Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 14, 1956 Page: 1 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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PRICE: FIVE CENTS
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for an international confer*
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As Big Issue
At A Glance
WORLD
EVENTS
state speaking tour.
• -
bow to opposition Labor
mands for an unconditional
gets Parliament’s okay of plan,
and government moves to
ment it as reports circulate
r Atty. Gen. Sbepperd confirmed
FLORIDA TALK
1g
Col
other
ilombo powers; Observers
Democratic nominees
tary of the Texas State Federa-
GRID SECTION
REMEMBER WHEN -
SET SUNDAY
/•
STILL NO WINNER
harmed and nothing was missing
Pot-O-Gold Soars
To $2,151 Value
WEATHER
Pot-O-Gold puzzle fans will find
a giant jackpot worth 52,151.75
Mrs. Winn told police a visitor
Service employe, also was kid-
naw
DNVER
To be eligible for the
csh donated by
peratures registered between 12
winner must register in the vari-
‘ANSWER NO. XS
and 34 degrees.
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2190702
Wealthy Californian Found
Abandoned In Desert Locale
College Prexy
May Be Cited
For Contempt
21 SAID KILLED
IN JORDAN RAID
$17,000
DRESS
Lawyers Probe
NAACP Office
U.S. Extends
Farm Loan Aid
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CAIRO—President Nasser says
Loyalty Question
Renewed By Daniel
ence is still bein
—but the invital
ing the wook prior to his winnings.
(See Explanations, Page 3)
investment
San Diego
not to use force without U.N. sanc-
tion. But he did say: "It would
certainly be our intention if dr-
circumstances allowed — in oth-
er words, if you like, except in
an emergency—to refer a matter
of this kind to the (U.N.) Security
rotary of State Dulles is coming
here next week; Eden pledges
protest to U.N. Security Council
a wealthy San Di
broker, was listed
ing Bad
Urn ion
associatit
of ships
The Prime
CANNON KINGS
DRAW CRITICISM
planks being smoothed out, except
that it was doubtful that the
declaration would include any-
thing on civil rights.
By THE ASOCIATED PRESS
Adlai Stevenson, arriving in
Washington today to open his nat-
ional campaign headquarters, told
a cheering crowd that he hopes
to set up residence in the White
House next January.
His arrival at 10:25 a.m. today
came as political talk increased
from a steady whisper to a buz-
zing hum of activity as the White
House announced today that Pre-
sident Eisenhower will make a
balks, but refuses to rule
ary force as last resort;
of London Underwriters
if Egypt
out milil
Institute
,r
her "rightful status" as a canal
user: hopes for guarantee against ,
continuance of Egspt’s eight-year
blockade of Israeli shipping and
trade through canal.
NEW DELHI — Indian Cabinet
Nf
Kditorlals ......a
Sporis ...........
TV Log ..........
Women’s Newa •
per because he had to fight
boogey-men on the way home. He
made such a poor showing st the
recent convention when he had to
steal the votes from El Paso and
See LOYALTY, Page 2
the passage
waterway,
linister refused to
for users’ association, says its im-
plementation means war; Britain
again warns Britons in Egypt to
leave
LONDON—Prime Minister Edon
Is Explained
And Adopted
A
cc.
police as a missing person. They
said there was no evidence that
she had been kidnaped
Mrs. Latham da the. wife of
broker George D. Latham. She is
listed as president of four com-
panies of which he Is vice presi-
dent. She was alone with a 4-year-
Suez Problem
take a position that will prevent
me from doing so."
In Austin Thursday, Fred
Schmidt, executive secretary of
the Texas State CIO Council, and
total of 320,000 to any qualified
farmer under certain conditions
The extension is effective in all
J57 Texas counties now under the
Credit program and which have
been designated drought disaster
areas by the national drought
— committee. w-
in order to be eligible for a loan
under the emergency program, a
farmer must show he is unable to
obtain credit from other sources
and has suffered a production loss
resulting from bad weather condi-
tioua
been urging caution in the canal
controversy also found comfort in
the statement by Secretary of
States Dulles that the . United
States will not "shoot its way
through" if Egypt refuses to go
along with the users’ association
plan.
