Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 83, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1953 Page: 1 of 16
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Box 5588
1
I
4
1.1953
«
cold
a day.
I -j—b "
DENTON, TEXAS. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 5, 1953
PRICE: FIVE CENTS
*
ROUND
ABOUT
$
In Face Of Vote Set-Bac
9
i
DEAN ASKS HALT
ON PEACE TALKS
*
“46 SMU Star
Killed In Crash
-
this
within
various
the first day’s work
ink
The
ness concerns,'
I
firms have
partlei
governorship, and made gains in
U.S.O.,
erican
Club, American
the Salvation Army.
4
fl
Arrival Set
I
FOR RE-ELECTION
For Hunter
Johnson Gets Garner’s Okay
dIEOMAJ
Wolters -
Weather
I officials
Freeman was taken to Carswell
Wednesday afternoon
1
Ikard Makes
2 Talks Here
so
Congressman Frank Ikard
of
THOMAS M. LINDLEY
4
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with the DlonGe
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534
Amt Dial
11 •
Ask for Classified
newspaper.
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Blonde Widow, Man
Indicted In Slaying
Democrats Call For Stronger
Voice In Senate Committees
Beef Leads S^ump
In Farm Prices
Paris Group Files
Election Protest
•1
' 3
In,Denton County
• " ■ *4--- -- - - ----- a a, - ’ (4; , :
With the drought broken in the year. Even the old standby, Ber-
last
him
a
•a
again to politics,
the elections of T
"Saved
your Ine.
Warren u
: Mrs. We
bands de
their apa
two men
the Democrats swept to victory
in the New York City mayoral
today, Canwell Air
said this morning.
/
t
sav-
mode
hrist-
ther,
dry
MARIE DIONNE ENTERS QUEBEC CONVENT —
Marie Dionne, one of the 19-year-old Callander, Ont.,
quintuplets, smiles at her mother from behind the
severe garb of a Quebec City cloistered nuns’ order, the
Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament. At the convent she
will spend her days in silence, prayer and work. (AP
Wirephoto)
.60
47
that Texas’ conservative Demo,
crats have nothing in common
with the National Democratic lead-
ership. He said the New York
Democratic leadership and the na-
tional leadership of the party were
“the same.”
Porter also said Republicans ran
a great race in Virginia, despite
the combined efforts of Virginia’s
U.S. Senators Byrd and Robertson
and Democratic Governor Battle.
2. Ralph Yarborough, unsuccess-
ful candidate for governor last
year, said the Democratic victo-
you
and
goes
for a drink,
musician * fr
By R. J. (Bob) EDWARDS
Neither is there any creature that
is not manifest in his sight: but
• all things are naked and opened
unto the eyes of him With whom
we have to do.-Hebrews 4:13
One sole God:
One sole ruler—his Law;
One sole interpreter of that law.-
Mazzini
are supposed to be divided in the
same ratio as the Senate itself.
Democrats have not said whether
they will ask more committee
strength, while still leaving the
chairmanships to the GOP.
Democrats moved into a numeri-
cal edge with the death of Sen.
Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio) and the
appointment of Thomas A. Burke,
a Democrat, to succeed him.
They <
Mrs. wi
with bar
Golf and
Finance Your Car wilh Waldrip’s
Fer Better Terms. C-4054.
scifically to
ly. In them.
■
A. G. Bratcher, Senior and Jun-
( lor, were Arkansas visitors and it
was about the first time that Sen-
ior has been back to his old home-
town of Salem, Ark., since he came
to Texas 61 years ago. He said,
“I plan on going back there this
coming summer to stay for sever-
al days. I have lots of kinspeo-
ple there that I don't even know.”
• • • •
Rev. L. P. Parker of Oswego,
Kas., was in Denton Tuesdsy en
route to Stephenville, where he has
some real estate holdings. He has
been pastor of the Presbyterian
Church of Oswego for the past
three years. He served as pastor
here of the Presbyterian Church,
USA, for six years, leaving here
in 1941.
The Denton Boosters Club will
1 head a caravan to Greenville this
coming Friday night when the Den-
ton Broncos play the Greenville
High Boys. The caravan will form
at the Denton High School Friday
----evening at.6o‛clock and head for
Greenville. Booster Club officials
ask every car-owner in Denton, who
< wishes to see the ga ne, to be on
hand with his automobile at the
high school Friday evening, as they
hope to see a large crowd of Den-
ton High rooters at that game.
Kern To Address
Producers Group
Here Tonight
Troy E. Kern of Cooper, presi-
dent of the North Texas Producers
Association, will address members
of the Denton County Producers
Association at their called meet-
ing tonight at 7:* in the Denton
City Hall auditorium.
The Denton County organization
is one of the member associations
of the NTPA. At the meeting to-
night, the Denton County farmers
will receive official notice of their
share of the (19,304 dividend de-
clared by the NTPA.
Other business will be discussed,
including the advisability of ad-
vertising milk and milk products
of the association members, offi-
cials said.'
GOVERNOR-ELECT -Democrat
Robert B. Meyner talks on the
telephone at his home in Phillips-
burg, N.J., after he was elected
Governor of New Jersey in an
election Nov. 1. (AP Wirephoto)
Fairbanks followed. He said he
Mrs. Wells discussed divor
4
eral chairman said this morning.
* Committee workers will give em-
ployers cards to pass out to their
employees, Williams said. Several
Flamilig. torch
campaign will run through Nov. 13.
“Our goal is one day's pay from
United Fund
Total Passes
$1,200 Mark
Contributions and pledges to Dem
ton County's United Fund totaled
$1,285 this morning at the United
Fund office.
United Fund officials estimated
that more pledges have been made,
but have not yet been turned to
to the office.
Committee workers were contin-
ulng to contact people and firms
id Warren as relating
made advances with
100 per cent
police. He was arrested a________
earlier en his job at Acme Bride
WW Nation
Denton Texa
by Denton
a few hours
TOWN
County Treasurer
Tom Lindley Dies
into custody at Denton Wednesday,
will be escorted to Camp r-----
PANMUNOM (JR—Arthur Dean,
U.S. envoy, suggested today that
top Allied and Communist diplo-
mats abandon temporarily efforts
to arrange a Korean peace confer-
ence and turn over to subcommit-
tees disputes which have stalled
the preliminary talks.
The Communists promptly said
“no,” then agreed to think about
it overnight. They promised an
answer at 11 a.m. tomorrow (9
p.m. today EST).
Dean, noting the high level ne-
gotiators have gotten nowhere,
told newsmen he felt staff advisers
AWOLSoldier
Arrested Here
Special to the Record CbreMslo
FORT WORTH — John Garner
Freeman, 20-year -old escapee from
an Army stockade, who was taken ■
secret relationship wi
widow of a wealthy ----- —
dealer whom both are charged
her eyes while
husband at the 1
SIAM
IIUWV.
_ ■ 8
-g
$
local elections in such atatea as
Connecticut.
6
“AV4 M3 VIK b III*
American Heart Association, and
morning, a
Wednesday.
every employe as well as contri-
butions from the firms and busi-
" Ed Williams, gen-
their mates.
The friend, Kenny
was a witness before
PARIS, Tex. IF—Voters rejected
the mayor-alderman form of city
government in a Paris city charter
election Sept. 26 but yesterday the
decision was contested.
A notification of intention saying
the city council had acted wrongly
by calling the election was filed
by four men.
The complaint said the council
acted Illegally by calling the elec-
tion on the issue at the same time
the public voted on candidates un-
der the mayor-alderman form of
government.
Paris now has city manager
government John Perryman, for
merly of Denton, holds the city
manager podtfoe,
skies and mild temperatures. The
U.S. Weather Bureau indicated
that partly cloudy skies and mild
temperatures will continue for an-
other day or so, and then a new,
moisture laden cool front will move
into this area.
Denton County’s official rainfall
measurement during the last two
days was 1.45 inches, as recorded
at the Agricultural Experiment
Station, four miles northwest of
Denton. However, nearly all other
parts of the county reported from
one-quarter to one half-inch more
rainfall. Agricultural leaders said
the average amount over the en-
tire Denton County area was closer
to two inches than the 1.45 record-
ed at the Experiment Station.
The county’s official rainfall
measurement for the year now is
27.37 inches—less than two inches
below normal.
With today's sun following two
days of rain, the winter wheat, le-
gumes and pasture grasses were
“jumping” over the entire area.
Some observers believed that pas-
tures were greener today than they
have been at any other time this
no plans to ask for creation of
the post of vice chairman. Hunt
said he would discuss with John-
son his plan to award such posts
to senior Democrats on at least
some major committees.
There has been no decision
about the makeup of the Senate’s
regular committees next year.
Republicans now have a narrow
majority on each- The committees
home through a back lane when
he met a tough looking character,
who said:
“Could you help a poor hungry,
homeless man, boss, Who has noth-
ing but a loaded revolver on him?”
—Labor Digest.
L‛ 7
W. L. Hunter, Jr., former NTSC
and Denton High School student,
stricken with polio in Mexico City
Sept. 12, is due to arrive at Park-
land Hospital in Dallas. Nov. 12,
according to word received by his
mother, Mrs. W. L. Hunter, TSCW
faculty member. Mrs. Hunter also
said that her son is improving.
The 23 year old Denton man was
originally scheduled to be flown
back to Dallas Nov. 30.
Hunter will make the flight In
an iron lung, attended by two
nurses and two doctors. Arrange-
ments for the flight were made by
the New York office of the Nation-
al Foundation of Infantile Paraly-
sis.
Hunter was stricken with polio
while a student at the College of
Mexico where he was majoring in
economics and business. He has
been paralized from the neck
down and confined to an iron lung.
Mrs. Hunter this morning said that
young Hunter is showing definite
improvement
That was another of those ‘mil-
, lion-dollar’ rains that fell here
' Tuesday night and Wednesday and
grain men are Jubilant over the
winter pasture that is coming into
use. Most of the cotton and peanuts
have been harvested in the county
and it is believed that the rain
will not materially affect the cot-
l ton crop as it was one of those
gentle rains and not accompanied
by wind. Nursery men, too, were
happy as expressed by Boyd Arm-
trong—“This is the finest kind of
rain for young nursery stock.”
and lush—at a time of the year
when itusually begins to yellow
-and die.
Cotton and peanut farmers were
hard hit by the wet weather, which
temporarily halted their harvest-
ing activities. However, it has
been estimated that at least two-
thirds of the peanut and cotton
crops in Denton County already
had been harvested when the rains
came.
forts
•ave
nylon
llent,
oolen
teal.
Francis Leffler Jr., 1009 Carroll
Street, returned to his former
home city, New York, this summer
and also visited his sister in Wash-
ington, D.C., where he sat down
with the great and near-great. He
said, “My sister took me to Jie
Country Club for dinner one eve-
ning and at the table next to ours
sat Vice President and Mrs. Nixon.
He is certainly a fine looking
man.”
This showing in heavily popu-
lated Eastern areas came at a
time when most politicians were
saying there , were definite signs
of opposition to the administraton
n Midwestern and Southern farm
areas. i : d-
These factors seemed to many
political observers to add up to
a gloomy picture for the Republi-
cans, facing a fight to retain or
widen their narrow margins in the
Senate and House next year.
Whether Tuesday’s results really
foreshadowed a national trend to- ■
ward the Democrats was a matter
of debate.
Many Republicans, while con-
ceding unhappiness, pointed to lo-
cal issues. Democrats were quick
to note Eisenhower had given a
blanket endorsement to all Repub- 1
licans running everywhere. '
with murdering.
Warren, 33, was arrested here.
The widow, Mrs. Diane Wells,
31, was picked up in Seattle on in-
dictments issued by federal grand
jury in Fairbanks, Alaska. Her
am, Marquam Wells, 4, was taken
to the home of a Seattle attorney.
Her husband, Cecil Wells, 51/
president of the Alaska Chamber
of Commerce, was found shot to
death to his bed Oct IT at Fair
franks • ...
Mrs. Wells was his fifth wife.
Company.
- The youth told his bride and
parents goodbye at City Jail. He
has been married a little over a
month, police said. He started
working for Acme July 15.
Freeman escaped from Fort
Jackson, 8. C., May 24, according
to the Federal Bureau of Investi-
gation, which alerted Denton po-
Carswel would not dh class the
offense for which Freeman was
being held in Fort Jackson.
Thomas M. Lindley, Denton
County treasurer, died at 2:30
a.m. today in a Denton hospital
following an illness of more than
two weeks.
Funeral services will be held at
2:30 p.m. Friday at the First Meth-
Country Club. . nung.
Warren said he telephoned her
and was invited to her apartment
DENTON AND VICINITY: Clear
to partly cloudy and mild today,
tonight and Friday; increasing
cloudiness Friday night and Sat-
urday.
Denton County rainfall for 24-
hour period ending at T a.m. to-
day: .36 inch. Rainfall so far this
year: 27.37; this month: 1.45. Sun
rises Friday at 6:51 a.m., sets at
5:34 p.m. Fishing Friday: fair,
Saturday: poor.
Experiment Station Report
Denton County area, farmers to- muda grass, was growing green
day looked favorably on clearing
—J The
The Flaming Torch campaign,
which will eliminate 19 separate
Akek-oke “ainngrnktskkbbra Hall
Tuesday night
race, elected a governor and a firms have i
congressman in recently Republi- poet soon to
can New Jersey, held the Virginia participation
. ---------------------A----—. ■ v - ^,0,----meleat-a-nrteC
Declines Comment
On Signs Of Trend
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Eisenhower, conced-
ing he is not completely happy over portents of Democratic
resurgence at the polls, vows he ia sticking to the political
and legislative course he has charted.---------------
1
.V I
2 ------
as *—«r -
—J ft
..,3 ; f.1.
awarded primarily on the basis
of seniority, are coveted positions.
They carry with them some pa-
tronage, and an influence over the
course of legislation, committees
do not now have vice chairmen.
In the absence of the chairman,
the next senior Republican nor-
mslly presides.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of
Texas, the Senate Democratic
leader, has declared his party
members would not attempt to take
control of committees unless cir-
cumstances gave them a margin
of several votes. He has mentioned
ries reflected “a trend all over
the nation.”
“The people are thoroughly dis-
illusioned with the Republican pro-
gram,” Yarborough said, “which
shows utter lack of regard for the
citizen and for the habitat that
Americans live in.”
3. A spokesman for the Texas
Federation of Labor said what he
termed “Republican wrecking-
crew tactics" in soil conservation
and labor-management relations
may cost untold millions of dol-
lars.
Jerry R. Holleman, secretary of
the state organization of AFL
Unions in Texas, condemned GOP
plans for reorganizing the Soil Con-
servation Service and the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Ser-
vice-
“The price for the saving of a
few dollars in appropriations will
be paid in depleted eoil, lost water
and costly labor-management dis-
putes,” Holloman said.
v
K*
Poor Man: He was traveling
SOLD BY FIVE O’CLOCK
FIRST DAY
Mrs. Bellar inserted the follow-
ing ad in the Record-Chronicle
Want Ad section and sold the
baby bed and mattress first dsy
the ad appeared by five o’clock.
BABY BED with Simmons iner-
apring mattress, clean, good
condition. XIX._______________
Mrs. Bedlar said, “The ad was
very successful. It brought re-
sults the first day the ad ap-
peared and she had several calls
after she sold the bed.
Whenever you have anything to
sell let a Record Chronicle Want
Ad make the sale for you.
FARM, CHURCH
NEWS FRIDAY
Friday's Record-Chron-
icle features farm and
church news in Denton
County. All of the county's
church notices available will
be included as well as those
in Denton. On the farm
page will be two interesting
columns filled with names
around the county you will
recognize. Allen Bogan,
farm editor, who writes
Down On The Farm, will al-
so offer interpretive report-
ing on the latest events af-
fecting Denton County
formers and ranchers and
Uncle Mack will have his
down-to-earth column about
the goings-on omona the
county farmers. You’ll find
the things you're looking for
in Friday's Record - Chron-
icle, Denton County's home
run it will win. -
Eisenhower declined to ap-
praise the results of Tuesday’s
elections, which included sur-
prise Democratic victories in
New Jersey, in terms of re-
action to his administration’s
policies or actions.
He told reporters he just didn’t
know, and they would have to do
their own analyzing.
The President volunteered, to
1 open the news conference, that he
was not completely pleased and
happy with some of Tuesday’s
state and local election results.
But he added, giving reporters per-
mission to quota him directly in
this instance:
“I hsve lost skirmishes before.”
Taking up the military analogy,
a reporter asked whether he in-
tended to win the war—presum-
ably the 1954 congressional elec-
tions.
He never went in a war to lose
one, the President replied.
Questioning came back time and
I
> I j
nd police inspectors James
and Don Ainsworth said
, a husky c-tooter, was
up here at his sister’s
resterday. He denied any
go of the slaying.
tfioers said they took a 23-
The job of his administration, he told his news con-
ferensexesterday,18 to provide a dynamic and forwards
looking program for the country. He said the administatien
will continue toward that goal, believing that in the long
50 TEARS
of Daily Service
to Denton County
Wichita Falla had to leave home
early today to keep his appoint-
ments in Denton.
The U.S. representative from the
13th Congressional District arrived
here about 9:30 a.m. for an address
to the distributive education class-
es of Denton High School and then
at noon was the featured speaker
at the Denton County’s Federated
Women’s luncheon in Hubbard
Hall.
Ikard gave a report on truce con-
ferences and congressional com-
mittees in reference to the world
situation at the women’s' luncheon.
The Modern Arts Department of
the Women’s Shakespeare Club
sponsored the women’s luncheon.
Ikard, who has been one of the
strongest congressional supporters
of distributive education, discussed
the ways by which Congress re-
duced the budget by 14 billion dol-
lars.
Members of the Distributive Ed-
ucation Council of Denton Include
Cecil King, G. Emory Taylor,
Frank Gray, Johnny Yarbrough,
Billy Floyd Brooks and A. L. Cal-
boon.
Mrs. Jack Gray to ehairman at
the program -committee at the
Modern Arts Department
agaMK-ANuCgl“hc"miatenpoe S5 "Wtemsnt,rnmnewn
date attention.” 19 hours, then freed him. .
Oakland police say a Negro
band drummer.. Johnny Warren,
told them that’s what started his
PLATTE CITY, Mo. M—Two
automobiles collided headon on
Highway 71 near here last night
killing eight young people, includ-
ing Dick Reinking, former college
and professional football player.
Reinking, 17, and his wife,
Camille, 25, were in one car. Six
young men were in the other.
Authorities, who blamed exces-
sive speed for the crash, said the
speedometer of the ear in which
the six men were riding was stuck
at 83 miles per hour.
Reinking was a star left end at
Southern Methodist in 1945 and
। 1946 during the college, days at
AhAppraa-pnoktoWbmFwah th.
» New York Giants. 2 ■ **
The victims, in addition to the
Reinkings, were Mike Nigro, 16;
Mike J. Ferrera, M; John Floyd
Tittong, 19; Dean O. Stanley, 19;
Carl J. Pace. 19; and Charles Di-
salvo, 29. All lived in nearby
Kansas City.
Reinking was plant manager of
a north Kansas City lumber con-
cern headed by an uncle, A. C.
' Reinking. He and his wife moved
to this area from Dallas, Tex.,
about one year ago.
AUSTIN UR —Dropping prices
still plague Texas farmers and
ranchers, the U. S. Department of
Agriculture said today. —
Prices at mid-October declined
three points under the mid-Sep-
a tember average with the livestock
" slump dominating, the Bureau of
Agricultural Economics reported.
While crops generally were up
a point, the drop in price of meat
animals brought a decline of 1
points in that classification- i
WASHINGTON OF - Sen. Hunt
(D-Wyo) suggested today that
Democrats should demand the
right to name vice chairmen on at
least some key Senate commit-
tees when Congress meets in Janu-
ary.
He said Senate Democrats, who
now outnumber the Republicans
by one, “have no desire to take
over the committees” or the
k.
VOL 51 NO. 83
By CLAYTON HICKERSON
Associated Press Staff
U.S. Senator Lyndon B. John-
son, promised sure opposition by
Texas Republicans in his race for
re-election next year, had the
blessings today of former Vice-
President John Nance (Cactus
Jack) Garner-
Johnson, continuing his strenuous
tour which he has called a “report
to the people,” visited at the Gar-
ner home in Uvalde Wednesday
before speaking Wednesday night
to a water conservation meeting.
He called Gamer “one of the
greatest Americans I’ve ever
known.”
Garner spoke well of Johnson,
too. “Can anyone give a sound
party or patriotic reason Why Sen-
ator Johnson should not be re-
elected to the Senate?” he asked
his neighbors.
Nobody answered.
The Johnson visit t Uvalde, fol-
lowing appearances earlier in the
day at San Angelo, was only one
of several events of a political
nature during the day. Others:
1. Jack Porter, national Repub-
lican Committeeman from Texas,
said reults of Tuesday’s elections
in New York City demonstrated
High Wednesday........
Low today ............
, High year ago
Low year ago ..........
Asnociated Prems Leamed Wire SIXTEEN RAGES-
President Sticks By Poli
A. V
-
deliberations.
The envoy also said the lower-
level negotiators might divide up
with one group debating the time
and place for the conference and
another thrashing out the major
issue—who will attend.
The preliminary talks to arrange
the peace parley have been stalled
from the start over Red insistence
that neutrals be invited and that
this question lead the agenda for
the Panmunjom discussions.
But Dean, speaking for the na-
tions which fought against the Red
armies in Kores, insists only the
belligerents and possibly Russia
attend the conference and wants
the first order of business here to
be a decision on time and place
for the conference.
The U.N. Assembly has fixed
composition of the conference
and Dean is not authorized to
change it.
Dean picked Kenneth Young, di-
rector of the office of northeast
Asian (Japan and Korea) affairs
of the Department of State and
Col. Stanton Babcock, a aenior ad-
viser, to represent him at lower
level meetings if they are held.
The Communists called an hour-
long recess to mull over Dean’s
proposition. Their first reaction
was definitely unfavorable, if not
an outright rejection.
The North Koresn foreign minis-
try councillor, Ki Sok Bok, spokes-
man for the Reds told Dean hla
side feels the agenda “must be
"Hhe Ra zstakelvahe+-
appropriate” to refer the dispute
to ataff workers.
But Ki promised to give the plan
further study and “comment on
it tomorrow;”
The deadline recommended in
the armistice for opening the
parley, Oct. 27, already has
passed.
At a press conference after the
session, Dean was asked if he felt
Communist rejection of his staff
adviser meetings would mean a
breakdown in preliminary talks.
DENTON RECORD-CH
i odist Church with Rev. Philip
) Walker officiating. Burial will be
I in Jackson Cemetery near Krum.
1 Born in Hutsonville, Ill., Mr.
Lindley had lived at 825 W. Syca-
! more in Denton for 11 years. He
■ married the former Sylvia Fox
Barr in Denton on July 19, 1928.
A former grain buyer at Krum,
Mr. Lindley had served as Denton
County treasurer for the past 11
years.
He attended public schools to
1 Collin County, was a member of the
I Methodist Church, and was the
' son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Sam-
uel H. Lindley.
Mr. Lindley suffered a stroke
at his home more than two weeks
: ago and had been under treatment
' in the hospital.
He is survived by his wife; a
sister, Mrs. Ellen Mallow of De-
ien, N.M.; a brother, A. F. Lindley
i of Krum, and several nieces and
I nephews.
could have a “freer exchange of
ideas.” They presumably wouid
meet in closed sessions.
Dean said the top delegates now
“sit tike bumps on a log” and
have ine-give-and take” in. their. .
—-5
. ■
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chairmanships. But, he added in--—
an interview, he believes they are - A -I- —
ate affaire than apparently S Rains Snap Drought
Committee chairmanships, I
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V,
5,
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 83, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1953, newspaper, November 5, 1953; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1424630/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.