Bethlehem
to Moab in a time of famine. Not
only had her husband di£d but also
her two sons, who had married
Gentile women, leaving three wid- ,
ows in one family to.mourn togeth
er, Naomi craved the fellowship of
her own people in her hour of trial,
and she arose to return to her own
land.
Her debarture brought out in the
two daughters-in-law the expression
of kindness and loyalty which should
exist in every family, but which <s-
The conclusion of the story finds
Ruth married to bonz, her kinsman-
the’heat’on Senators Ma gnus™ aTd *'>« “Hving happily ever
— ■ • — -• after," als a true finance should
end. God gives happy endings
*u*. ... . Here we find the right attitude
p!ane)S7ome" states?'where the" Novembw i to*ar‘< ™"iage. something whicn
ks “P’Vace will be close, a vote for Pauley' needs e'nPhasi» ‘n »ur <1**
H may mean defeat for a f)emocrat. j aH’ “ *« «-emember that Ruth
U. . The Pauley-Allen-Vardaman an •l*‘‘stress of Joans, we see anew
Manhattan Mural: The “tent Merry-Go-Rounds have evolved the cip*n, noble, god
house” on Fourth Avenue where a latest Washington wisecrack: “Tru* living. What will Lie generations
war vet and his wii’e have pitched man U suffering from Pendergastrifi | c^me be able to say about our
; their tent. On the roof of an office ulcers!” I
KELIEVE iii/f
Coins’I Is
At bedtime rub throat, chest and back j H g |
with Vicks VapoRubtoeasecougHlng, \ M j
■ loosen up the phlegm, help relieve con- jj |
: gesdon in upper bronchial tubes, invite 1
I | York
Frenchmen here InsiskDeGaulle ^tie tore^d“thZ
Is being held prisoner in his own „ . fe-eted sod eopyrixhted by Intern*tlonal
* .* ‘ , I , . .. newspapers. If so.- they might not couned << Refixtou. Education: u»ed by
. house in Paris by order of the com- . . . — —
■ my hiih command. ... Rep. Ran-;
| kin’s report on Hollywood (to his
i Un-American Committee) has been
, | Rent back tor re-writing. So poorly j
home-proved... the best-known home i presented, etc. . . . Sumner Welles,!
remedy for reliev- - — 1 - - --- -----~ •-----
ing miseries of |
children’s colds. ▼ vapoRus
LESSON TEXT: Ruth 1 :S-17.
MEMORY SELECTION: Intreat me !
Justice "ot 10 leave thee, or to return from fol-
lowing after thee: for whither thou goest.
I win go: and yvhere thou lodgest, I
will lodge: thy people shall be my peo-
ple. and thy God my God.—Ruth 1:16.
Li'
W'SI
A good life in the midst of a cor-
rupt and confused age—such is the
aw# a« nurlail /.RonC Alt,
the time of the judges. One Is re-
minded of the poet's words:
“How far that little candle
throws its beams!
So shines a good deed in a
naughty world.”
It is refreshing to have a glinffise
in the Eastern Hemisphere! . ~.
Mr. Justice Douglas of the Supreme
jCourt caffTU-he likes, be Assistant:
their own pockets? The rest would
have to be passed on to the consum-
er or the government. Their report
was filed February 7.
However,' early in December,
long before the fact-finding
board was appointed, a number
of smaller meat packing plants
had already signed contracts
with the CIO and A FL for U
cents an hour pay Increase with-
out any strings attached re-
garding increased meat prices.
The small packers who signed
such agreements included Hygrade
I Products of New York,
time romance. .
who planned spending oodles for’
radio time have held up their plans
since the Dcmmys started slugging
each other. Lucky stiffs. . . . Some ;
hotels are offering permanents as;
high as $500 "to move out • ■ •
Black market butter is,, selling at
$1.10 the lb. . . . Three-iourths ot . „ .
the people in the world could not ing of unscrupulous.bakeries which
WASHINGTON - — Some people
are wondering whether the fact-
finding board for the meat packing i
leeted and
newspapers. 1 ■ . - — ,
have recommended that the house- permisaion.
THE EVERYDAY LIFE
OF A PEOPLE
Sgt. Stanley Vnlchok forwards
the U. S. Army paper (The Lud-
wigsburg Sentinel) (rom Germany
in which Fritz Kuhn was inter-
viewed. They quote him as finally
admitting: "AIL the reporters start-
ed muckraking me. They wanted to I
; Cleveland, Kansas City and St.;
Louis from carrying on the prac-
tice on a huge scale.
Instead of making their re-
turned stocks of one-day-old
bread available at a reduced
price to poor families,
loaves frequently wind up
garbage bips. One Texas farm-
er who tipped off the depart-
jnent of agriculture about condi-
iiffnx' ~ffi fwifiitiwi Haiti m» du
been buying wagon-loads of
bread “fresh enongh to eat”.to
feed his hogs and chickens.
veronica
lake 1
8T.. a '
I VolW^o°d “at*< Wh°
CriolTooYowd«.o^lott
1 H^t,Cooo.
1 CM OX POWDER
’• - "1
-J
7
JT
When Your'lnnards”
are Crying the Blues
Recommended
by Many DOCTORS
Helps tone up adult
systems — kelps
children build sound .
teeth, strong bones.
(f$ GOOD-T^STfN^!
WHEN CONSTIPATION makes you feel
punk as the dickey, brings on atomacli
upset, tour taate, gassy discomfort,
take Dr. Caldwell’s famous medicins
to quickly pull the trigger on lazy “in-
nards”, and help you feel bright and
chipper again.
DR. CALDWELL’S It the wonderful sen-
na laxative contained tn good old Syrup
Pepsin to maks it so easy to take.
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin prepara-
tions in prescriptions to make the medi-
cine more palatable and agreeal le to
take. So be sure your laxative is con-
tained in Syrup Pepsin.
INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL’S— tilt fa-
vorite of millions for 50 years, and feel
that wholesome robot from constipa-
tion. Even finicky children love it
CAUTION: Use only as directed.
DR. CALDWELLS
SENNA LAXATIVE
CONTAINIO IN SYRUP PEPsm
T- -
Thursday, March 14,
THE TEAGUE CHRONICLE
—
. .........♦ . j.-. -'a^gMeewaa -..
' ■.....
MS
7SS
_________ _____
j. ••• t ... ' ,
■ ■' 7 7: ’
.....,r""
. ■
i
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!
' 'i
P AZ O IN TUIIII/
Million* of people suffering from
■imple Pllea, hare found prompt
relief with PAZO ointment. Here'a
whv; First, PAZO ointment *<>othea
Inflamed areas—relieve* pain and
Itching Second, PAZO ointment
lubricate* hardened, dried part*—
help* prevent cracking and *qre-
nee*. Third, PAZO ointment tend*
to reduce swelling and check minor
bleeding. Fourth, lt‘* ea*y to u*e.
PAZO ointment's perforated Pile
Pipe make* application simple,
thorough. Your doctor cad' tell
you about PAZO ointment.
SUFPOS ITOKI IS TOOI
Some person*, and many doctor*,
prefer to u*e*uppo*ltorie*, *o PAZO
come* In handy suppo*itorie* also.
The same soothing relief that
PAZO always give*.
<21
■ \ & 'A
■
< BEN-GAY-THE ORMttttAL AKALGESIQUE BAUD'
RHEUMATISM l THERE’S Alto
NEURALGIA .’-MILD BEN-GAI
AND COLDS FOR CHTtTOW
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Owens, H. Weldon. The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946, newspaper, March 14, 1946; Teague, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1290840/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.