Egypt has bitterly assailed the
SYRIA UNHAPPY
ABOUT TROOPS
DAMASCUS - Reliable
sources said here today the Syrian
government is "ill at ease" about
the reported massing of Turkish
troops along that country's bor-
der with Syria. Turkey has de-
nied she is concentrating troops.
INDIAN CABINET
TO MEET TODAY
NEW DELHI w — The Indian
Cabinet met today amid indica-
tions that Prime Minister Nehru
may be preparing somz initiative
in the Suez crisis with the four
other Colombo powers.
Church News ...
Classified ......
Tate pressed the NAACP Fed*.,
oral Court suit against the Mans-
field School District, where
crowds barred Negroes from en-
rolling last week. He also is the
legal spokesman for 24 Negroes
Who seek to enter Dallas white
schools.
The activities of the NAACP
drew the fire of the conservative
faction of the Texas Democratic
Party during the recent guberna-
torial primary election. -
The Dallas County delegation
to the state Democratic conven-
tion in Fort Worth this week spon-
sored a resolution calling for an
investigation of the NAACP and
listing of its membership rolls.
(k ,
expect Indian action in line with
his denunciation of Western plan.
COLOMBO—Sources close .to
Ceylon’s Prime Minister Solomon
Bandaranaike say he and Nehru
may fly to Egypt soon to try to
settle canal dispute.
The anual Pigskin Parade,
a tabloid section, will be pub-
lished as a special feature of
Sunday's Record * Chronicle.
For information and previews
of all football teams in the
Denton area, don't fail to read
this fc-page tabloid.
Represented in this color-
•ful section will be NTSC, Den-
ton High School, Denton High
B team. Denton Junior High,
Fred Moore, Northwest, De-
catur. Lewisville, Celina, Fris-
co, Pilot Point, and Sanger.
t .
-
support the
unless they
Officers said Mrs. Winn told
them the kidnaper said they were
abducting her to prevent her from
testifying against the Lathams.
-T
■
EL CENTRO, Calif. (B—Mrs.
Ruth Latham, who disappeared
from her San Diego home Wed-
nesday. was found today, nude,
scratched and in a state of shock,
by the side of a desert road.
Within a short time the sheriff’s
office in San Diego announced
the arrest of two women. Mrse
Beatrice Winn, St. and Mrs. Lu-
cille M. Wisenand, 36, on suspicion
of kidnaping and attempted mur-
der of Mrs. Latham.
Mrs. Latham, 51, wife" of a
wealthy San Diego investment
broker, was spotted as she
crouched behind a bush on the
tion of Labor, issued a joint state-
ment on Daniel’s comments at the
Dallas news conference. They as-
serted:
Price is like the little boy who
explains that he was late for sup- ,
• In
T
-
. A Streamlined Report
Of Important News
that "We are investigating the
NAACP,” but added that "I can-
not say for what reason at this
time."
The Dallas office of the NAACP.
chartered in New York as a cor-
poration. is headquarters for Tex-
as, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkan-
sas and parts of Mississippi
The attorney general is empow-
ered to investigate the records of
any corporation operating in Tex-
as.—
The Dallas investigation was
conducted in the offices of Simp-
son Tate, NAACP lawyer.
Suez policies and pushed ahead
with plans to set up a canal users'
but three checkbooks and five cor-
porate seals of companies in
which Mrs. Latham is president.
She disappeared about the time
two women said they were kid-
naped by three men and a woman
in suburban Bonita and driven to
Calexico, where they were re-
leased.
Police Said there was no evi-
denee of a direct link between the
two cases, although Mrs. Latham
and her husband were involved in
a taw suit with Mrs. Beatrice
Winn. U, who said she was kid-
naped at her Bonita home.
L craticvhtendardbcepui for “opp: derr-Hollemaneexesutive-seere
Druze religious minority were re-
ported killed Wednesday night by
raiders from Jordan at Hatseva
(Ein Hussub), about 27 .miles
north of Gharandal. On Aug. 16
four persons were killed and eight
were wounded when anisraeii bus.
to the new puzzle which appears
in today's paper. "
No correct solutions were found
for last week's puzzle. The new
puzzle boasts an array of prizes
which includes $275, basic prize;
$137.50, regular Record-Chronicle
subscriber bonus; $100, bonus for
obtaining a new subscriber during
the Pot-O-Gold contest; and oth
er merchandise and cash totalling
$1,639.25 donated by merchants.
While singing "Just an Ordin-
ary Girl" Zsa Zsa Gabor ap-
peared at a Las Vegas hotel in
this semi-nude chiffon gown top-
ped only by a halter of simula-
ted diamonds. The gown is re-
ported to have cost 117,000. (AP
Wirephoto)
Drive Widens
. a.. ■
For 3rd Party
MEMPHIS, Tenn. w_The Na-
tional States Rights Conference
meets, spokesman says Prime
Minister Nehru has arranged
29
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3 I
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U
DENTON AND VICINITY: Clear'
to partlys cloudy through Satur
day. No important changes in
temperature.
TEMPERATURES
Experiment Statlon Report.
the prizes and
merchants the
. At the mention of Nixon’s name
in Stevenson’s speech last night,
the Democratic audience reacted
with hearty boos. .
" Reacting quickly, Republican
National Chairman Leonard W.
Hall said in Washington that Ste-
venson had "kicked off his cam-
paign with a . resounding thud."
And Postmaster General Arthur
Summerfield dismissed the speech
as "devoid of facts, issues or sub-
stance.”
shoulder of state highway 80 near -
Coyote Wells, about 19 miles west
of here.
An El Centro plumber, Harvey
Webb, said he happened to spot
Mrs. Latham, although she did not
appear to be seeking help from
passers-by. He threw a blanket
over her and started for El
Centro with her in his car.
......... 6, 7
. 10
........... •
5;
.... S
opened its ambitious drive today
to lay the framework for a third
political party.
About 200 delegates from a doz-
en splinter parties in 30 states
were on hand for the first general
session in a downtown hotel ball-
room.
The three-day conference got off
to a . quiet start last night with
committees laboring over rules
and resolutions and a "declaration
of principles” — a sort of third
West Pushes For
A Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
DENTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 14, IBM * *
-•/ - —
1 :
uiant Budget
NO .37 ■
ITrrP7 N
marcation line that has been re-
ported by Jordan in three days.
Twenty Jordanians ware reported
killed at Rahwa in a two-hour
battle Wednesday.
The Jordan source said the at-
tackers at Gharandal, a village
about half way between the Dead
Sea and Red Sea, used heavy
weapons and were supported by
three planes which bombed the
area.
. Jordan's foreign minister sum-
moned the envoys of the three big
Western powers in Amman this
morning and informed them of the
attack. .
Jordan lodged an urgent com-
plaint with the United Nations
truce organization, saying the
raiders destroyed the poet. Truce
observers flew to Gharandal, 12
miles inside Jordan's border and
about half way between the Dead
Sea and the Red Sea.
The Tel Aviv newspaper Maariv
said there were dozens of casual-
ties among the defending Arab
force. - _ ,
There was no immediate com-
ment from Jordanian or Israeli
authorities.
Maariv, also quoting Arab
sources, said the attack began
Thursday evening and tasted un-
til midnight. It added that the po-
lice post was the only one on the
Jordan side of the border in the
Arava Valley and -controlled the
whole area "where the murderers
of three Druze watchmen and
those who ambushed an Israeli
bus to Eilat came from."
Three members of Israel's
JERUSALEM • - A Jordan
military source said today 21
Jordan soldiers were killed,
wounded or are missing in an
Israeli raid on a police post at
Gharandal in south Jordan last
night. He said,a force of 1,000
Israelis made the attack.
It was the second attack on a
Jordan poet along the Israeli de-
The case is scheduled for trial this year:
, gee WEALTHY, Page 2 ear:179
of Texarkana Junior College for
contempt of court has been drawn
up by, the National Assn, for the
Advancement of Colored People
but has not yet been filed, the
Federal Court clerk said today.
