Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1958 Page: 1 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Braces As Storm
Her Family
SAN ‘PEDRO, Calif.
that up to ear-
guarters
since the Reds triggered the new-
ly THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
5
fng a 58,000-shell bombardment on
Student Mob
Bars Negroes
*
Ck
feet above
before noon
sn Met
. By WILLIAM L. EYAM
the strikers, he said:
the publicity.
detect something phony in Red
shore islands
if Peiping has taken it upon it-
TWO DAIRIES
REFUSE HIKE
-that the
Washington s resp
See STUDENTS, Page 2
See STORM. Page 3
British Mob
in a Thursday editorial with the
Fire Damages
the counties in the
paper the Dallas Morning News,
nigNt-
Ad-Rime Winner
70
Church News .....
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220
ubeThae
V
in the Formosa Strait, the
can response will give Com
this locality-is encouraging. How-
ever, it may give an impression
Evacuations Begin; Corpus
Christi May Get Hurricane
Rights Voting
Suit Is Filed
viets of their treaty commitments.
Soviet propaganda has been say-
Bombs House,
Beats Police
Census Bureau's proposal to en-
the
this
Parker
for re-
REMEMBER WHEN
Men of fashion carried .walk-
ing sticks when wearing fine
suits-of-clothes?—-----------------
gations. Said Borneo- “I am not
rabid on the race question I try
to apply the law as I think it
ly afternoon only 60 Red shells
had landed on the offshore is-
lands Th* previous day only 144
shells were reported
This was the quietest period
.
c
■
Pu
Denton Buys
Police Cars
v
I
I
sh Gauge
Nona / • Lest 24 Noon
■
Boid the Times Herald in ' an
editorial:
"Many residents of Denton, Col-
gree name Kandi Kate—got her
reward.
their national dog bravery award
to Katie "She can't read the cita-
tion," said Vogel. "But ihe can
sure use the rest of the award "
ton and mainland Point Bolivar.
The Highway Department said if
the bay grew any rougher service
might be suspended
In Houston a voluntary team of
more than 4,000 civil defense
workers stood ready for emergen-
cy duty. Floyd Miller, city civil
defense director, said the down-
town city auditorium red- Sam
Houston Coliseum were available
for shelters and plans had been
made for mass feeding of possible
refugees
i biy semicircte in the ex
normwestern Guff ahead of
(President Eisenhower and Sec-
retary Dulles have indicated they
moval of an ingrown toenail,
that through negligence and
carelessness she was placed in
an operating room as Hagood
entered to perform surgery in
annhec nnea and +het ha
anouner caSe, and Unal En
physician thereupon operaled
on Miss Parker's right breast.
COLUMBUS, Ga (AP) - The
Civil Rights Act of 1957, a meas-
ure to protect voting rights, will
get its first test in federal District
Court here.
The new Civil Rights Division of
the Department of Justice filed a
suit yesterday criticizing Terrell
County's five election registrars
and deputy registrars of discrimi-
nating against prospective Negro
voters .. '
time thundenhowen. No imponant tom.
perature chenge,
TEMPERATURES
(Experlmemt Station Report)
Heavy damage in the attic of
a house at 1417 W. Hickory was
reported after a fire just before
noon Thursday
anxious to have the Red Chinese
free-wheeling in world councils
and posing as the great power of
Asia They have dragged their feet
in the business of pushing for a
Peiping seat in the United Na-
tions. The Red Chinese now may
be giving them the shock treat-
ment.
all peace-loving governments are
dedicated."
The Nationalist defense head-
year's
' The
Editorials .......
Sports ......
TV Leg .........
Women's News ..
were vital to the defense of For-
mosa.
(In Moocow. Pravda warned
pm 2
alarm
p.m. bi
CHINA MAY BE PUTTING
PRESSURE ON RUSSIANS
Thie Month
Sept, Normal,
This Yar P
last Yau F
---—T
mth YEAR OF DAILY:
-1——-—,—,—
lin and Ellis counties are perturb-
i of the Census Bu-
High Tursday ......
Low--this merning
Migh year age -
IN TODAYS PAPER
TWO OF THE U.S.’S top
tennis stars fell by the way-
side in the national tennis
tournament Page 3.
YOU MIGHT be surprised
to know how many American
men wear pajamas. It seems
to be determined by how much
education you have. Page 4.
{ "
A further look at the pro-
posed metropolitan status will
be taken to a revealing story
about Denton County in com-
parison to present metropoli-
tan areas to Sunday's Record-
Chronicle.
DENTON ANP VICINITY- Incremsing elgudi-
new thi afterneon and tonight. Ocee
. The Red Cross alerted personnel
all along the Gulf coast to be
surrounding counties, when
truth is that residents of
might to push the money across the ridge. He’s the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Boyd, 2317 Denison.
Incidentally, Mrs. M. P. Frank, behind the counter, said r
Bob didn’t complain at all about the new utility rates. I
M Gauge
Trece
‘
32.17
40060
will be in the not distant future.
"As far as political boundaries
lines are concerned the metropo-
litan designation has had no ef-
fect. Dallas County has about
twice as many independent mu
nicipalities as it had in 1950, and
several of these are islands with-
in the City of Dallas. Moreover,
the county still has a type of gov-
ernment designed for the rural
conditions of 1876.
"The Census Bureau may be
, • • • 6
..... S
..... 9
..... 4
••••♦ 3
• • • 6
..... 5
Lew iear age --A....... 68
Su* wU today at 6147 pim.; tises Saturdey
at 6105 a.m. Fishing Good.
taiNvati
(i* inehes)
Grows In Force
Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
The Soviets, for all their loud
propaganda, never seemed too
} V, i
DALLAS (Staffi—Raw milk will!
be diverted-from two more Dallas
processors and distributors after
their refusal to pay a 30-cent per
hundred pounds increase demand-
ed by the North Texas Producers
Assn.
Cabell’s Inc said it would be
gin using milk supplies from dai-
ries in the Midwest Saturday. The
Borden Co. and Metzger Dairies
are receiving raw milk from Wis-
* consin and Illinois plants. Milk was
diverted from Metzger Dairies
* Monday to open the price disturb-
ance
Diversion of milk from the two
hew processors was the latest stage
in a price skirmish between the
processor or distributor and the
large dairy cooperative to see
which win set the price of. milk
produced on dairy farms .through-
out the Dallas-Fort Worth Milk-
I shed
“Things are liable to get a bit
hectic before it‛s all over," said
J. O. Woodman, NTPA manager,
this morning.
"Katie saved our lives twice.
"If she hadn’t aroused us, we
would’ve died in bed Then we
passed out, and we would’ve died
there on the floor if it hadn’t been
for her."
Katie is a dachshund — and a
brave one. She won a medal and
a citation for distinguished dog
heroism yesterday for her courage
the night she saved her owners,
Capt and Mrs. Victor H Vogel,
from carbon monoxide poisoning.
FAULTY FLUE /
A faulty flue on a new furnace
sent fumes into the home here
where the U.S. public health offi-
cer and his wife were asleep last
Dec 14. Katie somehow knew the
odorless gas was filling the house.
The complete review of the week’s news is some-
thing that few newspapers tackle. And only the big-
gest, such as the New York Times, have ever presented
its readers with such a feature. But the Record-Chron-
icle has proven that it isn’t necessary for its readers .
to live in a huge city to get the best newspaper product
available—you get it every day in the Record-Chronicle
t with a bonus on Sundays. .
STRETCHING TO PAY ,
Four year-old BobBydeaued-quite a stir this week-
when he went to City Hall to pay a utility bill for his
grandmother, Mrs. C. V. Stallings. 402 Ponder. Why
the stir? The clerks sitting at their desks behind the
counter couldn't see Bob who had to stretch with all his
trade-in for aU five cars, Bill Ut-
tar Ford won the sale e
in other business at the callet
meeting, the commission accepted
the dedication of 17 lots in the
Windsor Park addition, awarded
a contract for 460 feet of curb and
gutter on Blount Street between
Hickory and Mulberry to L. K. Dut-
ton. bought 43,097 worth of elec-
tric cable and awarded a contract
to Jack Hodges of Denton for a
of rubber base paint.
Mion also bought a
VAN BUREN. Ark. (AP) - A
group of about 60 segregationist
white students apparently suc-
ceeded today in keeping Negroes
out of integrated Van Buren High
School. - -
But they failea to their boast
that hundreds ST other white stu-
dents would join them in their
boycott, which started Thursday.
One striker had said Thursday
night:
“You’ll see very few white kids
in there (the schooD tomorrow."
Newsmen watching all three en-
trances to the 400 - pupil high
school did not see any of the 13
Officials said f it went to 4 or 4,
feet. as expected, the sea water1
would flood some parts of down-
town Gal vest off
WIND FORCE
*one
2.57,
27.13
42.46
c*.
The three plants utilize about
500,000 pounds of milk daily. Wood-
man stated. The milk is being
diverted by the association to oth-
er markets and to association-op-
erated manufacturing plants at
Muenster ahd. Sulphur Springs
Woodman said thia morning. that
“We’ve a long way from being in
a tight position as far as being
able to handle our milk is con-
cerned." Total production of as-
sociation members is two and a
half million pourds per day.
Woodman this morning express-
ter doubt at the legality of the
shipments of milk from northern
and midwestern states by the
three large processors
"Public health laws require that
milk be bottled in the same plant
in which it is pasteurised," the
manager stated. "We are cer-
tain, from reports from plants to
those midwestern areas, that the
milk can not be shipped into this
area without first being pasteuriz-
ed tp bold down bacteria content."
it other areas under investi-
t
county have problems enough
without reaching out for more "
Although the other Dallas news-
the proposed enlarging of the
area, it has editorially comment-
ed on the matter. Under a head-
line "No Need to Fall Out/’ the
News pointed out in an editorial =
that possibly . "Dallas has not
done all that we could in proving
the area's case to our neighbors.
Actually Dallas notably the Dal-
las Chamber of Commerce, has a
policy of helping bring industry
anywhere it can be induced to lo-
cate to the area. It means busi-
ness for all oflus.""
tonight. Oece
zouth portien.
$510-machine to' tape record city
commission, proceedings and
other cticial meetings. ” •
Several boasted that theiri parents .
were behind them and had given i
PAPER ON PORCH?
LET VS KNO^j J '
WAT ISN'T—
"We, had her in a bedroom near
ours because she had a new litter
of eight puppies." said Capt. Vo-
gel “h the night she started mak-
ing such a disturbance she woke
us up and my wife went to see
what was wrong.
“My wife said she felt sick I
jumped out of bed and eaught her
as she fell—and then I passed out
too
"The next thing I knew, Katie
was jumping all over Mrs Vogel
snd me, licking our faces and nuz-
zling us I got up and managed
to open a French door snd we
drsgged ourselves outside."
PUPPIES
Then. as Vogel lay to a half-
faint on the lawn. Mrs. Vogel re-
membered the puopies. She re-
entered the gas-filled home and
brought them safely out in a waste
basket.
Firemen gave the Vogels oxvgen
and they recovered. So did Katie
and her puppies. Yesterday, at
fire headquarters Katie — pedi-
U.S. warships might be asked to Mt Formosa Strait crisis by loos-
escort supply convoys to the to- tog a 58,000-shell bombardment on
self to raise a real threat of war . —
i-e ing Moscow is ready to spring to
SHE LEARNED TO READ
AND WRITE AFTER 50
The kids started back to school this week.'
But what ifyou were past 50 and had never been in
a classroom—how would you feel about the matter?
Well, a Denton visitor knows what it means not to
go to school but that hasn’t prevented her from learn*
ing reading, writing and arithmetic after passing her
50th birthday. . .. ___
Her story is only one of several unusual features
you’ll find in Sunday ! Record-Chronicle, which now to
bringing you an. even more complete- roundup of the
week s news in review on the Sunday editorial page.
Itf
Th* Dallas Times Herald. which i ures may conclude that this
has the largest newspaper circula- ! county is as solidly urban as it
tion in Dallas County, took -issue
China's allies. the Soviets, some
food for serious thought.
