Pilot Point Post=Signal (Pilot Point, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946 Page: 3 of 8
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1
Si
ON THE
ft
Lessor, for March 17
b<
candle
U.S.-
r« tv
tor
«■» tWM MOtf ooctoss
Dreite refee
HE
iitniffl
ft. J«
I *-■ ,
I Ju J lit
i a big nation u Hitler
oat.
ccHoctii
doe* I
ADDX1SS
NULMAN A COMPANY
□w* W Tarr. Haute, farftaao
advei
got S
LI .
.03
In a
the
Lesson
.»jd; our I
—~rker has
ration book
trolled si
food she
per
statr
’IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAY
□CHOOL
Russia's wheat Belts saved that
country.
forms ■ u*ef
savings
our forr
These
when <
up to
out of
and aa final.
__ _ rrachi
i. Love hoe
I the matter,
it^ voice.
pound.
AmeriOa
IS.M per
I pickled
f famine.
died hot i
bad mari
^vtag three nd-
to mourr t.
the fellowship nt i
her hour of trial.
own I
Vynn iy intelhgant
t the I* the Red A
Manhattan ---
Muse" on Fourth
THE F.VEBTDAX LIFE
OF A PEOPLE *
A good hfe in the i
nipt and confused a|
life of Ruth Ln the i
the time of the Judp
mitt
iWi
WHO OWNS THE VAJHDS KNOWN
CO. fcSHWU
BieliSfillSIB
, unai ■ Buy U. S. Saving* Boat!*!
m «»• ’ ........... — ---
some- ,
or when
' the state in
:otnpeie with
sful act. For out of such
igs our factor!** are built and
forms improved.
Socialists can argue that
saving and spending aro left
the individual, they can got
J control and wreck • nation**
bustoeae atruatura. Panicky savin*
. can stop »u business activity and
'J™ throw million* out of work. They
■ck mar lhat gnoteat vule vf
the valuable man-hours of work
which cur notion )r»as when those
millions are either Itfte, *
-uv are employed by ‘
------ which do not cc
—I business.
tro bk cowrnruED)
Nylons are no longer the top
black market item. A $S white shirt
in many spots brings 90 bux- . . LUI
St. Cyr of the night dubs can’t
wear nylons. Allergic 1 . . . W. Z.
Foster, chief of the U. 8. Coromun- bo
ist Party, issued a rebuke to a
headline writer on the local oommy
paper for "rtupid Journalism." . . -
Doris Lilly (no dunce, she) insert,
ed a classified ad in a paper adver-
tising for an apartment end got 30
replies next day. And an aptl . . .
Sgt. Chet Skreen observes that the
legend about British women hav-
ing ao sex appeal took a terrible
debunking when H'wood hired two
Bntiah actresses to film the moot
amorous woman — Amber and
Scarlett I
Sounds in the Night: At Leone'
"I love to stand et 42nd Street »
Broadway ana watch the frauds go
byl” ... At the Blue Angel: “They
have a lot in common—they are
hated by the same people.'* . . At
the Latta Quarter: •• 'Charming' ta
a word that means the joke wac
lousy but told by a very dear
friend." ... At the Penthouse;
"Whcta snob! Hohls her nose so
high she nearly drowns when U
r a tool" . . At WJZ: "Like all
bigots, that Congressman has yet to
learn you can’t lynch the truthl"
... At Club 7fi: “That ftunj
Damon In '
Cdb Room:
you a bottle of r Jfir for a eow.'
Faces About Town: Waller ]
geon, Nancy Guild, Keenan w
and other H’wood notables (at
Stork club] observing that they win
be book tn Mbvietown (via H
Hughes' mw Constellation fllane)
“before you oohmmisfs wake cp
tomorrow J"
TODAY'! BAKINGWAYS
j to e bees bMw*i farthest ... a book of
* Ceava-r*' lebeeefary-iMew eM teM
by «ap«<te. Um H » Mae row fcrwOte
belaas aerifrai T In ifote.
Yew MRS edifa— ae • portuad
SI bring yea tote no* bakes etoSa ytea •
—y af »• CuUll’ GH «0*>E *eefc . .