The campus was the scene of
demonstrations this week when
crowds prevented two Negroes
from entering the college.
The contempt citation possibly
will be filed Monday. Simpson
Tate, NAACP lawyer, gave no-
tice that he would bring a motion
for intervention in the integration
case before the court of Judge
Joe Sheehy Monday.
The case is styled Wilma Whit-
more vs. H. W. Stillwell. Stillwell
is president of the college. It is
the case under which the NAACP
obtained a court order stating the
college could not bar. Negroes.
In the proposed contempt suit,
Bill Williams, a college trustee,
also is named.
Tate cites a statement by Still-
well at a White Citizen's Council
rally in which the college presi-
dent said it was not only the right
of white citizens to protest admis-
sion of Negroes to the college but
also their duty.
The court action claims Wil-
liams was a member of the crowd
of demonstrators which turned
back the two Negroes Monday.
First Snow Recorded
Today In Minnesota
INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn.
in-The-seasen’s first snow — the
earliest in 42 years—fell in the
International Falls area for 18
minutes this morning
The light snow melted almost
as soon as it touched the ground
between 4.32 6:50 a.m: as tem-
One-year extension of emergen-
cy loan provisions of the Farm-
rer’s Home Administration to help
farmers and ranchers with operat-
ing finances has been granted by
the USDA, according to word re-
ceived here late Thursday.
. The loans, which will be made
to bona fide operators who can
not obtain credit elsewhere, will
continue- to be handled and pro-
cessed by county Farmer's Home
* Administration offices.
Details of the extension, which
places a Dec. 21, 1957, deadline on
the program, were not known
here today due to the absence of
Pat Roberts, county supervisor,
who is attending an area meeting
in Dallas.
However, Committee Member T.
W. King, Jr., said some limits of
the emergency provisions have
ig drawn up
itions would
go out "shortly." The Brit-
ish Press Assn, suggested the
LONDON (AP__ The Western Big Three moved swiftly
today to set up a Suez Canal users' association with the
prospect U.S. Secretary of State Dulles may make a hur*
ried flight to London.
An American diplomatic source said he understood
Dulles was coming here next week—probably Wednesday.
’ A British diplomatic spok- •-----------------------------
esman said the invitation list
i
Secretary .
To London For Conference
Deputy Bill Dickey said she ap
- parently had been let out or
thrown out of an automobile at
neat in the general election, said:- meeting tomorrow with envoys of
"I have given no fiat endorse- other l— ------ •--------
ment. I am going to
Council.”
British quarters which have
Atk
Y
ert.
The attack reported at Gharan-
dal was the second in three days
on a Jordan police post. Jordan
military sources charged Wednes-
day that a mobile Israeli force
1.000 strong blew up a post at
Rahwa and killed 20 Jordanians
in a two - hour battle.
Israel had charged that six sol-
diers were killed by a Jordan pa-
trol in that border area Monday.
appeared. The baby wh not The o mi ees worked tiehind |
harmed and nothing was missing closed doors with no hint of the •
Plaster City, 14 miles west of here
on State Highway 80.
, Dickey said she apparently was
not harmed, or at least not ser-
iously hurt. She was taken im-
mediately to Imperial County Hos-
pital here.
Mrs. Latham, 514year-oid wife of
ous stores. A contestant is eligi-
ft____ , -,ble for only those prizes given by
waiting for the current solution stores in which he registers dur-
MOSCOW UP — The Soviet gov-
ernment newspaper Izvestia said
. today U.S. "cannon kings” are
— blocking disarmament.
NG.
, - _ --- . -
12 Pages
iII0! operation of canal; Dulles says —
Pc. United States would not shoot
way through Canal.
JERUSALEM—Israel says she
expects association will establish
Eden got a vote of confidence
from Parliament last night on-hist
Stevenson's running mate, Sen.
Estes Kefauver of Tennessee, to-
day starts a two • week swing
through 15 states. His first stop:
Tampa, Fla.
GOP Chairman Hall today
chimed in with other Republicans
who have called on Stevenson to
repudiate former President Tru-
man's statements about Alger
Hiss, a onetime State Department
employe who served a prison sen-
tence after he was convicted of
perjury for denying he had passed
government secrets to Communist
spies.
“A travesty on statesmanship."
was the way Hall described Ste-
venson's silence on the Truman
statements about Hiss. Hall's re-
marks were prepared for the
Union League Club in Philadel-
phia.
TRUMAN SAYS NO
Questioned during an interview
Sept. 3, Truman replied "no”
when he was asked whether he
considered Hiss a Communist spy.
Truman said he had not called a
congressional investigation of Hiss
a “Red herring." But, he said,
"it was."
A Senate Elections subcommit-
tee. which is keeping tabs on po-
litical spending, formally asked
yesterday for a list of all persons
or groups buying 10 or more of
the 150'tickets to the Harrisburg
fund-raising affair which Steven-
son addressed.
proposal, charging it is "flagrant
aggression on Egyptian sover-
eignty and its Implementation
means war."
Dulles told his news conference
in Washington that Egypt’s reac-
tion to the British-French-Ameri-
can plan "does not deter us from
proceeding with this program."
But he said the United States is
ready to send its shipping around
Africa, bypassing Suez, rather
than force its way through the
canal and risk war in the Middle
East.
Winding up two days of emerg-
ency debate in the House of Com-
mons. Eden sharply opposed La-
borite arguments that the govern-
ment under no circumstances
should use force before consulting
the U.N. Security Council.
f I
1 JI
.1
■ 2
dlLMAN
SACKED
Three-year-old Johnny Durham
faces his mother at a hospital
in Wilmington, Calif., where he
was taken after a neighbor
found him sitting in a pool of
crude oil near his home. His
mother, Mrs. Edna Durham, had
reported him lost. The oil pud-
dle—seepage from * a storage
tank—was small and only three
inches deep, but Johnny found
• it. Hospital attendants pro-
nounced him unhurt, and wrap-
ped him in a plastic bag for the
trip home—and a long bath. (AP
Wirephoto) .
major farm speech in Peoria, Ill.,
and give Vice-President Nixon a
personal sendoff on the latter’s
campaign.
Delivering his first nation-wide
TV speech last night, Stevenson
pushed the "part - time presi-
dency" issue to the fore and de-
clared that Eisenhower is “not
master in his own house."
In the Harrisburg, Pa., speech
he said that "from here on the
future of Republican leaders will
depend not on Eisenhower, but
the GOP heir apparent, Mr. Nix-
on."
SEND-OFF gPEECH
The White House announcement
said that the President will speak
in Peoria on Sept. 25 and that
next Tuesday he’ll speak at a
breakfast in Washington when
Nixon leaves on a 15,000-mile, 32-
IN TODAY’S. PAPER -rdt
Sun sets today at 6:35 |
rises Saturday at 6:10 a.m.
% / W f ■ >
•daA W • "n. d
A TALMADGE VICTORY
Beaming smiles reflect the happiness of former gov-
ernor Herman Talmadge and his wife Betty after his
overwhelming nomination for the U.S. Senate in Geor-
gia’s Democratic party. The 43-year-old staunch ad-
vocate of racial segregation scored a smashing victory
: over another former governor, M. E. Thompson, in
the race for the seat vacated by the retirement of Sen.
Walter F. George. (AP Wirephoto)
---------------
Nixon Tabbed
= TEXARKANA, Tex M--A mo-
p- tion-seeking to cite the president
-
■
.. . » ... 031- 62 M
Egypt can run Suez Canal even
after 100 foreign pilots quit at
party de- midnight tonight, leaving only
lal pledge 46 qualified pilots on job; Egypt’s
Washington Embassy raps plan
The North Texas State
Teachers College Eagles,
about this time of year, were
preparing for the opening
game of the season—always
against SMU?
• ,
city had been overdrawn, Commis-
sion Vice Chairman Charles Floyd,
wielding the gavel in the ahsence
of Chairman W. F. (Bill) Brooks
Jr., who was out of town, replied:
"It’s not the first time,
but it’s the first time the over-
draft has started to increase by
the month- It’s the first time this
has come up, and we citizens are
the goats."