There are aspects in the Far
East developments indicating that
the Red Chinese are just as in-
terested in providing the Soviets as
•3a?* to todBaRitof toi URihF
By drawing a line around the is-
lands with their declaration of a
12-mile territorial sea limit, the
Chiaase -ba*e—Rfaseated the
American defense of the offshore the United Nations and a
islands is. in effect invasion off stampede of diplomatie recogni-
________. ,_____. ____Red Chinese territory and direct' tion for Peiping
China's noise over the Chinese off- aggression.----.—..—— —*
-— This sharply reminds the So-
United States is prepared to use
timely and effective - force, if
necessary, to save islands essen-
tial to Formosa’s defense — tells
both the Soviets snd th* Red
Chinese they run a risk.of starting
World War III.
In the long run, U.S., policy
probably will be unable to save
Formosa from being taken over
by the Red Chinese. The political
task becomes more difficult each
day, and even Peiping itself seems
to have reflected an awareness
that Formosa someday will fall to
the mainland ' Chinese without
military force or th* risk of war.
BLACKMAIL
But perhaps the Red Chinese
would like to hasten this process.
Thus it is highly possible Red
China is engaging in a bit of dis-
guised blackmail—against the So-
viets. The Red Chinese may hope
the unshot of all this hullaballoo
over the islands will be a summit
conference. at Soviet insistence,
with Peiping sitting in as a great
power. In addition, there is an op-
portunity to this to prod Moscow
for more economic and even mili-
tary assistance.
The Weather Bureau reported,
winds of 40 to 70 m.p.h.in squ Is
pepea, u. ...... The attic and part of the roof
has not taken a definite stand on were damaged considerably by
=-= the flames and other parts of the
men biased a trail to
block on East Hickory
where they fought Moth
fire.
-r
bmefkatomaSstPporeie Minis- ′
DALLAS PAPER OPPOSES
ENLARGEMENT OF AREA
house received some water and
smoke damage, according to a
report from the Denton Fire De-
partment
No one was hurt in the fire. The
house is owned, by Mrs James
Webb and la rented by Bess M.
Townsend.
Firemen also made two grass
fire runs to Lake Dallas. one at
Hagood
The suit said
entered the hoi
Dallas Metropolitan Area: They
object to losing their separate
identity.,
“The Census Bureau is only an
agency for gathering and report-
ing facts. Without regard to politi-
cal boundary lines, it follows its
own rules of checking and report-
ing growth to population.
“However. the bureau s methods
of designating metropolitan areas
may not truly reflect the condi-
tions in a given area To most
persons the term 'metropolitan
area' suggests an urban district
when. in fact. it may include broad
stretches of territory that are still
predominately rural..- •---
“Dallas County waa designated
aa a metropolitan area to 1460. but
its citizens are not yet accustom
ed to the fact. Even to the City of
large theDallas Metropolitan .r*"*a fast in designat-
Ar mEM"-" *U "ing metropolitan areas. It can
— - — foresee growth and development
and its optimism with regard to
TAIPEI (AP)—The Chin-
ese Nationalists said today
the Communist blockade of
Quemoy is tightening and
they soon may need help to
keep their supply lines open.
Rear Adm Liu Hoh-tu, chief
Nationalist military spokesman,
refused to tell newsmen whether
Peiping may see its attendance ed by the plan
at a summit conference as a first resu to include
stop toward winning Formosa.
inatdanktxmutasymowy House in City
pus Christi late tonight or
early ,Saturday. " 1
This would be very near to
Port Aransas,-latest of the
storm's possible targets to
be evacuated. Residents of
the resort community, M mile*
from Corpus Christi on Mustang .
Island, started an orderly depart '
tore at 6 a.m. today.
Gale warnings flew along a 300-.
mile stretch of coast from Corpus
Christi to Galveston.
WARNING
The Weather Bureau, predicting
tides would keep on rising to 4 "
to 6 feet above normf, warned
all interests alonthe Texas and
West toisfna coasts to be ready
for quick action to event Ella re-
gained hurricane force.
Civil .authorities also ordered -
other low areas evacuated front 7
Corpus Chriti,upcoast—past-Gal-----
veston
Heavy rate fell along the coast
and high water already had closed
severa highways along the
beaches
At Galveston the tide ran 3%
Nationalists
May Ask U.S.
To Defy Ban
. Emergency and disaster units were put on alert along
the Texaa coast today as the Weather Bureau hoisted gale
warnings and ordered a hurricane watch on tropical storm
Ella
The U.S. Weather Bureau in a 10 am. advisory placed
the center of the storm, still poorly defined and a little below
hurricane strength, at a point 320 miles south-southeast
of Corpus Christi in the Gulf of Mexico.
Forecasters said the present course of Ella, advancing
west-northwest at 12 to 15 m p.h., indicated it would hit
------------------------------* the coast .just north of Cor-
J. G. Raines, chairman of the t ertetals of a dog food firm gave
Terrell County Board of Regis-........
trars, denied the government alle-
Quemoy and the neighboring Taa
islets Aug. 33.
American newsmen back from
a visit to Quemoy sld damage
from the two weeks of shelling
was remarkably slight. Most of
the Red gunfire has been directed
at the shoreline and airfield where
hits cause little damage and can
be easily repaired, they reported
E.= •
W,3,. 1
"e g >
1- 6 La
h "d ‛(
lands just off the Communist i
mainland.
.-There have been persistent- ru-
mors that ships of the U.S. 7th
Fleet would soon start escort duty 1
to the offshore islands.
Dispatch of UA. vessels to 1
guard Quemoy - bound convoys ;
would send the ships across Red
China’s new 12-mile sea limit Th* 1
Peiping government has indicat-
ed it would regard such action
an invasion of its territory.
Liu's remarks followed Thurs-
day's reported U.S. decision to
help defend Quemoy and Matsy '
against any Communist invasion I
—possibly by bombing Red bases
on the China mainland
STATEMENT ASKED
The Chinese Nationalist Foreign '
Ministry, which has flatly reject- •
ed Rod China’s new sea border, 1
today called for the United States
to make a clear-cut statement on
whether it would help the Nation-
alists defend Quemoy and Matsu
President Eisenhower a official
warning t o the Communists
Thursday said only that U.S
fa^es would help fight for the eSeatmsntfor tberiisisinn
- islands 1 he telt they leg. They declined, however, to
sionial rein Saturdey i*
• • No important tempereture ।
— west TxASr tartty ctartv
day widely seattered
Dallas there are wheat and cotton
fields and open pasture land. Yet
distant observers of census fig-
The award included 60 pounds
See VOTING. Page 1 of dog food
The City Commission Thursday
approved the purchase of five new
cars, most of them for th* police
department
On a low bid of $5,896.35 with
I that the Communists- would retal-
I tale throughout the Far East if
the China coast is attacked, but
-the kind of retaliation was not
spelled out. >
■ TROOPS
The importance of the Quemoy
islands to the Nationalists was
underlined by Liu’s disclosure
that they have 100 non troop*
j there. Thia is far higher than
I previously believed.
1 ssemasa.“hsuenqmShipon
eign Ministry claimed that the
Chiang Kai-shek regime is the
only government that can lawful-
---- ....—. th* storm This put their maxi-
"It’s the few out there that get mum strength 5 miles lees than
the publicity." hurricane force.
The official estimated that only
about 35 of the striking group
actually were enrolled in the high
school
A spokesman for the narents of
the Negro students said a meet-
ing would be held over the week-
end to decide what to do. j
As the boycotting white stu-
dents milled about, a number of
white adults watched quietly from
Ferry service became Irregular
between the island city of Galves-
Denton Record-Chronicle
-
__-
DENTON, wXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER I, IMS
=-c.
DETECTS GAS M _ '' e ri
Dog Honored Coast Uf 1 exas
For Saving
★ < A- ★ ★ It PAGES
-*
WOMAN PROTESTS I
SLIGHT MISTAKE
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP> I
Miss Jimmie C. Parker, • <
Largo schoolteacher, filed a
335,000 damage suit in Circuit
Court against Morton Plant
Hospital and Dr. John D.
e
2
with a problem. The The next logical step.would-hethe- ing— hurriedly- when — the- —first ____ .
purport to say that eny ouster of ationattst China from buzzer soundedeNodding towardtreme
automobiles and street corners.
Scorning a guard's threat to
shoot them, the rebellious white
youths burned a Negro in effigy
on the campus Thursday night
E t i ■ h ■<
Pieping's aid "if there is aggres-
sion. The Red Chinese now ere
saying American military help to
Nationalist China actually Is ag
gression.
It's highly doubtful that Russia
wants to be dragged into a
world war situatien new. Peiping
seems to be reminding the Krem-
lin that the Red Chinese have the
power to bring this about.
THE RISE
Recmreo
WEATHER
ss= i , ir 1 !■ n —'
•V • - «" *. N
POSSIBLE SHOVE
Negro students arrive et class
time, I a m. <CST) Later, report-
ers who were permitted inside the
two-story, red brick building,
found only white students in the
classrooms.
The leaders of the student strike
stationed themeelves across the
street from the high school and
called'to other shatouie to join
them as they arrived for class.
The strikers fashioned a card-
beard sign- and atteched- -it -te-
telephone pole It read:
“Chicken whites'go* to school
with jigs."
A sprinkling of girls joined the
striking group. Loud cheers went
up as a student left the school
ground to jota them.
But a huge majority of Van
Buren High's students attended
class as usual.
One school official said. "Those
are nice kids," referring to the
Students wm tiled 1nt0 tne buna-
\ •
LONDON (AP» - Race rioters
hurled gasoline bombs into a Ne-
gro's house Thursday eight, then
besieged two policemen who
dashed in to put out the blaze
The house in Paddington, an
area adjoining London’s racial
storm center of Notting Hill, had
been bombarded with milk bottles
and garbage earlier in the day.
The mob gathered quietly short-
ly before midnight The occu-
pants, a 37-year-old Jamaican and
his wife, were not at home. Neigh-
bors on either side were quietly
told to move out
The door of the target house
wa. broken down and bombs
were hurled into the hallway. Two
policemen dashed in and threw
one bomb back into the street. It
burned two girls in the crowd
Then the mob — mostly teen-
agers turned on the police. They
dashed back into the house and
barricaded themselves against a
barrage of stones and bottles.
Fire engines and police rein-
forcements turned up to rescue
them. -------.---
...........
!
» bann uur-
-----------------------:------r-------
, 32*M. —
WE A T B
FRIUE HVE CENTS .
* . * sbN
Mrs. J. O. Stribling, 1011 w, Oak,
is thia week’s $10 winner in the ad-
She found the slogan — "Direc-
tory Arms feature popular and
time tested brands" — and com-
posed this rime: "Do you seek a
famous brand? Hometown mer-
chants meet demand "
NEWS an the hour-KDNT 14M
try spokesman termed the Com-
munist proclamation null and
void.
The Communist declaration was
taken in some quarters here as an
attempt to forestall U.S. 7th Fleet
ships from escorting Nationalist
supply vessels whose trips to em-
battled Quemoy Island have been
curtailed by Red gunfire
The statement by President Ei-
senhower in warning against Red
Chinese moves said
1 Eisenhower would . order
"timely and effective" action if
he decided any Red Chinese at-
tack on the offshore islands threat-
ened* Formosa, the Notionalist
headquarters which the United
States is pledged by treaty to de-
fehd.-------------------------
2 Eisenhower has reached no
such decision yet, but would not
hesitate to make it if circum-
stances warranted:
PEACE THREATENED
3. Any Red Chinese extension of
its territory by force endangers
the whole free world, and "ac-
quiescence therein would threaten
peace everywhere."
4 Despite Red China's threats
and military buildup, it is not yet
certain the Communists will at-
tack. nor is eit apparent that the
Nationalists would need U.S. mili-
tary help to throw back any Com-
munist attackers.-
The statement called on Red
China once more to renounce the
use of force except in self-defense.
"The United States intends to
follow that course, so far is it is
concerned,” the statement said,
“unless and until the Chines*
Communists, by their acts, leave
us no choice but to react in de-
ense of the principles to which
r........
. 18 —
.pn
■ --e, •
. ... ... .
-Al-D
/ .t
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1958, newspaper, September 5, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467543/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.