LEMON TEXT: Item J»St
MEMORY 3KLECTMN; tnlreal ma not
Io leave thee, or to return horn taliowtng
after uwa; far wMUwt owe coast, J wtu ■
r>: and where Owe Went. t wffl todsw
u«jr jH-atrtc »HjD be my patfala. an4 lhy
One my Qae.—BiUh 1:U.
Backstage Vignette: It happened
in Tallulah Rankhrad's undreesing
room. ... An old boro got by the
doorman and found Talu's retreat
. Before she could say: “Now
locks here I” he brought forth one
of there spaUbindir.^ »nt vfliace.s
in which the anta build tunnels and
wtoeUiot. . . . The star was fasci-
nated fay them. . . . “They ere won-
derful Tittle things," he kept saying,
“they reaDy are. They never stop
working, always doing somethings
always keeping busy. They have
their 07/n police force and their own
army, tool" . . . "Hrnmnunm,"
hmmm’d Taht with her straighten/
face, “no navy. I suppose."
wnu NUM MMt WV.IU
4ASISN*MN
taw
Ruth
bitter <
w¥uw.
dear,
sweet pur
votion to _
became an exempts lor others.
As rv read our lesson we first
hear how logic soaaks. then love ra-
piles, and finally a life says the
final word.
L toxic (vv. 8-13).
Tragic mfrfortune
Naomi. ■'
, SOBS
tors eager to pay there j M b
Inside there is another kmg onJ_
he cashier's desk. Lt tnhee | har tWQ
«r rf . d.y <« ,.l in. I Cm|ls ,
VW items end get cut agah.. > jn
VElakeC*I
Russia is
also found i
tools. By the sumuter of 19M at
least half of the Red Army's road
transportation was being supplied by
210,000 American military trucks,
40,000 jeeps and 30,000 other military
motor vehicles. She also bad 6.COO
American lank, and tank destroy-
ers, and was unieg 827.5,000,000 worth
of nudiino tools—a total of WJflO.-
□00.000 worth of LwxJ Lwxj aid. At
last Russia's crushing superiority
in manpower couM become affec-
tiva.
But aa th
slve openet
Sgt Stanley Votshok forwards j
tbe U. 8 Army paper (The Lud.
Sentinel) from Germany I ,
in which Friti Kuhn was Inter- ]
viewed. They quote Um aa ftasliy j
admitting: "AU the reporters start, f ]
ed muckraking me. They wanted to ,
btuM mo and the German-American ,
Bund into botnetkine senntional so i
that their papers would sell! Even j
my good friend Walter Winchell .,
spoke against me. and then the i
Die* committee investigated me.''. '(
Investigated him? It advertised
tobn aa a good American and do- J
nounced me as "the leader of a ;
sioister propaganda tund’ l
Ach, Fritz! How times change not t
since 102). no? You are back home tag.
Dies°1s bsek home ta oblM^i."
iglc mtrtortune had visited *
11. who with bar hueband and
had gone from Bethlehem
in a time of famine. Not
her husband died but also '
«■», who toad married ,
men, leaving three n-’d- . espy
family to mourr toaeth- , bo*> <
craved t_.
people in her hour of I
arose to return to her
Mural: The **tanl
— — A* enue where a
war vet and his wife have pitched
their tent. On the root of aa office
Alda
midst of c cor-
i go—such is the
awful obaos of
__________.—***■ O“e tB r»
minded of tbe poet's words:
"How far that little
throws It* baa ms I
So whines a good deed in a
oaujftity world.” ,
It is refreshing to have B giimpse
Into the home life of God-feanng
people who live right in spite of the
— standards around thorn.
» knew life's sorrows and its
disappointments. Shr was a
low. <Witu*e of *0 she held most
Yet she. because of the
irity of her life and bar da-
» God and those she loved.
KRIS! /w*L V
White
INSTALLMENT ten
The war's climax came in 1M3
with the Micccartui defense of Stalin-
grad. The Germans had by bus
time been dealt a crippling blow
to their air farce tn Africa. Rus-
sians pointed nut scornfully t._
African campaign involved
men; however, it required mast
of highly complicated trapsport
machines.
Furthermore, the RAF and
Eighth Air Force in England were
*— ----—n industry.