"OR GO BANKRUPT"
“It’s either raise the tax rates
or go bankrupt,” Huey comment-
ed.
"If we don't, the city may be
dumped, into the lap of receivers,"
Commissioner L. A. (Bill) House
said.
Aldridge explained that the ad-
ditional income brought into the
city by the increased tax rate
would amount to approximately
170,000 to $75,000, and that the in-
come from the repeal of the 10
per cent discount would amount to
an estimated addition 130,000 to
•150.0M per-year.
Questioned about increase in the
See RECORD, Page 2
Comies y
m---ee-eme-
By JIM NEAL
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
City commissioners Thurs-
day night tok the second—-
and largest — step toward
their, goal of erasing Den-
ton’s 9100,000 overdraft, as
they officially raised the
city’s tax rate a total of 30
cents per 100 valuation and
adopted the 1956-57 budget
of 12,904.548. The budget is
the highest in the city’s his-
tory;
The initial step was taken in
August when commissioners re-
pealed the 10 per cent discount
given to utility users who paid
their bills within 10 days after
having received them.
While the commissioners said
the repeal of the 10 per cent dis-
count was a temporary measure
designed to help reduce the over-
draft, Commissioner F. B Huey
said he was doubtful that the new
tax rate would be lowered
For 14 citizens present, City Fi-
nance Director C. L. Aldridge ex-
plained that this year’s budget was
higher than last year's because it
included several items not in the
1055-54 budget.
KEALISTIC FIGURE
"Last year’s budget was set at
approximately 1200,000 under what
was actually spent," Aldridge
said. "Then thig year we have tax
warrants due, and we’ve tried to
take underconsideration all ex-
penses that will be incurred plus
non-revenue items.”
"Then too, we've budgeted in
payment of approximately half
the overdraft and the interest on
the overdraft,” Aldridge added.
Asked by Bennett Rice, 1205 Lin-
den. If this was the first time the
doubles war risk insurance rates.
WASHINGTON - President Ei-
senhower, Dulles docket talks
with Australian Prime Minister
Robert G. Menzies, whose com-
mittee failed to sell Nasser 18-na-
tion London plan for international
- ..c . f)-. . .2 • 1 .
2892222215022290291 203324022*84388
S A FIRST 1
7A.m9 .__d
DALLAS I—An investigation
by close mouthed state attorneys
of the regional office of the No-
tional Assn, for the Advancement
of Colored People was on today.
An assistant state attorney gen-
eral, Elbert Morrow, spent yes-
terday photographing records in
the NAACP office in Dallas. Two
other investigators. Sterling Ful-
more Jr. and William King,
checked into the organization's
Houston office.
By DAVE CHEAVENS
Associated Press Staff
Sen. Price Daniel, Democratic
nominee for governor, has re-
opened the question of whether he
will support the Democratic nom-
inees for' president and vice presi-
ident
At Dallas Thursday, the Demo
- . .
FAIR
vmete M
possibility that Egypt may be
British Press Assn. suggested the
possibility thet Egypt may be
among those invited. The general
feeling hero was that the confer-
ence would be next week — but no
definite date has been announced.
Whether Dulles' reported trip
ed trip was.to take part in the
conference or merely to discuss
preparations with the British and
French was not clear.
The.war jitters that gripped this
capital — and a large part of the
world—after the idea of the users
group was first raised—have sub-
sided somewhat in the wake of
Prime Minister Eden's qualified
prpmise to seek U.N. action be-
fore resorting to force.
The Institute of London Under-
writers announced big increases
in “war risk” insurance rates for
ships calling at Egypt and sailing
through the Suez Canal.
The British Embassy in Cairo
this morning warned Britons for
the third time to leave Egypt "if
they have no compelling reason
for remaining."
Another British aircraft Carrier,
the 27,000-ton Albion, was ordered
to sail tomorrow for the eastern
Mediterranean.
- • . . . em , -
Canal Users’ Plan
' ._L
es May Fly mursa
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, September 14, 1956, newspaper, September 14, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453235/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.