The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 21, 1929 Page: 1 of 8
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The Whitewright Sun
VOL. 50, NO. 29.
WHITEWRIGHT, GRAYSON COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1929.
5c a Copy, $1.50 a Year
ROTARY CLUB
• 1
gen-
was
Highway
sixty
SNOW AND SLEET
county
SCHOOL CENSUS
be given
<
con-
was
the
r
MOVES OFFICE
T
a
Tiger Coach Gets
Picture Printed
Fannin To Hold
Road Bond Election
Horse Racing
Measure Killed
Moody Prison Plans
Beaten; Vote 70 To 59
F. W. Smith Re-elected
School Superintendent
Presbyterians To
Limit Size Of College
Deposit To Be Put
Up For Ball Team
Charge Three For
Death Of Coulson
T exas-Louisiana
Employes Meet Here
$191,131 Paid Out
To Milk Producers
FORMER BONHAM MAN
GIVEN PROMOTION IN
CONSULATE WORK
FASTS FORTY DAYS
TO INDUCE FATHER
TO JOIN CHURCH
FOUNTAIN PEN PISTOL
IS SHOWN TO WARDENS
Mrs.
Verma
tainers
ON THE ROAD 68 YEARS,
“UNCLE CHARLEY” QUITS
RURAL CHURCH LAGS
CONFERENCE IS TOLD
were
entire
the
the
ized support of principles, not
ganized appetite for office.”
courtesy to
attack
CARPENTER MAKES
$100 IN U. S. COURT
BUILDING DEFENSE
ON TRUTH PLANKS
; now
than
years.
had
■ the
snow
a
N.
en-
cen-
the
Al Smith Book Brings
Democrats $125,000
____________________________I
Pension Bill Passes
And Goes To Governor
Three Sentenced For
Mail Car Holdup
Love And Bailey
Clash Over Debate
LIGHT SOCKET PUT
IN BATHTUB COSTS
LITTLE GIRL’S LIFE
BULL CIRCLES FORMED
BY WHITESBORO MEN
RICHARDS IS REFUSED
A NEW TRIAL
WHITESBORO.—At a meeting of
farmers and business men of Whites-
boro here Saturday a bull circle was
organized for this community. Lee
Simmons of the Sherman Chamber
of Commerce and County Agent C.
C. Morris were present to assist in
perfecting the organization. Ac-
cording to Morris, Grayson County
has 23 circles, including the one or-
ganized here.
DALLAS.—Motion for a new trial
for Ben C. Richards Jr., convicted of
forgery, was overruled by Judge
Grover C. Adams shortly before 10
o’clock Tuesday morning. The sen-
tence of three years in the peniten-
tiary fixed by the jury was formally
imposed by Judge Adams and Rich-
ards’ attorney gave notice of appeal
to the higher court. The Judge will al-
low them sixty daysjn which to per-
fect their appeal.
The bond, which was set at $3,000,
was made a few minutes later and
Richards released from the county
jail, where he has been held since his
trial ten days ago.
Richards was accompanied to the
courtroom by his father, his wife and
his father-in-law.
AUSTIN.—The House of Repre-
sentatives Monday killed the Avis
horse racing bill by a vote of 74 to
55.
No opportunity to revive the rac-
ing bill in any form at this session of
the Legislature exists. A parliamen-
tary motion to reconsider and table
was adopted. After such a motion
the bill cannot come up again so long ■
as a single member objects. The
Rev. B. J. Forbes of Weatherford, by
a motion to strike out the enacting
clause, gave the bill its death blow.
The vote was taken after the
measure already had the betting fea-
tures struck out by an amendment
offered by the bill’s supporters.
Crosby is a
while at the same time he has had to
omit improvements he would have
made if the finances had permitted.
Whitewright people are loyal to
the schools, and never let an oppor-
tunity pass, when they k'now it, to
assist the board of education and
faculty in improving the schools.
This is a condition to be proud of. It
takes harmony and co-operation be-
tween faculty members and the loyal
support of the patrons and student
body to make a successful school.
This Whitewright has had for years.
Supplies for taking the scholastic
census have been sent out by the De-
partment of Education at Austin,
and within a short time , the scholas-
tic census of the Whitewright school
district will be taken. It is impor-
tant that all children within the free
school age should be enrolled, and
all parents should see that their chil-
dren are listed on the census roll.
FORT WORTH. — Mealing E.
Pruett, a mail clerk, and his two al-
leged accomplices, Travis H. Wilson
and Mrs. Ottie Bridges, Tuesday
were sentenced to five/ years, two
yeara and eighteen months, respec-
tively, for robbing a Texas & Pacific
mail car of $53,000 last November.
Wilson, who testified for the Gov-
ernment, had pleaded guilty ty the
charge and had attempted to exoner-
ate Mrs. Bridges. Wilson, however,
drew the maximum allowed under a
conspiracy charge. Pruett and Mrs.
Bridges pleaded.not guilty.
The sentences were set by the
Feredal Judge a. short time after- a-
jury had *found all three guilty.
Last November a robber entered a
Texas & Pacific mail car between
Aledo and Fort Worth, tied up the
mail clerks and escaped with $53,-
000 in cash, most of which was re-
covered. Wilson admitted he was the
robber, but said the mail clerk .had
planned the holdup.
It is said the men charged with the
Greenville murder were in White-
wright last week. They claimed to
be rug salesmen, and visited several
homes and offered rugs at what they
claimed to be less than wholesale
cost.
S. H. Montgomery & Son moved
their insurance office from the sec-
ond floor of the First National Bank
building to the McMillin building. A
partition has been put in the build-
ing and other- improvements made.
S. H. Montgomery & Son will occupy
the east side of the building and
Chesley Rutledge the west side. Mr.
Rutledge expect^ to move his fix-
tures and stock to the new location
within the next few days.
SHERMAN. — Arrangements are
to be made, it is said, for the placing
of the deposit of $300 required as
the initial fee for admission to the
Lone Star Baseball League of a club
representing Sherman. It is requir-
ed under a ruling of the league that
this deposit be made on or before
Feb. 20. Another deposit of $1,000
is to be made on or before March 4,
it was announced, but this is in the
nature of a guaranty, the money to
be used only in the event of failure
of the club to pay players’ salaries
and to be returned at the close of the
season. This deposit will be made in
the form of a cashier’s check or oth-
er negotiable paper, the actual mon-
ey being kept in Sherman.
sion, always must remain distinctly
Christian with a capable administra-
tion and faculty with sufficient sal-
aries to make the college equal to
other leading educational institutions
of the world.
( ______________________________
NEW YORK.—The fountain pen
pistol, which fires a 48-caliber bullet
and is the newest of criminals’ wea-
pons, was exhibited Thursday at a
meeting of wardens of county and
city prisons in the office of Inspec-
tor J. J. Noonan. The purpose was
to acquaint the wardens with the in-
nocent looking one-barrel gun and
prevent smuggling of a weapon of
its type into the prisons to aid
escapes.
Can Pay Gas Bill
On First Of Month
The Community Natural Gas Com-
pany has made an extension of one
day in time allowed to pay gas bills
and receive the discount. In the past
the 30th of the month was the last
day on which one could pay gas bill
and get discount. This has . been
changed to include the first day of
the month. Statements sent out this
month must be paid not later than
March first to receive the discount.
This change was made at the request
of Mayor Echols, in order to make it
more convenient to those who draw
their salary monthly.
NEW HAMPSHIRE, Ohio.—Fred
Conrad, the “fasting martyr” of New
Hampshire, is going to dine copious-
ly Friday night if his father, George,
a grocer, keeps his promise.
The elder Conrad has promised to
join the New Hampshire Methodist
Church, thus effecting a compromise
with his son, who began fasting thir-
ty-six days ago “because his father
was possessed of the devil.”
Young Conrad’s self-appointed
martyrdom began after a revival
meeting conducted by the Rev. Ray
Doton, as former Lima (Ohio) news-
paperman.
George Conrad capitulated Satur-
day, assuring his son that he has no
objections to joining the church, but
Fred chose to continue his mealless
existence until Friday,, when, “like
Christ,” he said, “I will have fasted
for forty days.”
Meantime, the church'of the Rev.
Mr. Dotson, who allegedly inspired
the fast, has lost heavily in member-
ship, and Dotson will be subjected to
questioning by the Rev. E. S. Weav-
er and the Rev. D. F. Helman of the
Lima Methodist area.
Some sources have charged the
fast was a publicity scheme to draw
attention to Dotson’s revival meet-
ings, while others insist that Conrad
has not fasted, but has been subsist-
ing on half rations.
Conrad is 27 years old and is tick-
et agent at the traction depot here.
When his fast began he weighed in
at 200 pounds. He has lost
pounds.
Employes of the Whitewright-
Farmersville district of the Texas-
Louisiana Power Company held their
monthly meeting here Thursday eve-
ning. The meetings are for the pur-
poses of discussing subjects of inter-
est to the employes of the company
and for studying safety methods.
After serving a plate supper, several
talks were made, followed with
roundtable discussions. Valentine
decorations were used on the table.
The following were present: M.'D.
Honaker, district manager; Henry
Honaker, assistant district manager;
E. B. Hurd, Misses Effie Robinson
and Howard, Farmersville; Wade
Chapman, Dick Caskey and Mrs.
Pendergras, Leonard; Gordon Cox,
Lone Oak; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Craig,
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Abbott, Mr. and
Mrs. T. S. Cole, Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
Fuller, Miss Willie Ross, White-
wright, and R. G. Johnson of Fort
Worth.
The Whitewright section has
almost every kind of weather
past three weeks, rain, sleet, i
and sunshine, but very little of the
latter. The first snow and sleet of
the winter fell two weeks ago, and
there were still traces of it when the
second sleet came Tuesday. Wednes-
day morning more sleet fell, which
was followed by a light snow.
Wednesday evening the ground was
covered with sleet and snow which
measured about an inch. Saturday
and Sunday were the first two days
in succession that the sun showed its
face in more than a month. Tuesday
the temperature dropped to around
22 ' degrees, but was higher Wednes-
day. Most of Wednesday the ther-
momtetr stood near the freezing
point.
WASHINGTON.—John W. Bailey
Jr., of Bonham, vice consul at Loan-
da, Angola, on the west coast of
Africa, has been transferred to
Prague, Czechoslovakia, it was an-
nounced at the State Department.
Mr.. Bailey is 35 years old and ,has
been stationed at his present post in
Africa since March, 1926. Prior to
that post, the Texan was vice consul
at Geneva, Switzerland. He began
his career as a clerk in the American
consulate there in 1924.
By C. A. SANFORD,
President Meadolake Milk Products
Company, Sherman.
Since the opening of the Meado-
lake Milk Products Company at
Sherman, Texas, on Jan. 16, 1928,
this company has paid to the farmers
in Grayson and Fannin Counties of
Texas and Marshall County, Okla.,
$131,131 for whole milk delivered to
us.
We have received 5,440,000
pounds of whole milk up till Jan. 25,
this year, and we pay off twice a
month. On the opening day we re-
ceived 3,100 pounds of milk. During
the first month we manufactured
14,687 pounds of condensed milk.
Since then we have manufactured
692,612 pounds of condensed milk.
During the first month we made 8,-
100 pounds of powdered milk and
since have manufactured 155,000
pounds of this product. (
In addition to the $131,131 paid
for whole milk we have paid $60,000
for sour cream and have produced
some 250,000 pounds of sweet ’and
sour cream butter since the plant
started operation. We, therefore,
have paid to farmers a total of
$191,131 in approximately twelve
months’ time. We have about 350
farmers on our pay list and we have
thirteen trucks in daily operation
collecting the whole milk on our
routes.
The most enthusiastic boosters in
Grayson County are those who real-
ize that an adequate milk market is
a great asset to the agricultural in-
terests of a community. These are
usually farmers who own five to ten
cows. These farmers have found that
the regularity of milk checks twice a
month enables them to put their
farming on a cash basis and make
their actual living from their cows.
Also keeping cows enriches the soil
and such money crops as cotton and
wheat are largely profit at the end
of the year.
Dairy development in Grayson
County is not the result of a boom
or overzealous enthusiasm of those
interested, but rather a steady and
persistent growth, patterned after
those sections where the dairy indus-
try has had its most satisfactory de-
velopment in the past.
The Whitewright board of educa-
tion has re-elected Fred W. Smith as
superintendent . of schools for the
school year of 1929-1930. Mr. Smith
was elected superintendent of the
Whitewright schools five years ago,
and next year will be his sixth term
in that capacity. The. schools have
progressed under his administration.
The Whitewright high school has
twenty-five credits at this time,
which is the largest number it has
ever had, and is affiliated with all
the higher educational institutions of
the state, and for the past several
years has also held affiliation with
the Southern Association of Col-
leges, a rating attained by few
schools in towns the size of White-
wright.
The Whitewright schools are
in better4 financial condition
they have been in several ;______
When Mr. Smith was elected super-
intendent the schools were in debt.
The indebtedness has been reduced
each year under his administration,
and from indications the indebted-
ness will be entirely wiped out this
year. Mr. Smith has accomplished
this without injury to the schools,
An election will be held in Fan-
nin County Tuesday, April 2, for the
purpose of voting $2,700,000 in road
bonds. If the bond issue carries a
tax of 98 cents on the $100 valua-
tion will be necessary to take care of
the issue.
A committee appointed to work
out a road system for Fannin Coun-
ty, in the event the bond issue car-
ries, made the following recommen-
dations:
The representatives from all over
Fannin County have come to an
agreement as to the main uses to
which the funds derived from the
sale of the proposed Fannin County
road bonds to the amount of $2,700,-
000 shall be applied in the event the
bond election shall be carried and we
desire to get the approval of the
Commissioners’ Court to this
eral lay-out:
First—To refund all existing dis-
trict road bonds to an amount suf-
ficient to take them up, now esti-
mated at $1,225,000.00.
Second—(a) To build
No 34 from county line through La-
donia to Honey Grove of concrete,
with state aid and if possible Fed-
eral aid.
(b) To build Highway No. 78 from
county line through Leonard to
Bonham of concrete, with state and,
possibly, Federal aid.
(c) To build Highway No. 5 from
present end of concrete east of Bon-
ham through Bonham, Ector, Savoy
to county line of concrete, with
state and federal aid.
(d) To build Highway No. 42
from county line through Leonard
and Trenton to county line of as-
phalt with state aid.
Third—The whole county will
unite to get one state (and if pos-
sible Federal) designation of an ex-
tension of Highway No. 78 from
Bonham to Red River, and builld the
road of concrete.
Fourth—To use existing roadbed
as far as possible and re-gravel or
build a road from Honey Grove
through Monkstown to Riverby of
gravel and a branch from Monks-
town to Telephone of gravel.
Fifth — To use $200,000.00 to
build lateral roads to connect com-
munities by shortest and most prac-
tical route with new cardinal high-
ways where such connection does not
now exist. This will include new con-
struction at Ravenna, Anthony, Sa-
voy, Ector, Ely, Randolph, Gober,
Hail, Dodd City, Windom, Carson,
and others. A detailed schedule of
these improvements will
after the committee of five appoint-
ed to work out this plan have made
their report.
Sixth—To re-gravel the existing
136 miles of graveled road in all
road districts on a pro rata basis ac-
cording to present mileage.
It is further agreed that we will
attempt to get Federal designation
throughout Highways Nb. 34 and
No. 78. Federal designation already
exists on Highway No. 5.
The plans 'outlined above
unanimously adopted by tjie
committee.
DALLAS.—The rural church is
failing to perform its proper task in
the scheme of modern society, was
the flat charge hurled here Tuesday
by Dr. W. H. Alexander of Fayette,
Mb., at the Western regional meet-
ing on social service of the Southern
Methodist Church
“Times have changed,” Dr. Alex-
ander' said. “A sermon 'can be heard
over the radio and the home is no
longer the central factor.
“In the past the clergyman was
only a preacher, but today he should
devote more time to pastoral work.”
The conference was attended by
400 social service workers of
church from all States west of
Mississippi.
Tuesday’s Sherman Democrat car-
ried the following “write-up” of H.
B. Crosby, member of the White-
wright high school faculty. Above
the article was the likeness of Coach
Crosby, which added to the attrac-
tiveness of that issue of The Dem-
ocrat.
The Democrat had the following
to say about Mr. Crosby:
A newcomer to Grayson County,
H. B. Crosby Jr., head coach of the
Whitewright high school Tigers, has
built a nucleus from which much is
expected in football and basketball
during the 1929 and 1930 seasons.
graduate of Dartmouth.
College, and has an LL. B. degree
from Cumberland University at Leb-
anon, Tenn.
He is a native of New York City,
and celebrates his 30th birthday this
year, having been born in 1899. His
father, Colonel Hiram Crosby of
Ardmore, Okla., is a veteran of the
Spanish-American and World Wars.
He is a veteran of the World Con-
flict and a member of the American
Legion.
■ In religious and fraternal affilia-
tion, Crosby is an Episcopalian and a
Mason. Prior to his coming in 1928
to Whitewright, his connections
were, following the war, as athletic
director, Panama Canal Zone and
since that time he has been associat-
ed with athletics at Lebanon, Tenn.,
high school; Zaneis, Okla., high
school; Tulsa, Okla, high school, and
Oklahoma Military Academy, during
the years 1921-1928.
AUSTIN.—Benefits to married
\Confederate veterans and their wid-
ows are increased under the provi-
sions of Senate bill 387, which has
passed the Legislature and is with
the Governor for approval.
The bill was prompted by the fact
that there are a large number of vet-
erans who have been continuously
married since Jan. 1, 1900, who have
not been receiving adequate pen-
sions. Veterans are rapidly passing
away and the postponement of addi-
tional benefits to them will mean un-
due privation in their declining
years, which the State is unwilling to
inflict on them, the emergency clause
of the bill declares.
The bill provides for a pension of
$50 a month to be paid quarterly to
every indigent or disabled Confeder-
ate veteran who came to Texas prior
to 1920, and to their widows in indi-
gent circumstances who have been
bona fide residents of the State since
Jan. 1, 1920, and who were married
to such veterans prior to Jan. 1,
1912, and who were born before
1873.
To every veteran now unmarried
or a widower who is drawing a pen-
sion there is to be paid $25 a month,
provided no pensioner shall draw a
larger sum than a veteran and the
remainder of the pension appropria-
tion shall be equally prorated among
the pensioners at the end of each
quarter.
A mortuary warrant of $100 is
provided, instead of $65 as under the
present law.
EL PASO.—Gladys Carbine, 12-
year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.
W. Carbine, was electrocuted and in-
stantly killed here late Saturday
when one of her small brothers
threw a connected electric light
socket into a bathtub full of water
in which she was bathing.
AUSTIN./—Former U. S. Senator’
J. W. Bailey berated “counterfeit
Democrats who vote the Republican
ticket when they have a chance,” and
State Senator Tom Love of Dallas,
former Democratic national commit-
teeman from Texas and Hoover lead-
er in the recent campaign, retorted
with a declaration that Bailey was
attacking “better Democrats than
himself” in a heated debate in the
Texas Senate late Tuesday.
Bailey had been extended an invi-
tation to speak through a “courtesy
resolution.” Most of his address was
a demand for party loyalty. “I am
willing to take his vote as an inde-
pendent or even as a Republican, but
I want the Democratic party
trolled by Democrats.”
Love in reply charged Bailey with
taking advantage of a
make insidious remarks and
upon men who followed conscience.
Bailey had urged that the party
should put principle above victory.
Love declared that those being at-
tacked had done so. “I have seen the
time,” said Love, “when he was glad
to have the aid of the men whose
honor he now assails. He is the fii^st
man who induced me to espouse the
cause of prohibition. I stood by him
when his neck was in the halter and
when his very political life was at
stake.”
Bailey in opening his remaks out-
lined a party platform of five planks
—human liberty, frugal government,
separation of Church and State, local
self-government and tariff for rev-
enue alone.
Party, he said, should be organ-
ized support of principles, not or-
DALLAS.—E. L. Phillips, a car-
penter, made $100 in Judge William
H. Atwell’s Federal District Court
here Tuesday.
“Judge, I’m not going to lie to
you,” Phillips said. “I was going to
a hotel to deliver the liquor, but I
am through with it now and am
working every day at my trade.”
“Well, you have made $100 since
you have been standing there, and I
am glad to have met you,” Judge At-
well replied. “You pay the marshal
$50. I had considered making your
fine $100 greater.
R. B. Anderson and
Mangrum were the
GREENVILLE. — Sheriff L. L.
Porter of Hunt County Monday filed
three charges alleging murder with
Justice of ‘the Peace J. P. Attebery
against three men held in connec-
tion with the death of Glen A. Coul-
son, Greenville capitalist,1 who was
found dead in his apartment at the
Washington Hotel here early Friday
morning.
The three men charged are Wil-
liam Joseph Mullen, Oklahoma City;
Nelson Keith, 1314 East Third
street, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Michael
Kelbie, 1119 East Third street, Cin-
cinnati, Ohio.
It has been established that the
men registered in the same hotel in
Hugo, Okla., last Tuesday as did Mr.
Coulson, who was in that city on bus-
iness. The men were said to have
been seen in Paris early on Tuesday.
The men were arrested in their
room, one floor below the Coulson
apartment, immediately after
discovery of Mr. Coulson’s body.
NEW YORK.—Sale of 30,000
copies of the volume of Alfred E.
Smith’s campaign speeches has
brought $125,000 into the Democrat-
ic national committee treasury.
Over the radio Jan. 16, Mr. Smith
offered a copy of the book to each
contributor of $2 or more toward
liquidating the $1,500,000 deficit re-
sulting from the last presidential
campaign. Responses have come
from every part of the United States
and also from foreign countries,
party officials announced.
The largest check received is one
for $10,000 from the Bronx Dem-
ocratic organization.
Many sending large contributions
have asked for only one copy of the
book.
■
.........
AUSTIN.—The prison system cen-
tralization and relocation plan ad-
vocated by Gov. Dan Moody was de-
feated Tuesday when the House, by
a vote of 70 to 59, turned down the
Governor’s ideas as embodied in
bill by Representative Harry
Graves of Georgetown.
After refusing to adopt the ad-
ministration proposal the House
grossed the Young-Turner bill,
tralizing the prison system on
Darrington and the Ramsey Farms in
Brazoria County and providing for
the sale of the other prison land
with legislative approval. The bill
was engrossed by a vote of 90 to 36.
ATCHISON, Kan. — The “grand
old man” of the traveling profession
is retiring after sixty-eight years on
the road.
“Uncle Charley” Terry, who made
his first sales trip on horseback be-
fore the Civil War, traveled from
coast to coast as representative for
concerns in St. Louis and Kansas
City.
The 92-year-old man heard Lin-
coln speak several times, voted for
him three times, and said Horace
Greeley once “talked him to sleep.”
AUSTIN. —■ Texas Presbyterians
are laying plans for a model college
of a maximum student body of 1,-
000, according to resolutions adopt-
ed by the commission appointed by
the Synod of Texas to make plans
for merging Austin College, Sher-
man; Daniel Baker College, Brown-
wood, and Texas Presbyterian Col-
lege, Milford.
The institution, which will cost
from $2,000,000 to $5,000,000 to
found, exclusive of lands, will be lo-
cated in the community which makes
the most attractive offer. A com-
mittee was appointed by the commis-
sion in all-day session here today to
consider offers for the college. The
school will be co-educational and will
have sufficient grounds and build-
ings to care for the school and out-
side activities. The institution, ac-
cording to resolutions of the commis-
Miss
were the enter-
at the Rotary luncheon Fri-
day. Miss Mangrum gave two mus-
ical readings with Mrs. Anderson ac-
companying at the piano. Miss Man-
grum recently returned from the
University of Oklahoma, where she
was awarded the Bachelor of Fine
Arts Degree. She is an excellent
reader and her numbers were enjoy-
ed by all. The program was in
charge of H. P. Donigan.
Two new members were elected to
membership. They are Rev. J. T.
Purvis, pastor of the Central Chris-
tian Church, who fills the vacancy
made by the resignation of Rev. J.
H. Hankins, who moved to Green-
ville, and Clyde Craig, local manager
of the Texas-Louisiana Power Com-
pany.
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The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 21, 1929, newspaper, February 21, 1929; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315434/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.