_ ) strip the
Russian front of Messerschmitt* to
defend their home factories, so
tliat for the first time the Russians
had superiority in the air. Lend-
Lease, including thousands of
trucks, was now pouring in, the Ger-
man lines of communication were
perilously extended, and for the first
time it vros posaible tor a RuBfllan
army to move quickly out to en-
itap and cut off a German army,
I theirf. had been enveloped sc
many times before.
Russia's factories behind the
Urals were wnridag; new ones were
equipped with American machine
items together, nlrw-Umths of what
it raises must be sold to the State
at the low pegged official price.
But not a!i. A small surplus of
produce usually ■ remains, and this
is distributed among tbe farmers,
-------- ------* it ar bring It to
I Het departure srauihi <nit in ths '
■ two daughlers-ln-law tbe expreas<on I
I of kindness and loyally which should
| exist in every family, bat which is
. all too often lacking. Her own ta-<i-
! mnny concerninr »he«e girls of Moab
I Is that they dealt kindly with her and
with tbe dead That word speaks
volumes. There to w» little genuine
kindness in the world.
Both Orpah and Ruth went with
her on the way. protesting their
loyal purpose to go with her al] the
met their ktad offer with
the only sensible answer. There was
no point tn leaving their homes
and loved ones toad going with her
to another country.
Logic la so conclusive
Yes, end Eometime* it
wrong conctasfon. Lav:
i thing to say sbout I
J Lot us listen to it=
II. Love (v. 14).
Orpah loved her mothar-in-law.
That is evident. She wept at the
tlxtughc of parting, and «'ae affec
denote fa bar final farewell. We
must not be loo quick to censure
bar. She did what Naomi told her
to do. She responded to her lave V
r oimri wh^ RoW <tod wt ,ha‘ Rulh •
r-owDars who “Orpah
a hand-to-mouth basis, dependent on
his ■avernmeut-cuutrollea salary.
In America a man who saves
money is regarded as a sound and
valuable citieea. In Russia ho is
viewed with suspicion as a hoard-
a potential capitalist to bo
itched for the criminal tendency
exploiting his IcUow workers by
giving them Jobs
Into one of tbese government-
owned '*Coinmorcial Stores" steps
our €20 a week Soviet warworker
without her ration book. This Mick
market Is perfectly legal—the gov-
ernment makes the profit—not some
racketeer. The cheapest grade of
baloney sells tor filfi.M per pound
or boiled ham st $2(1.46 per pound or
bacon at AM.S7 per pound. A dressed
chicken ot only SJ3.J0 per
Beef—about the grade
uses tor soup meat—Is fill
pound, mutton $13.26, and
herring 513.20 per pound.
Luxuries, too. If she plans to
have a tew friends in for a snack,
there is sliced, cooked sturgeon al
813.20 per pound, block caviar at
MS.73 per pound; almond meats the
same, and ako bezel nuts. For an
omelette from really fresto eggs
(never sure In the free market) et
only $1.96 per egg, and e pint of
nice, fresh thick cream tor $8- Swiss
cheaze st S20 par pcuftl.
Outside this store a long line
stretches around the block; shabby [ trt)
werworkers eager to pay there >
prices j——Mu., i. _ „ .Mu. v.- i
line to tha cashier's
--the better part of a aay to g« m, i CentiU wonw
the buy a few items and gat out again > ows ln Qne
and This is one of only twenty "Com- er x’anmi
mcrcial Stores" in Moscow h.
The govenunacl has already tried I
patriotic appeal; cnuatless drives '
urging factories and coUective terras * Ulf[
to buy tanks and planes for tha Red (
Army but this was not enough. •
There remains considerable money
now in the hunds of the farm -is who '
ha vo been selling food at the fantaa- '
tic (ree market prices for some I
time, and hero bacn paying fantas-
tic prices for second-hand clothing.
The government opened a chain ot
clothing stores exactly like its com
merclai food stores, where new.
stout, warm clot hrs, including many
luxury items, are oa sale at black
market prices. Thue, It takae from
the fanner at) he his saved from
selling food in the free market to
city workers.
The people do not protest the gov-
ernment taking over the functions
of the illegal black market. They
seem glad to buy these things, and
count the new shops among the otb- |
er blessings of this society.
Sotne effort is made to present I
the merchandise attractively, just
as our post office would prefer to
put out pretty stamps. But It doesn't
greatly matter, arty more than Kan-
sas particularly carta whether its
auto license tegs eie prettier or eas-
ier io screw on than Ihose of neigh-
boring Oklahoma.
The architect who die.
a---apB1 ___
the people who
promoter-
k«op it rontod, but the gov-
officials who approved his
The tenants live there
not because they like ite facade or
Its plumbing, but because it beiungs
Io the foctory where they work or
because they lack the necessary
prestige or political connactlons to
--—nre square metere ot Uv-
space in a better one.
w'^dor our way of doing things, a
man who saves money Lnsteed of
spending It to have a good time, per-
yg s.
any price. This is also true ot what of i
I masses eBeV1 fariner fa the small givi
(port and jutchen garden tract which is allot- b
. .. ted him. It fa supposedly only targe owr
and tne enough for his family's needs, but our
md were .^agy Mr Is lrft over. wltl
i.dnrtrv commission men make
the rounds of farm houses in tracks,
buying surplus vegetables tor resale
in town. In tbe Soviet Union both
the farmer and the cocnmiasicn man
would get a five-year sentenca, be-
cause that is exploitation. To avoid
this crime, the Soviet farmer must
take time to hitch up and go to
market where be aetis person ally
what he roises. and the hungry
housewife may go hv subway clesr
acmes Mcscow to find him.
The rouble par tita prices I trans-
late Into American dollars and cents
per pound. But remember that cn
this same baste, our Russian war-
worker gets a total al 320 a week.
At the Rynok. sbe may buy eggs
at $15.10 a dozen. She may buy as
big a chunk of bread as she wants
at the rate of $5.07 per pound. Mut-
ton (or perhaps goat)—a bargain at
$1IJ< per pound—more than ha*f
her week's wages. Sugar bee» at *0
cents a pound. Hocay at SIS a
pound.
Aa old lady is selling a caff's head
and Its four knuckles at 818
collection, with the hal-
plawy eyee op«n. attracting a few
files.
Another wrinkled old Indy la sell-
ing a bunch of peonies, asking land
getting) $1-60 par flower. A man ■
selltag a crudely made wooden ooat-
hanger for $1.02. This sale is le^al
m Russia because the seller whit-
tled it himself. Potatoes are $l.f“
cents a pound. Rloe currants tn
Jetty glare at a dollar without L.
glrre. Cheese tor 86 a pound.
Stockings, slightly used and care-
fully mended, cost $0.25 for Hie cot-
ton ones and $35 tor the rayon pair.
A man is selling hin extra pair of
shoes, somewhat worn but took fair-
ly stout, for 1,000 roubles $20 in our
money—exactly a month's astery
for cur warworkcr. A pair of new
evening shoes would cost 813303.
Here a girl is selling a sweater—
since It is warm now and this to a
real English camel's hair or caah-
mere. And any Russian would caD
it a bargain at $66. etill, this is
June. Sbe could got much more
next October—but she's hungry now.
However, remember that there
food pnees listed above are excep-
tional; our $20 a month 8m*iet war-
worker hew already bought with her
ration book at the government-cco-
store about nine tenths ot the
...a uses and has paid only $6.50
month for It, at to^pegged.
The Soviet governmeut's problem
w*e basically that of our own: its /
Me^af^&StoZJSS ItoAtekaoptt
ST i,X“
p.rtl, br «,!»« our powl. „„ too.™, th.
bo«u w th.t ,n« th. w«r th., ... .lymbinK In
nhH rt <T. bml. .nd bur m.r- J,,
chandise at normal -pnena. war
bonds are sold in Rurcia, many even
boar Inter ret. But a large propor- wangle moi
tian of Soviet wax financing consists jng 5^^ jf
Im aL outright gifts solicited from in- Under oui
divMuats, factories, and co-opera-
,. 7; lives, either in cash or in kind. Also
the government gets money by
charging fantastic prices for luxu-
ries fa state-o<iviMd stores, thus put-
ting part of the war on a solid nay-
ai-yju co bafta which would delight
a Vermont Republican.
Russians are skeptical about
bends, becauro a mar. who o.rnx
one has purchasing power tbe state
can't control His whhns constitute
a danger to the state economy. He
may take a’notion to buy before the
government Is rowdy to aeU. Ke may
prater a radio instead of a wooden
table, and create n sudden shortage
in radios!
While dependent on state wages,
he is on a hand-to-mouth basis and
his purchasing power can bo cos-
trolled. He will get a radio only
when they ata ready to make radios,
and Uw first seta will go to three
whom the government thinks most
deserve town, u he owns a bond,
or has hoarded hie high wartime
wages the whole carefully planned
economy is threatened.
The Soviet government has met
this pcx 11 mort fagenioueiy. In April
of 1W4, it reopened “Commerofal
Stores." in them the government
sells you almost any luxury in food
or clothtag at prices about equal
with those fa the free market and
without ration coupons.
In Amoricon terms, the Soviet
govemment runs its own bloc*
ket as a alate enterprise I
from its workers ths bulk <
war wages.
Wl>on pesae comes, they hope to
have most of the worker's savings
in the hands ot the government the*.
(without obligation to repay him, as wa«a w
our goveibtoeul must redeem its ortvate
war bonds) and ho will be back cu
Theodore Dreiser** "Tbe I
wai-k” (his iMiiement novel on
decline of 2Dtb Century morals)
be published by Doubleday r
month. Original publication t
was the fall of 1917 Tt will be
April Book Find Club selection.
Fred Allen and bfr agent are mak-
ing a money settlement after a long
time romance. . . . RepuHicans
■who planned spending
radio time have bold up
since the Demtnys started slugging
«ach other. Lucky stiffs. - - - Some
hotel* are r.'fertng permanents al
high as 6660 to move out. .
Black market butter Is selling at
SI.10 the lb. . . . Three-tourihs of
the people in the world could not
reed the Atlantia Charter if writ-
ten in their own language—that’*
how much illiteracy there fal
showed a deeper love. ...
kissed her mothar-In-Iew, but Rulh ,
clave unto her." There is a differ-
ence. Such love cannot he dented.
It to the most precious possession
that a tnnn can have, apart from
hta fellowship with God The love
of a devoted father or mother, of a
nobta helpmate, or of a Uttio boy
or girl, there are the things that
realty make life worth while.
Life ha* put into the hands ot
many of us th* opportunity of show-
ing Just that kind of love to these
postwar day*. A boy cotree home
crippled and dlxabled and a loyal
swoetheori shows her unduntatahed
tove far him, even though he can
ne^er agah> be wtiat he bad expect-
ed to be. That is love. A mother
aad a father taka to thotr hearts a
promising young son who returns
from overseas with a shattered
nervous system, and give their fives
anew to him. Ono could go on
and on with t«uch illnstrations, but
whet we are saying is that II takes
more than a Ida* and tome te«t» to
express real love. "Ruth clave unto
her." fatehlove expresses iteelf to a
ID. Lire (w. 15-17).
Literature knows no more beauti-
ful declaration of faith and devotion
than three words, and nothing couM
improve on it. Lord Tennyson said
«* ff»e »wfr of Ruth that “bc art
can improve on it." And ot these
verses another said. "We cannot
hope to contribute to literature a
sentence so exquisite and thrilling aa
that Into whtah Ruth poured the
full measure of a noble heart, but
we can imitate her devotion" (WO-
tarn Jcnrtags Bryan).
The oonchsioD.of the story finds
Ruth married to Boat her kinsman-
redeemer, and "living happily over
after," aa a true romance should
end. God gives happy endings
Here we find the right attitude
toward msrriuRc. something which
needs emphasis tn otrr day. Above
aS, as we remember that Ruth was
an ancestress of Jesus, we see anew
the knportanoe of clean, noble, god-
. ly living. What wil) the generations
to come bo able to aay about car
■Atta York /Vffwgboy
Fraaoiunw hero tesist DeGeulla
is being held prisoner in bls own
house fa Paris by order of the com-
rrty high command. . . . Rep. Ran-
kin'* report on Hollywood (to his
Un-American Committee) has been
rent back tor ro-writing. 80 poorly
preaented, ato. . . . Sumner WoUes,
former Ass’t Soc'y of State, has an
old farm near Babylon (L. L) for
sale. A home is on the grounds. . . .
Interesting observation: That big
page ad in which tbe N.A.M. at-
tacked Bowles waa prepared by the
Eeoton L Bowlea advert agency, ot
which he Is vice-chairman. . . . One
of the best infaruiod State Dept,
officiate complains that too many ___
of the top men in Washington are by then pounding German
fiddling while the world turns- th a t and the Germane had to
World War III has already started -—■— *—• -• •»-----
in the Bastorn Hemisphere! . - -
Mr. Justice Douglas ot tbe Supreme
Court can. If he tikes, be Assistant
President of tha United States.
the Anglo-American offen-
. ted fa France, Uie Soviet
government loyalty kept her agree-
ment, made at Teheran, to start a
drive from the east To do this, she
was drafting for from line duty mtn
who bad already been discharged
with wounds and others previously
rejected tor senans physical defects
—the dregs of any notion's power.
But^ tke Soviet government kept
One reason for the success of
the Red Army to that the breach
between its old-line, experienced of-
ficen and the Communist Party is
now completely heated. Originally
tha Red Army was bacdened with
e system of political cornntfuars
whose duty tt was to watch tbe
fleen, and whose authority <
under certain clrcumsianoes exceed
.that of tbe anil's regular command-
The political commissars have
been absorbed In the army, with
regular military rank and Jutits.
Political education continues, but
to the neglect of military train
T7. A”’ T2X’S’”’ I “**’ Monibership fa tbe Communist
beloved Germany undi Herr Party always carries heavy rerpan-
1 u • slbiitty and this continues in the
army. Pnrty members are supposed
ie'S! to set an example to the others
and not only fa efficiency but to bravery
--under fire, and as oonsoquuuuc the
Party haw hud moce than its share
of casualties Its membership, for-
merly 1,500,000, was increased to
4,000,COO, but many of them have
been killed.
But the Party te -strong fa the
army, and a man who wishe* to ad-
vance must usually Jain.
Tbe army's achievements have
giveu it a great ptuie ui Ueeif ana
some little contempt for the outside
uto76:' •’That Runyon to'4 Moscow correspondents have a
the rough" ... At tha <5ca<’ reapeot for the competence at
1: "Nice feDer. He’d *iv< ti* baderabip and often, when irri-
Ic of r Jfic for a eow."^ t-**} by the stupidity of . Rumtan
civilian official, they would remind
each other that some of this was
temporary, as all the country's real-
—it and efficient men were
The farmer live* on a cdfloctlve
or state farm, where he does Ms
share of the cotnmoa work. When
tha crop is sold, cortain overhead
expenses must ba met. There are
substantial state taxes. HU collec-
tive probably owes money for farm
laiplaments and these tasiaUmeota
must be paid. Tbe Collective has
probably pledged Itself to buy a tank
far the Red Army. Taking there
> tha
will
next
date
the
risk-
ra l<
oodles for
their plans
«ra»MT
KAM
tufao. aU drsnfat* Mli Svmw *••*.
IS GETTING UP NIGHTS
GETTING YOU DOWN?
Ttauairf* say finuw doctor's
dmwrery mre* HessUroWfewa
WiatoJlbHatorcamdiy
recess aci£ty aa tin arias
SALVE
W1
YOUR-, I
Reuete
CeLDS’
Atheddinorab throat, dime end bode
with Vicks VapoRnbtn aaaaaougfaing,
fooeen up thephtegm, hdp rriirxecou-
KNClfftTES fa oppet bvowchbl
tubes wfthhsspecfal medicinal vaporj,
SRMA1ES dfait and bed: tar-
focs* Ika a wunntng poultice.
Often by morning most of the mL*l
cry of the cold b gone! Rroeindru g
ONLY VAPORUB fives Yog tab spel
del double artimi. ft's tune-tcctarlj
re
S:
TOE PILOT POINT POST SIGNAL
c A\ R B o 11
G£T THIS HCW
BAK/HG GU/D£
r maMar
A .
11
j __ij :«i>iiiiuai«:; eatai i ■ si uwb f
nil’s HK
iiliJE
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Pilot Point Post=Signal (Pilot Point, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946, newspaper, March 14, 1946; Pilot Point, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335935/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .