Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 296, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 15, 1939 Page: 1 of 6
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Weather Outlook
Brenham Banner-Press
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*
1.
Member of the United Press, the Greatest World-Wide News Service
VOLUME 55
NO. 296
BRENHAM, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15,1939.
%
n as
HELPING THE LORD
HAPPY EX-MONARCHS
MILITARY RULE
i
i
MAY 18 AND 19
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AUSTIN. Marfh 15 (l’P»
i'ragu* for. a triumphal entry Jp
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(Continued on Pago 6)
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a
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ratill and Arthur Al. Geick to the
(Continued on Page 5J
(Continued on Page 2)
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After due donaideratton, a mo-
(Continued on Page 2)
HOFFMAN AND
ARTHUR Al ARE
NAMED KINGS
NATIVE OF THIS
COUNTY IS DEAD
COMMITTEES
FOR MAIFEST
ARE NAMED
Official N o tification
Ceremonies Staged
Tuesday Night
Has Much Experience
In Demonstration .
Activities
Give Precedence
Ter Pensions
Czech Fate Sealed By
Appointment Of
Germans
Hungary and Poland
Recognize Slovak
Independence
i
i
i a
Members of the Texas legisla-
ture enjoyed their recent visit to
Brenham and Washington State
Park for the Mirch 2 celebra-
tion, according to a letter re-
ceived by F. W. S. Zschappel,
general manager for the event.
It was signed by more than 40
members or officers of the Ipwer
house. It follows:
"We wish to extend to you
our thanks for the picnic and
splendid program, and moat deli-
cious barbecue you furnished at
Waahington-on-the-B r a z o s on
March 2. 1939. We think you are
doing a great service in keeping
alive the spirit of Independence
and Liberty, by having this an-
nual program at such a historic
East Texas- Fair, colder east
and south, frost north portion to-
night; Thursday, fair, slowly ris-
ing temperature.
a house trailer in the cotton mill
block Last report A, thia report 3.
hundreds of frienda, and informed
them that they were the choice of
the Fire Department to reign aa
" ■' !■ ■■!■■!■!■ HF ■ — —— ■ ■■■■■■■— | || , ■HI, | ———Jbas——St^SMSm
Maifest Monarchs Notified/by Fire Department
OLD AND THE NEW ,
SOLONS* THANKS
t| |
ii
■3
---------_u—
Baby Orang To Have PaHy
ST. LOUIS <I’P> — A baby orang-
utan. believed to be the fourth .of
ita kind born in the United States,
1s to have a coming out party at
the zoo here soofl.^ •
r
«
i
Rules Suspended To
Spelling Been Come Hack
HUTCHINSON, Kaa Reno
county rural schools are turning
to old fashioned spelling bees for
saUrUuuucnt and educaUuo.
junior and are robbing the oliveorchards and
junior May Queens-elect, the FT re
Funeral Rites Will
Be Held At Home
Near Burton
THE
SPECTATOR
FIREMEN DAM DITCH
MONTOUR FALLS, N. Y. <V.R>—
Hampered by lack of water, fire-
men dammed up rainwater in a
ditch nearby and used it to battle
a fire which destroyed a farm-
house near here.
scnooi aninmenc, room re; bud. jt 2 .
rural A ward school arithmetic, fcjfl
room 12.
10:00-11:00: High school spelling ?|j|
(rural A high) room 8; Sth A 7th
New-Home Agent
*. * ■
B
children's court on the second day of the Maifest, are shown on the
veranda of the residence of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Navratil. With them are
being notified of their election as monarchs of the forthcoming Maifest. Chief Pflugljaupt and several children.
MYRNA HOLMAN
ASSUMES HOME
AGENT POSITION
Town's Pride Now Coop
. BOLTON NOTCH Conn i f
'Time marches on! Once the pride
ol. Ihu wur -1 -orw
joneihalf story building that once
1 housed th* railroad station and
> post of flee has been dismantled and
converted into a chickencoup and
I f
cipate in the meet, the program of >•
which follows:
WOO-9:15: General aj»er nifty
the auditorium. ,
0:16-10:00: Seventh grade'arith-
metic, -room 9; Jr. rural A ward
school arithmetic, room 14; Sub. Jr
andmant to provide revenue
Old-age pensions and other social
security was given right of way
today in the legislature, when, Joint
Hiles were suspended.
Without the suspension the
house would have I wen required
' first to consider several bills pass-
ed by the senate
Before both house and senate
gave overwhelming support to the
rules, suspension the house had
-adopted a minor court procedure
bill, and heard explanation of a
bill to regulate mutual assesernent
insurance companies.
A few house vote* held the ver-
dict on a proposal to substitute for
a comhilttes-approved sales tax a
state tax on net income.
A proposed constitutional am-
endment to allow women to serve
on'juries was defeated when the
senate failed to order printing of
a minority report.
NAZIS HOLD MEMEL
KOVNO, Lithuania; March 15
(UJ?> Willy Neumann, Nazi leader
in the Memel district, gathered
German deputies in the parliament
building today and declared that
the present time . requires "quick
ldecisions" in behalf of the ’87 per
of German population of
i Memel." •
Miss Myrna Holman, formerly of
Foard County, arrives today to be-
come home demonstration agent
of Washington County.
of Miss Holman was announced by
the A. A M. Extension Service
about three Weeks ago.
Since joining to Foard County
Miss Holmah has proven herself
>ne of the most outstanding and
hard working agents Foard Coun-
ty has ever had, and her departure I Do
< to a new field Is accepted with
keen regret, not only by the wo-
I men, of the county with whom she
has 'worked, but by the public in
general.
Miss Holman la well informed on
home demonstration work and, has
contributed many articles and
news items of interest to the col-
umns of The News which have
been greatly appreciated. She has
taken active part in church wonk
and other community affairs.
A orlef resume of work done
during Miss Holman's administra-
tion follows:
The major demonstrations
which work has been done
I kitchen, bedroom, wardrobe, poul-
try, yard, family life, and various
May 18 and 19 Are|
Chosen As Dates
For Fete
on i Needle in Seven Years
are Travels Through Foot
Fire Department To
Hold 55th Annual'
Maifest
BERLIN, March 10 <l'J» Fueh-
rer Adolf Hitler sent his armies J
into Czech territory today to en-
force a newly-declared protector- fl
ate and appointed a military gov- . 1
ernor and two civil administrators
for Bohemia and Mora' ia.
While Hitler crossed the frontier
Miss Dorothea Hasskarl. popular ,
high school senior, daughter of fTr
W. e. Hasskarl, will reign as queen
of the 55th annual Maifest of the
Brenham Fire Department, and
has jhorjen as her king, Hoffman
L. Reese, Jr., son of Mr. And Mrs.
H. L. Reese, also a. high ‘ school
lenior, who will crown her with
lavish ceremony on the first even-
ing of the big spring featival,
dates of which have been set for i
rhursday and Friday, May 18 and
19.
Frances Ann Navratil, eight
year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.-
F. J. Navratil, has been chosen
as queen of the children's court
that.will feature the second day
of the Maifest, and Arthur Al
Geick, nine-year-old son of Mr.
and Mrs. A. F. Geick, will share
the throne with her as junior king
in brilliant coronation exercises
the second evening of the Maifest.
The entire- Fire Department
headed by Chief E. W. Pflugh-
haupt, accompanied by'the Bren-
ham High School Band with Frank
Malina directing and ». crw-i ''’I-
uumm. puiucjpat- r_—■
ed in the notifiratlbn ceremonies at
the homes of the May Queens
Tuesday evening. Repeated shrieks
of the fire sirgn summoned citi-
zens to join the firemen in assemb-
ly on the street* near the Simon
Theatre, and members of the band
were loaded into trucks for the
visits to the homes where the
queens and (heir families awaited
the firemen. ’
Embrey Is Spokesman
Farview, the suburban residence
of the Hasskarl., was the scene
of the first stop and a huge crowd
gathered on the spacious lawn.
Judge W. J. Embrey, who for many
years has been official spokes-
man of the firemen at the annual
Maifest notification events, ap-
peared on the veranda with Chief
Pflughaupt and after compliment-
ing the firemen for their fire-
fighting record declared they were
also champions when it came to
selecting beautiful girls as queens
of the May fetes. He then pre-
sented Miss Dorothea Hasskarl,
as the choice of the Fire Depart-
ment for the coming Maifest and
she was acclaimed with tum.lutuous
applause. In a gracious speech she
accepted the honor, pledging her
best efforts for a successful cele-
bration, and presented her king,
Hoffman L. Reese, Jr., who thank-
.ed her for the honor bestowed on
him and declared he would co-
operate to the fullest extent in
making the 1939 Maifest the big-
gest and best ever held.
The lovely young queen was pre-
sented with a big box of candy by
the firemen, and Mary Fat Amsler
who reigned as queen of the junior
court last year, gave her a pearl
evening headdress..
High School Band Plays
Spirited musical selections were
rendered by the High School band
during the evening, and after the
notification hundreds of frienda
tendered congratulations and of-
fered assistance to the queen and
king and their families in activi-
ties for promotion of a success-
ful Maifest.
The entire assembly then pro-
ceeded to the NavaratiU home
where the junior queen and king
were notified of their election and
expressed their joyful acceptance.
After the High School -band play-
ed several selections, Judge Em-
Miss Myrna Holman, experienced
home demonstration agent, is ex-
pected to arrive today from Cro-
well to luuunu her duties as sue-
cessor to Miss May Stein, who
recently resigner. ner position as
Wfflr' TTcmWnfiw 'Yiitit' of
Washington County/
The appended resume of Miss
: Holman's activities as home agent
in Foard County la taken from the
I Foard County Nsws, published at
j Crowell, where she has been mak-
ing her home: •
Miss Myrna Holman, county
J home demonstration agent for
k Foard County for the past five Ind
■ i otih-half years, will leave next
r Wednesday for Brenham where she
Charles Bredthauer, 81, died at
his residence in the Burton com-
munity at 8:45 Wednesday mom-,
ing, after a brief illness.
A life-long resident of Washing-,
ton County. ,
and ”?o^^; p^i^' ^s Sd-
resided in the Burton community.
He was married January 26, 1882,
to Miss Adeline Neinast at .the
Jtehburg Lutheran.^hurch.
His widow and the following
children survive: Robert Bred-
thauef of Rehburg, Misses Lydia
and Nora Bredthauer of Burton,
Mrs. Charles Klaus of Houston,
Mrs. Albert Landua of Burton,
Edwin Bredthauer of Austin, Fred
Bredthauer of Brenham, Willie
Bredthauer of Temple, and Mjss
Adeline Bredthauer of Burton. He
also leaves nine grandchildren and
one great grandchild. Four sons
doed in infancy.
For many years Mr. Bredthauer
had been a member of the Rehburg
Lutheran church, and was very
active in church and civic work.
Funeral services are to be held
from the family residence at 2:00
rhursday afternoon, and will be
continued at the Rehburg Lutheran
church, with Rev. C. A. Lehne, the
pastor, officiating and the Leon
Simank Funeral Home in charge of
arrangements Burial will be in the
Rehburg cemetery near the church.
Nephews of Mr. Bredthauer
have been chosen to serve as active
pall bearers, and all friends of the
family will be considered honorary
pall bearers.
COLLISION TOLL INCREANEM.
WASHINGTON <V.P» — Deaths
from motor vehicle collisions with
fixed objects have increased more
rapidly than any other type of
rhotor vehicle fatality — 244 per
cent from 1927 to 1937 the U. 8.
Bureau of Public Roads reports.
Tota4 alarVns during the 9..
I
but the condition of the surround-
ing tissues. The khowMgn
.whether a foreign object 1ms clean
or in.a hidden sums ia extremly
impos taut in opciaUa* tochnl^tMi
REACH POLISH BORDER
BUDAPEST, March 15 UPi —
Hungarian troops occupying Car-
patho-Ukraine fought their way to
the Polish border at 3:00 p. m.,
reliable advices rejxirted today.
lived alone since her husband died
in 1921. She keeps her own house,
cooks her <wn«meals. "And I hp
it," aha said. "It give* me time to
think **
Special X-Kay
Permits More
"■ Precise Pictured
r... ..... "
LONDOON d l?> - A new type of
'X-ray apparatus, called the Tomo-
’ toe, across the top of the foot, and !
into the heel.
’.■'a
UKRAINE (MTUPIED
BRATISLAVA, March 16 ®£>—
German troops entered Bratislava
late texiay aa the armies of Hun-
gary completed occupation of
("arpatho-Ukralne. the eastern tip
<>f Czechoslovakia.
The march of the German* to
th«- capital of sioyakls •****--»**—-
been entirely routine. They «n-
counterrd unexpected Czech oppo-
sition at the town* of Boessing and
Ratzerfciorf, Indicating that Czech
hcwtillty extended farther than
Prague. •
Brothers Defy Years,
Youngest of 4 is 74
PLAINFIELD, vonn. fl'.Rl — I
Longevity is one of the strong
characteristics of the Adams
"boys."
William, the youngest of four
brothers, is 74. The others, Henry,
Labe and Arnold, are 77, 79 and
80, respectively, and all are sound
and healthy.
Their father was 87 when he
died.
— PheCo b, Klna«r.
Pictured above is a scene on the veranda of Farview, home of the W. Frances Ann Navratil anti Arthur Al Geick, rtdxn ^vrr the.
F. Hasskarls. Miss Dorothea Hasskarl and Hoffman L. Reese, Jr., ns
they appeared with Fire Chief E. W. Pflughaupt immediately after
Blow Knocks Out 9 Teeth
ham. 12, is fully convinced of the
mystical influence nt numbers.
While playing on the Woods School
baseball nine, he got hit with *
bat and luat nine tccUL
room 9; 4th A 5th grade spelling
(rural A ward), room 10.
11:00-12:00: Story telling, libr-
ary; 3R contest, room 9/Picture
memory, auditorium.
12:00-1:00: Lunch.
1:00-2:00: Choral singing, audi-
torium.
2:00 p. m. Athletic events,
Washington Co. Jr. (Blinn) College
Athletic field; Sr. boys track team;
Jr. boys track team; rural penta-
thlon. ‘
The track teams include both
track and field event*.
All athletic eventa will be con-
ducted according to the rules of'
the Interscholastlc League,
7:30 p. m.: Declamation: Sr. de-1
clamation, boys and girls, auditor-
iium; Jr. declamation, boys and
I girls, auditorium; Sub. Jr. decla-
mation, boys and girls, auditorium.
7:30 p. m.: Debate and extem-
poraneous speech, room 15.
: Tennis tournament, Saturday,
March 18, at 9:00 a. m.
Ready writing contest (essay >
March 17, at 2:00 p. m., room 9.
Washington Co. Jr. College.
Boys A girls indoor baseball,
Saturday, March 18, at 1:00 p. m.
Washington Co. Jr. College.
Boys A Girls volley ball, Satur-
day, March 18, at 9:00
Washington Co. Jr. College.
A cold drink stknd will be op-
erated on^the grounds, the profits
of which r*y>expenses of the Inter-
scholastic League meet.
I'
—PUu by KinMy. |
Queens of MayNAaARMIES
vr ,Tiqy enforce new
INCOME TAX IS PROTECTORATE
SUBSTITUTE FOR
SALES LEVIES
MUTUALS HIT
St r o n g Support Is
Given Measure
To Regulate
BIRDS STORE QL1VEH
BANGOR, Cal. (tJ»> - This year’s
After officially notifying and crop of woodpeckers and robins
serenading both the
RED HILL, Pa. d’.l’i It required
seven years for a needle point t«
travel "ohe foot."
The foot was that of James L. !
Wood, Red Hill farmer He stepped
on a needle seven years ago. Ine
point penetrated the big toe of his
right foot and broke, leaving a
half inch of steel in the flesh.
Wood forgot about the accident.
Recently, his right heel became
sore and ho consulted a physician
The latter made a small incision 1
at the sore spot and extracted the '
needle point, expiaining that it j
probably had traveled from th* u trpat oH
war wounds <*t Queen Mary's hos-
pital.
'■ The machine is unique in that
Tnwr it Larry Man Fuund rays will focus on a section of
IL1NCOLN, Neb. <i;j*i Fossiljzed ■ the body a( any depth from the
plwtrtf.apJt it Leaving O
out anything shove and below;
It not only revcato'the presence
( IIAMBEKLAIN IM SORRY
LONDON, March 15 H’J»> -Great
Britain interrupter! important
t rade negotiations with Nazi Ger-
many tcaiay and Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain told parlia-
. WB.c-V .,»<<■( n,,v a »a('»UK4 WIV-
at the Lancaster county jioor farm » zC u •
terly regret the fate of Czechd-
'Slovakia, since the peace of
Munich."
ii Hl I'wVvyf wtesWk—*
___________ lived tQ br 25.000
years old'is now- m the h^nds of
Kanolte Aosu-luriC Bwteaa4-S«>iu!U. Mttetert. dba|.oLeiU>*lVt ,
rector of the University of Ne-
braska museum. The find was
made nea> Brofy in one of the
Trt-county public power district s
ter go csaate.
Cavalrymen Will * -
Be Paid $1,139.42
'At Drill Tonight
Captain W. C. Dorbrltz annouh?
ces that drill checks totaling II.-
239.42 have been receiver) and will
be distributed this evening at the
regular drill jlerlod of the cavalry
troop. All members of the troop
are expected to be oh hand for
______—MiUJjMWmRJhM:.dulteS.a*u*gfti4.Xnr drill a^ l-W-thls evening -----
* Washington County. The transfer ———r- ----(
Estate Willed
Too Late, Heir
Dead 10 Years
spot. The fact that the birthplace
of Independence ia in your coun-
ty furnished you a perpetual op-
portunity of reminding the citi-
zenship of Texas of the v-nhis of
independence. We Msh to ex-
“ j-tnwMrtnnfrflrd Frsnees Ann Nav-
•appreciation to you and to the
-Mthaa- Steio- -csgaaiarXlwe -who ^-veaeada.. w!*w4urfwa»-s»Hwmuta*4-by^—
participated in this great cele-
bration, and for the splendid
way you carried out this great
An
income lax .was substituted today
(or a snics tax proposed In a con- Into Czechoslovakia and speeded to
stitutlonal amendment under con- i’ragu* for. a triumphal entry jp
sideration by the house. 1 hr vote the wrake'of occupation by Nazi
was 82 to 69 A .constitutional am- sqjdicra, the following appotnt-
for rnents were announced to sea) tbs
fate of Czech territory under Ger- !
man rule:
Konrad Henlein, the fuehrer of j
Hudetcnland, as civil administrator
of Bohemia, the largest Czech |
area;
Josef Bucrkcl, commissioner of
Austria, as civil administrator of
Moravta, and General von Gablens 1
aa German military governor at ]
Prague.
At the same time it was disci os- j
ed that Hungary and Poland had
officially recognised the new in- .
depemient state of Slovakia, which !
under Nazi pressure started the
break-up of the Czech republic. 1
The art ion lensened the possibility
officials believed, of dashes among
the massed troops of four nations
in or around Slovakia and Carps- 1
• tho-Ukralrie, the eastern tip of
Czechoslovakia, which ha* been oc- 1
cupted by" Hungary; ■ - 1
Hitler was credited in Nazi 4
circles with a display of courage
which demonstrated great hostllt- |
ty to German' troops, for a trium- ’
phal entry. 4 J
, .---------------------------------------------------------------------------*------------------------------------------------------------ J
HITLER ENTERS PRAGUE IN TRIUMPH
-------;------------—-------------------------------------is________
Dorothea and Frances Ann Will Reig
' " 1 1 A ....■Ill 1.1. I. ■■■■!■ I I ■■■ ^■■i„„|, I, ■■■! , ... ■ __
Chief Pflughaupt presiding and ail lble-
except threlfc members present.
Maifest matters were discussed WOMAN tiPERATEM MINE
and committees appointed. ' JESSUP. Pa. <UF» -■ Mrs. Anna
The Chief reported three alarms! sklepko, 24-yr'ur-oki Jessup widow
since the last meeting, resulflng in believes she is the only woman
a loss of about 200 baby chicks, anthradte operator. She ia the
one false alarm and the burning of head of lhe Enkuknko Coal Com-
pany, which employs 20 men and
mines 35 to 40 tons of coal a day.
9 ' . aftfeia—ISx—
WIDOW .90, LIVES ALONE R human jaw hell
CONNEAUT, O. (UK> - Ninety- j
Fritz Graeber was in the other
day, and told how he took a
farm that was pretty badly run
down, has farmed it ’ for more
than 30 years, and now has bet-
ter soil than when he took it
over, despite annual production
of good crops. He did it by being
the first man in the county to
terrace his land, and by fre-
quent application of barnyard
manure, and planting of soil
building crops. Which reminds us
of a storjq^ve saw printed in the
Denton Record-Chronicle as fol-
lows:
The story’s going the rounds
about the farmer who took a
terribly run down, soil fertility
depleted, weed choked farm in
- hand and made it bloom like an
agricultural Garden of Eden. He
was so proud of the result he
invited his preacher to a special
dinner of celebration. After a
grand meal the two walked over
the place and the farmer pointed
out his flourishing crops, his
cattle and hogs and chickens and
mules, and the general success
and prosperity of the place.
“Yes, Brother Smith,”,said the
preacher at last, “you and the
Lord certainly have don* a good
job—a fine job!”
"Sure have," said the farmer
proudly. “And, say, you’d ought-
er seen the plAce when the Lord
was runnihg it alone."
* • •
Two monarchs of last year had
a big time at the exercises last
Hinsca- and
• ■ A". . x.
their selection. They were the
junior king and queen 'of last
year—Arthur Earl Mgebroff and
Mary Pat Amsler. Th*- two
youngsters, who reigned for a
ni£ht test spring amidst pomp
and splendor, caught a ride on
the fire truck last night and
rode to the notification exer-
cises where they presented the
new royalty with gift*.
...
Dan IJoffmann brings in a
couple of verses pointing out the
difference between the way we
treat the old folks now and in
the olden days:
"In heathen tribes, where skulls
are thick, did primal passions
rage,
They had a system sure and
quick, to cure the blight of
age.
If one’s native youth had fled,
and time had snapped his vim,
They simply popped him on the
head, and that wa* the last of
him.
But in this, our enlightened age,
we’re made of finer stuff,
And we look with righteous rage
on methods so crude and tough
So when our man grows old and
gray, and bent and short of
breath,
We simply take his job away,
and let him starve to death.”
storing the olives in holes In fence
Department met’in regular month-. ©W**" when dry, lose their
ly session Tuesday evening with biterness, ami become highly e<li-
____< as______s hid
LINCOLN, Neb. (ILPi- John C. j
(>wning, Lincoln restaurant cook, I
died 10 years too soon.
When his half-slider, Mrs. Jen-
nie Delvin, died in Nt. Louis Nov.
8, 1938, she left Downing 115,000.
Attorneys for the estate learned
that he last was heard of from
here in 1888.
Attempts to locate him wer* fu-
tile until a newspaper reporter,
tracing his activities from city <r
rectory listings and former ci
Ployer. learned that he had died
nt ths. Lurwiiatpr cminlv farm
here in 1929 Th»- $15,000 will be
given to other relatives in Ireland
L BREDTHAUER County Meet Will
At Biinn
College On Friday
Supt. M. H. Ehlert announces that the Washington Coun-
ty Interscholastic League' Meet will be held Friday, March
17, at Washington County Junior (Blinn) College, with
Oscar Hinze, diredtor-general in charge. The meet will open
at 9.00 a. m., and continue through the day, with literary
events scheduled for the morning hours, track and field
events in the afternoon, and declamation and debate at 7.30
in the evening. f ‘
and, Baseball
sOT ■Szrtwxrnry, Mrtfvh
Schools of the county will parU-
in f .
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 296, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 15, 1939, newspaper, March 15, 1939; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1347411/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.