The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, November 26, 1934 Page: 1 of 8
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THE WEATHER
For Brownsville and the Valley:
Partly cloudy and somewhat wann-
er Monday night; Tuesday mostly
cloudy.
“ —_
FORTY-THIRD YEAR—No. 125
By RALPH L- BUELL
WELL. WE HAD ONE MORE
high of a time placing the last time
that Sen. Morris Sheppard was In
the Valley.
■ First we ourselves none other
placed the time as 1915-
Wrong.
Then we finally got it right In
our own mind at least
And had It oorrectly as 1933.
Typographical error changed the
first 1 to a 3—
And It went through 1923.
That settled It.
Every time anybody wrote 1933
It was changed to 1923
And la our face red?
You are right.
At any rate the Senator was
here In 1934—
And glad were we all to see him.
■ • •
ANOTHER ONE OF OUR GOOD
railroad men leaves us on his way
to the top.
That's the way with these promo-
tions they take our friends away
from us but we all join in con-
gratulations to Henry Kelley of the
Southern Pacific on the step up-
ward which takes him to Dallas.
Just about 4 years have the Kel-
leys been with Brownsville coming
here from Harlingen.
How they will like Dallas after
five or six years of the Valley is a
matter of conjecture but lt’a no
guess how Dallas will like them.
They carry with them wishes for
the best of success tinged with
regret over their departure.
• * 9
A FARM PRODUCTS FESTIVAL
and picnic scheduled for Mercedes
on Tuesday of this week should
draw the crowds.
It’s a keen idea of the Mercedes
Chamber of Commerce this fest-
ival. which will bring hundreds of
displays from the farmers of the
•ommunlty—
Competing for $350 in merchan-
dise prises.
rThe prise winning vegetables
and farm products will go to make
up the Mercedes community ex-
hibit at the Valley midwinter Pah-
On top of all that an old Fiddlers
contest womens nail driving con-
test will bring many contestants—
With prises offered for the larg-
est family the family coming the
longest distance the family residing
the longest on one farm on the
American company tract.
The whole program will be top-
ped off by an address by Cong.
Milton West scheduled for 3 p. m.
In the city park after which the
prise winners will be announced.
We would say this if you want
to see Valley farm products go to
Mercedes Tuesday.
No Valley community raises bet-
tor nor a more varied assortment.
W NOT SO MUCH THE WINNING
hot the ability to absorb defeat and
to learn the lesson therefrom is
what causes us to doff our hat to
the Bagles of the Brownsville High
School football team.
It takes an intangible something
that will {wove the finest asset
those boys could have to go down
in defeat time after time and still
keep up the old fight. \
Tnat s just what these boys did
and that’s what w* give them
credit for.
The beating of Laredo was flue
but the ability to 'teep up their
spirit to the stage that enabled
them to beat Laredo la something
still finer.
So. our hat is off to the team
and its coaching staff and loyal
bunch of rooters who stood by with
encouragement and support.
FIRE CHIEF T. P. 8ARRAN
would like it known that—
It’s up to traffic to look out for
him when he is on his way to a
Are—
Not to him to dodge traffic.
There is just one good rule to
follow when the Are siren blows and
jwu jhear^the trucks coming down
Pull to the curb and stay there
until the department has passed—
Or It is obvious that the fire la
located In some other direction.
There might be a serious accident
come day.
• • •
SUCCESSION OF EVENTS
which all deserve Valley wide recog-
nition and participation begins
Wednesday with the formal open-
%of the Valley Mid Winter Fair
ten follow Mission’s Citrus
Bata and then Weslaco’s 15th
thday celebration.
We axe telling you that you will
get lots of enjdyment out of at-
tending them all and will probably
learn a few things about the Val-
ley you did not know before.
Better make your plans now to
Mko to *U three. •
BROWNSVILLE TEXAS MONDAY NOVEMBER 26 1924
0
EIGHT PAGES TODAY
1 \
_——
• W A COPY
Two Texas Policemen A re Kidnaped by Gunmen
OFFICERS ARE
TAKEN WHILE
QUIZZING MEN
Policemen Abduc ted
In Own Automobile
At Paris; Jail Break-
ers Are Hunted
PARIS Nov 28—(£*»—Two men
who kidnaped Parte policemen Newt
Baker and H. R. Marks Early Mon-
day were said to fit the descrip-
tions of Ambrose Nix and Arthur
Gooch who broke Jail at Holden-
ville Okla. Oct. 25.
At 10:30 a. m. approximately
seven hours after they were ab-
ducted no trace had been found of
the policemen oi their abductors
and North Texas officers were un-
certa a which way they fled. They
started north out of Paris but could
easily have doubled back to the west
or to the south. Hugo. Okla.. of-
ficers were advised of the kidnap-
ing shortly after it occurred and
guarded roads but did not see the
fugitives.
Abducted in Own Car
Holdenvllle officers said descrip-
tions of the kidnapers led them to
believe they ware Nix and Gooch.
Nl. and Gooch escaped along
with two other men. Bill Johnson
and Red Hurst and two women
Maudle Lawson and Myrtle Kindig.
Johnson Hurst and the Lawson
woman since have been captured.
The Paris officers were kidnaped
and carried away in their own pa-
trol car vf en they went to a filling
station to invesigate a car that
had stopped there They had been
notified by Tyler V fleers that two
men had robbed Q Mitchell’s lunch
and beer stand two miles north of
Tyler Sunday night escaping with
(Continued on Page Two)
GIRLS’DEATHS
CLUE
But Driver Say* Children
Rode With Him; Were
With Woman
CARLISLE. Pa. Nov. SS-lAV-The
first definite clue to the identities
of three fair-haired little girl* found
dead in a rain-dampened mountain
thicket turned authorities toward
New York and New England Monday
in their investigation.
The information came from Paul
White Harrisburg bus driver who.
after viewing the bodies at the
morgue said he was certain they
were the three children who accom-
panied a woman from New York to
Harrisburg in his bus last Wednes-
day.
Whitt also postively identified a
suitcase picked up two miles from
where the girls’ bodies were found
at one of three carried by the wo-
man on the trip.
Safe Crackers Get
$900 In Alto Jobs
ALTO Nov. 38.—(JP\—Safe burg-
lars took approximately 1500 from
Brookshire Brothers grocery store
and $450 from Blanchard Dry
Goods company here Sunday
night. Explosives were used to
open the safes. Beside the cash
an undetermined amount of checks
was taken.
Fingerprints on a cash register
were studied by Rusk and Lufkin
officers searching for a clue by
which to identify the burglar*
F. D. R. Displeased
By Housing Clashes
WASHINGTON. Nov. 26. —<AV-
President Roosevelt was said In
administration circles Monday to
have expressed displeasure—albeit
In a smiling. Jocular manner—to
both Secretary Ickes and James A.
Moffet. the housing administra-
tor. over their recent clash of
opinion on federal versus private
housing.
A usually authoritative source
told The Associated Press the
president called Ickes and Moffett
from Warm Springs Ga. at 9:30
a. m. last Saturday and. among
other things directed them to go
to the White House Immediately.
FHAlmCIAL
TO BE SPEAKER
Details of Federal Hottsinf
Act to Be Explained By
State Administrator
Pull details of the Federal Hous-
ing act how it works and what it
does and can do will be explained
to Valleyltes here Wednesday night
by R. A. Tullls Federal Housing
administrator for Texas.
Mr. Tullls will speak in the high
school auditorium at 8 p. m.. it was
announced Monday by L. F. Boling
manager of the Mercedes Chamber
of Commerce.
"We would very much like to
have every Valley contractor lum-
ber man and material man attend
this meeting" Boling sold. "We
find that actual workings of this
Federal Housing act are known to
comparatively few and feel that If
all details of the act were known to
our Valley bankers and construc-
tion men that more Federal Hous-
ing plans would be made.”
Boling has been especially active
in promoting the making of these
loans and feels that once the act
is explained In detail by some one
in authority that more such loans
will be made In the Valley.
2 Disabled Yachts
15 Aboard Located
NEW YORK. Nov. 26.—(A*)—Two
disabled yachts missing on the
Atlantic with fifteen persona
aboard were found early Monday.
The schoner White Cloud its
steering gear disabled on a scienti-
fic and treasure-hunting expedi-
tion to the Spanish Main was
located 300 miles northeast of
Puerto Rico by the 8. 8. Rangi-
tats. The steamer which wire-
lessed coast guards that ft was
standing by gave no detaUa. Ele-
ven men are on the White Cloud.
Creeping shoreward with only a
staysail the ketch Fayaway was
found by the Coast Guard Cutter
Mascoutin 35 miles off Chesapeake
Light vessel near Norfolk Va. A
family of four was aboard.
Storm Located 200
Miles From Bermuda
WASHINGTON. Nov. 26—<*V-The
weather bureau Monday issued the
following storm warning:
"Advistory 10:30 a. m.: Northeast-
ward advance tropical disturbance
blocked by area high pressure great
magnitude to northward. Distur-
bance centered about two hundred
miles southwest of Bermuda moving
westward or southwestward attend-
ed by shifting gales. Northeast storm
warning ordered Atlantic coast
Hatterms to Atlantic City. Strong
winds will be due principally to high
pressure area.'*
Houston Robbery
Suspect Arrested
DALLAS Nov. 26. —iff)—A man
suspected of participation in the
114000 robbery of the Ben Milam
hotel in Houston was under arrest
here Monday and the night mana-
ger of the hotel was en route here
to view him.
ITALY DEFIES
YUGOSLAVIA’S
KILUNGPROBE
Duce Refuses to Hand
Over Two Suspected
Of Part In King’s
Assassination
(Copyt 1934. by the A. P)
ROME Nov. 36.—Italy Monday
openly defied Jugoslavia's attempt
to Investigate the plot that resutt-
ed In the assassination of King
Alexander at Marseille last month
by refusing Prance’s demand for
extradition of two allege:! prin-
cipals.
The court of appeals at Turin
ruled against France’s request for
Dr. Ante Pavelich alleged terror-
ist leader and his supposed as-
sistant. Egon Kvaterni*. Both
have been under arrest in Italv
since shortly after the murder of
Alexander and Louis Barthou the
late foreign minister of France.
Cart Denial
A curt three line communique is-
sued Monday afternoon announced
that the court of appeals had de-
cided the extradition “must nc
be conceded to France." This i*
tne second blow Italy has deliver
ed to Yugoslavia In two days.
On Saturday aha demanded
flatly that the League of Nations
council immediately hear Yugo-
slavia'* grave charges that the
Marseille assassinations were plot-
ted In Hungary and an Italian
government spokesman laid Italy
and Hungary will be Joined by
Austria In presenting a united
front at Geneva when Yugoslavia’s
charge Is heard.
Refusal Accepted
That France'* demand would be
(Continued on Page Two)
OPEN SEINING
SEASON SEEN
Legislative Group Sees No
Harm In Nets; Wants
Island Channels
(Special to Th* Herald)
SAN ANTONIO. Nov. 2d—An open
and closed season for seining and
netting in bays along the Texas
Gulf coast will be recommended by
the legislative committee which has
just concluded a series of hearings
on salt water Ashing. It was Indi-
cated after the committee had spent
the week-end here and Informally
heard C. E. Wheatley state presi-
dent of the Isaak Walton League.
Representative Pat Jefferson of
San Antonio committee chairman
said efforts also will be made to
obtain a federal appropriation to
opc - passes through Padre Island-
three are desired—to admit fresh
gulf water into back bays and thus
remedy a condition which kills many
fish in those waters. The federal
govenment also may be asked for
a biologist to make a scientific long-
time study of coastal fishing. The
committee expects to complete Its
report in two weeks.
Wheatley declared a plan of per-
mitting seining and netting when
Ash are not spawnln g&nd prohibit-
ing the practices during spawning
time might prove satisfactory. Sein-
ing and netting are now unlawful
at all times In most of the bays
but admittedly the state lacks war-
(Continued on Page Two)
I Hitler’s Friend
JX FOUNTAIN
DROPS DEAD IN
CHURCH HERE
Bank Receiver Die*
Quietly At Sunday
School Service* in
City _
Jasper Cluck Fountain 81 re-
ceiver of the Merchants Natiopal
Bank of this city since July 1 1933
died in his chair at Sunday School
at the First Baptist church Sun-
day morn Inf. Death came sudden-
ly and without warning.
According to eye witnesses .Mr.
Fountain drew a deep breath
Just as the aervlces were terminat-
ing and was dead.
Coming here from Marlin as
successor to John M. Young first
receiver of the bank the deceased
was well known throughout the
entire Valley and was active in
civil life of the city.
An active church worker he had
served as deacon of the Merlin
Baptist church for more than a
quarter of a century and occupied
the aame position with the Browns-
ville church. He was a member of
several Masonic bodies and of the
Maccabees.
Mr. Fountain had been In the
banking business for more than M
years starting as a bookkeeper
with the First National Bank of
Marlin. Later he organised the Ci-
ttern National bank of that city
and waa connected with the Marlin
Clttens bank when It consolidated
with the Cltlsene National.
While In Brownsville he con-
tinued his fondness for outdoor
life was an enthusiastic hunter
and fisherman and enjoyed the
facilities of the municipal golf
oourae where he recently made a
bole in one.
Survivors Include Mrs. Fountain
whom he married as Miss Lola
Kyaer In Marlin In 1883; four
^Continued on Page Two)
ROBLES KIDNAP
GUILT I l
Suspect Pleads Not Guilty
At Hearing In
Phoenim
PHOENIX Aria Nov. 36.—(A*)—
Oscar HL Hobson former Tucson
ttenca hall proprietor charged
with sending extortion notes In the
June Robles kidnaping last April
pleaded not guilty before Daniel
Hurley U. 8. Commissioner here
Monday.
Mr. and Mr*. Fernando Poble*.
parents of little June were pres-
ent for the hearing as was Mrs
Robson.
It was the second time since his
arrest by department of justice
agents November T Robson has
been taken out of the Phoenix jail.
He was taken before the commis-
sioner last Thursday at which time
hi* hearing was postponed because
of the absence of government wit-
Defense counsel announced that
by establishing Robson's absence
from the state at the time of the
kidnaping of Little June they
hoped to have Robson’s bond re-
duced from the 6100000 figure to
which it was hiked soon after his
arrest.
Ira Webster Jr. Is
Believed Recovering
Ira Webster Jr young Browns-
ville attorney who was painfully
Injured Saturday night when his
car went off the floodway bridge
west of Mercedes was brought here
Sunday afternoon after being treat-
ed In the Mercedes Oeneral Hos-
pital
Although tftie young lawyer who
Is connected with the Edinburg
firm of Kelley Looney * Norveli
was painfully cut and bruised his
injuries are not considered of a
dangerous nature.
Webster was ooming from Bdin-
burg to Brownsville when ths ac-
cident occurred. His car was almost
totally demolished by the long
drop over the side of the flood way
bridge.
MERCEDES FAIR
OPENS TUESDAY
Farm Products Fee*rval
Plana Completed At
Queen City
(Special to The Bereld)
MERCEDES Nov. M—Farmers of
the Mercedes community will gather
here Tuesday for the first annual
Farm Products Festival and Picnic
which will bsgln In the morning and
continue throughout the day cul-
minating with a speech by Oong.
Milton West In the city park at I
p. m.
The immediate Object of the
festival la to secure the best pos-
sible specimens of farm produce and
products to bo used in the Mercedes
community exhibit at the Valley
Mid-Winter fair and to this end
the merchants of Mercedes are of-
fering a total of 1300 in merchan-
dise prises for the best exhibits.
In addition to the farm products
exhibition .cash prises are also to
be given to the winners of the Old
Fiddlers contest for which many
entries have already been received
Prises will also be given to the
family coming the longest distance
to the largest family and to the
family which has lived the longest
on the same farm on the American
company tract.
Mrs. O. E. Van Berg will use
nrtse-wtnning displays from the
Festival to fashion the Mercedes
community exhibit at the Harlingen
exposition the following day. Judges
of the local exhibit will include Mrs.
Van Berg. Mrs. Morris Allen &
Dodson A. F. Hendricks George
Morrison W. L. Bradbury. Fred
Johnston. L. M. McDonald. Mrs.
Otsukl. Mrs. John Rouse. Mrs. Le-
roy Ziefler Mrs. Roy Bowker Mrs.
A J. Reisterer snd H. Wallace.
Chairmen who have assisted In
arranging the Festival are: J. C.
Deyo. general chairman; finance. D.
R. Johnson J. H. Davis. F. A. Han-
shaw; public grounds and refresh-
ments; J. C. Lear Ray Stern. L. M.
McDonald; prises Walter Collier
M. L. David. Nix Harrington; ad-
vertising. H. H. Harris. E. A. Brown
and Jack Sharp; entertainment snd
contest Dr. E. G. Smith and T. J.
Pikes.
All of ths contests w*H take place
In the dty park In the early after-
noon. snd prise winners In the farm
produces exhibition will be unnotic-
ed Immediately following the speech
by Cong. Milton West Entries for
this exhibition must be left at the
chamber of commerce before noon
the announcement of ths event
states.
Farm families of the Mercedes
community are Invited to bring their
families and a basket lunch to be
eaten srrnnd noon in the city park.
Tables for the picnickers will be
erected snd coffee and ice water
will be furnished by the City of
Mercedes.
The various classes tn which ex-
hibit* will be received are listed be-
low:
All exhibits must be In place In
(Continued on Page Two)
FIFTH VICTIM
FOUND SLAIN
AT RIO RICO
Mystery Assassin Has
Killed 5 Wounded
Three During Past
Four Weeks
The fifth victim of MaUunoroc1
“Phantom Killer" was found tn tha
brush near Rio Rico Sunday mora-
ine shot twice with a J» caltbra
piatoL
Tha body badly deoom posed.
was identified as that of Andre*
Zamora. It was discovered lying in
the brush in the district known a*
Plan to Chltlpln.
Two bullet wounds inflicted by
.18 calibre bullets were found tn
the victim's neck and two empty
JI calibre shells were found on
the ground near the victim's body.
Matamoros police declared Mon-
day morning that an investigation
of the shells led them to believe
that Zamora’s slayer was tha
"Phantom Slayer" who has killed
five men and wounded three. In the
past four weeks and has tweorised
ranch districts between Matamoros
and Rio Rica
Police believe that tha killer 1*
demented.
Only twlos has h* been even
and both times his features were
concealed by darkness. On the twa
occasions that hit murders hav*
been witnessed he has mysterious-
ly appeared from out of the dark-
ness and opened fire on his vic-
tim* without warning.
Three of his victims have been
found lying in the brush near Ria
Rico. Another a prominent Mat-
amoros legal advisor was shot ta
death before hie wife and children
as he attempted to drive his auto-
mobile Into the garage. The fifth
was shot down as ha stood talking
to a group of men on a ranch near
Matamoros. Three others were
wounded In the bunt of gunfire
that greeted the group of men on
the ranch.
The fact that five bullet wound*
were found In the bodies of his
first three victims led police ta
call him "the five-shot terror." Hie
last two victims however were
hit only twice each.
Police concluded after an Investi-
gation at the scene of the slaylna
Sunday that the killer lay tn wail
for his victim and shot him dowa
without warning.
Well Known Houston
Resident Is Dead
HOU8TON Noe. X —OP)— Fu-
neral services were conducted here
Monday for Daniel Adam Hort-
man who died at his home Sun-
day. Hartman had been a res-
ident of Houston for X years
coming here from Huntsville. He
was widely known in central and
southeast Texas Survivors includ-
ed a eon. Claude Hortman. of Lake
Charles.
Scrivnor Given To
State By Federal#
PORT WORTH. Nov. X. —OF)—
►W. 8. "Shllo" Scrivnor was order-
ed released by Federal Judge Jams*
C. Wilson here Monday after a
brief hearing. Judge Wilson held
that the state of Texas had a
prior claim to the prisoner who is
at large on a state furlough from
Huntsville penitentiary.
November M. 1*34 —No
tinctlon vu ever made between
those whose labor nnd sacrifice
molded Texas civilisation. At
times the -Original Three Hun-
dred” In Austin's ootany Indulged
themselves a pardonable feeling
k of superiority for having been
' the first families * to establish
homes In an untamed environ-
ment. always admitting how-
ever. the maintenance strength
of those who followed tat the
pMcoiu rounaauon w in •ni-
ptiY.
In early Texas as elsewhere.
English speaking people showed
the most remarkable energy and
capacity for colonisation. North
Americans were the ones who
Slanted the roots of civilisation
i Texas soil. The wlldemem had
been giving way to them for
generations Virginia. Kentucky
Alabama. Tennessee North Caro-
lina. South Carolina Oecreisu
Missouri and MlastaMppl
at tide time the states eon
mort largely * the
population of
Surprising thing about elooo friend-
ship of Lem Riefenstahl (above)
and Reichsleader Adolph Hitler if
that she makes no effort to eoneeal
fact she is Jewish. Nazi chieftain
made her virtual dictator of Ger-
man films and allied arts. This li
her newest Photo.
• ^ • 111 T — - - . —I I . ——
BULLETS HALT
PRISON BREAK
One Killed Another Shot
As Escape Near Hornet on
la Thwarted
HOUSTON. HOT. 26—<*>>—Jimmy
Lee Cain 30 of Centerville IU..
was killed and Albert Baggett 33
of Port Arthur was wounded In the
leg when they attempted to escape
Monday morning from the Harlem
state prison farm near Sugar land.
Cain was serving 40 years from
Tarrant county on conviction of
four charges of robtery. Captain
A N. Owen of the Harlem farm
said he also had been In prison In
Illinois.
The pair ran from a corn field
and sought to gain the protection
of nearby timber but bullets fired
by guards halted their flight.
Victim of Kidnap
It Reported Seen
Philadelphia. Nov. 96 - UP)—In-
formation that William Weiss kid-
naped night life character was re-
ported seen In adjoining Delaware
county two days ago sent federal
agents off an a new track in their
investigation Monday.
The report was that Weim.
“snatched” by three men outside his
surburan home on October 36. and
held for 6100.000 ransom was seen
entering a house in the “lower end”
of the county.
Japanese Minister
Of Finance Resigns
TOYKO. Nov. 96—UP)—Banenobu
Pujil minister of finance who is
suffering from a nervous and physi-
cal breakdown as a result of his
futile efforts to prevent large In-
creases in military appropriations
resigned Monday.
Physicians said Pujil. who has
long suffered from weakness of the
lungs is seriously ILL Camphor in-
jections were necessary.
. r&DDlES/-
GATHEP POUND ^
JWinnincr WE ARE FORMING A CLUB OF BOR WO
beginning GI(?LS F9QM NEIGHBORHOOD TO
A START ON A GREAT ADVERSE iMlOTHE
LANO OF »CE AMD SNOW IN SEARCH OF
Christmas Santa Claus/-wougyn W w«
ID GO ALONG — VMOUDNT YOU LIVE TO
Adventure see that touy old fellow right in
HIS OWN WORKSHOP BOS IIV ENGAGED IN
Bv MAKING TOYS FOR NOO AND AU. THE
_ . OTHER KIDDIES? .
Leslie ALL Pt&HT-HEPE WE GO/
A. Mitchell
COME ALONG WITH US AND WELL1
CARRY SOU ON THE ADVENTURE
^ OF YOLK? LIVES /
-SrFnesi ui
GO»OE AND OOMffcNVON ON THIS FUZ1Y
WUZZY MAN -WES A eCEAT <3CO0T All CCVEPED
WITH FUZZY WUZZY FU? U WEEP HIM VW?M nTHe
COLD Cl'MAlE OF SAtffc QAU&-V0U WAD BEfTEfc
ALON& WfrgM Qj01W>N6 /
HEftE. ACE TVUO KlDoieS W HME SELE^ED
AS AIDS TO 'WE RJB3Y WUZ7V MAN-TAD AND
TCTRJC-NOUU LIKE THEM BOIH BECAUSE
THEV'CE CEGUAfl KIDS TU$T LIKE THE <5*HEC
BOSS AND G«I?I5 GONG ALONG ON THIS
vgs borr have tcttell \Ou who tw*s old
FELLOW f$-R5RHES KNOWN VOU AND VtX/VE
KNOWN WNRRMEACS.0Or»%5 THE HARDEST.
OLD BCV T> CATCH SOU EVEP -HOWEVER
VEIL SEE F WE CAN SNEAK UPON HIM m HtS ‘
MOOSE IN THE FAI? NORTH — WE'RE ON OUR
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Buell, Ralph L. The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, November 26, 1934, newspaper, November 26, 1934; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1395591/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .