Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 118, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1947 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Gainesbille Hailo RRegister
57TH YEAR
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 14, 1947
(SIX PAGES)
NUMBER 118
2*
2 te
3
News Briefs
*
e‘,
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (
and some other items should be
ing of Republican members of
John L Lewis, and the govern-
le
tained
for a place to
। kilowatts day and night
DALLAS, Jan. 14 (P)—An of-
would
be entitled to
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14
provides.
I
The Weather
Miss Anna Edwards, 67, pleading
wizened old lady slowly climbed
the woman muttered:
an increase in the
coal stirke in the dead of winter, oil to an average ol
some time and I reckon my time
••
. Earlier
has plumb done come.1
has announced that he will op-
colder in Panhandle,
•
28
I
sition against the two men at
the . ville and Cooke county citizens
proper time and place," but did
i
1.
discussion at the meeting
been
tion gath-
1
-
«
Lh
I
Truman Will Call in GOP Leaders
For Consultations, Rayburn Says
Present Arguments
Before High Court
I
its
an
LEGISLATURE
BULLETINS
Peonle
Odd Glimpses of Life
in Town and Country
HILLSBORO, Jan 14 (A—The
executive committee of the Na-
war-
1 the
lions.
of men die still wondering if
they was the men they thought
they was."
1
Told of this Francis said:
"Death and me to old neigh-
bors. But remember this, I’m a
closer neighbor of the Lord.”
Francis was sentenced to die
achievement in meeting foreign problems in one of the most
difficult periods in the country’s history.
Organisation of the house
moved at a slower pace.
n
1
22
gu0
By ELLIOTT CHAZE I
NEW IBERIA, La., Jap. 14 (P)
"9
1
> dek
-I
".a
,, 03
4,
ns at lion
i and Neu
of peace.
Fr,
elect
malfunction allowed him to walk
away from it alive, was singular ly
cool when he learned that the
United States supreme Court had
ruled him subject to another trip
to the chair.
%
! ficial of the AFL Teamsters union
I has announced that midnight Jan.
31 has been set as a strike dead-
line in a labor dispute involving
' 7,000 truck drivers and approx-
I mately 100 motor freight lines
Gilbert Ozenne, who brought the
news of the unfavorable supreme
court decision to him in his parish
33
He
nold, Greenville, Texas, as inter-
nal revenue collector for the sec-
ond Texas district, and Joe B.
Dooley of Amarillo for federal
telling
“I’m____
sit down."
Egdrrad’ Tamd-lm
MONTGOMERY VISITS STALIN—Field Marshal Montgomery
(left), chief of British imperial staff, visits with Premier Joseph V.
Stalin (right) during Montgomery’s six-day visit to Moscow. Mont-
gomery returned to England at conclusion of visit. (AF Wirephoto
received in New York by radio from Moscow.)
Bible, and I still got the breath
in my chest. No thanks.”
Gov. Jimmie H. Davis has said
he will sign another death war-
rant for Francis as soon as his of-!
“You may a
as senatsrs of
4 1
power from five kilowatts day
d one kilowatt night to five
ycis, who once cheated the
ic chair when a mechanical
e your seats
Centennial Legislature
Tackles Touchy Issues
House Organization Faces Trouble
price of crude
f $2 per barrel.
-.1 i d j i
Since November, 1044, four men have been secretary of state
for the United States. Each has made a record for outstanding
Mmocmumemmm23zmnan
PEeeadhbigne
LIKES NO. 13
CHICAGO (A)— Al G. Kumskis
says he dotes on the number 13.
Yesterday, Jan. 13, Kumskis,
an independent candidate for ai-
derman —- the 13th ward — ap-
peared at the election commision-
er‘s office He was accompanied
by a committee of 13 persons who
filed his petition of candidacy
with mor than 5,000 signatures.
FORT WORTH. Jan. 14 UP—
Luz Herrera, 118, who recalled
He will attempt to gain rec-
ognition to urge that he be
•anted as a member of the leg-
islature. Ho was elected on the
basis that Nueces county would
most major state service*, it is
far from all that may be appro-
priated. Other large sums in
special funds are earmarked for
spending on other functions in
varying amounts.
There was the general impres-
sion in the capital that most of
the proposals for increased spend-
ing, as well as for new taxes,
would stem from the house of
representatives and that the sen-
ate would be more inclined to the
conservative side in both matters.
The question of the length of
the session was already being
widely discussed.
druggist.
Editor's Note: See “Nation To-
fice receives the supreme court's
_ mandamus that a second trip to
te the chair would not constitute
cruel and unusual punishment
was re
state’s revenue will be main-
‘ during | the next' two
‘ears at wartime peaks. Spend-
ng and income must be kept in
eastward this afternoon and to-
night; Wednesday partly cloudy,
little change in tempe rat •
— Ohnerve Trafnie Lew-—
,2*-72
' M
aTe F
{r,.
GEN. GEORGE C. MAM
war lender of the U. S.
has been conducting
talks in hina and has
role in international al
AUSTIN, Tex., Jan. 14 (P)—
The senate in caucus today as-
sured the election of Ben Ram-
sey of San Augustine as presi-
dent pro tempore.
Phil Schraub, a Corpus
Christi lawyer who has been
, elected to a seat from a district
which does not exist, sat at the
table with Gov. Coke
London Dock Hands
Vote to Join Strike
•
LONDON, Jan. 14 (A—A mass meeting of London dock’workers
voted today to join some 30,000 union laborers in a walkout pro-
testing the use of troops to move food supplies held up by a nine-
day strike of London truckdrivers.
Lt. Gov. J. L. Smith admin-
istered the oath to the new sen-
ators. and at 11:14 p. m. told
them:
WASHINGTON, Jun 14 (A)—
Senator W. Lee O'Daniel of Texas
The women were taken to Kings
County hospital where doctors di-
agnosed Anna Edwards’ ailment
as malnutrition.
The neighbors talked. They
said the Edwards' had liyed in
Tentative assignments of
resentatives to house commit-
tees has been completed by Dem-
ocratic members of the house
702
‘a
ALL
rmy.
PILOTED DISCOVERY PLANE
James L. Ball (above) of Anson,
Tex., was pilot of the plane which
discovered the burned wreckage
of a missing Byrd Antarctic Ex-
pedition plane with six of its
crew of nine still alive. (AP
Wirephoto.)
jail cell.
Francis smilingly refused the
sheriff’s offer to carry the
. news to relatives. “No thanks,"
he told the sheriff. “If I need
1 you. I’ll let you know. I got
! four bucks and come funny
books and the good Lord’s
judge of the Northern District of
Texas.
The Texas senator said
“I think Charlie's dead. Hasn't
moved since Saturday."
Mrs. Bennett immediately
called a priest who climbed the
dark staircase into the squalor of
the Edwards’ apartment. There
he saw the withered body of
m.e
Before admi
oath, the outgol
governor said:
dYours to a great opportunity
—You are being welcomed into
one of the greatet legislative
bodies in the country. We must
not lot right deteriorate and we
shall not”
pro-tempore of the senate, and
Senate Majority Leader White of
down the three flights to a neigh-
bor’s basement apartment, timid-
ly knocked on the door, and when
the neighbor appeared, asked for
a cup of coffee.
Delia Edwards, 67, had been do-
ing this for many a day, so it was
to make conversation that the
neighbor, Mrs. Mary Bennett,
asked:
“How's your brother, Miss
Delia?” * -
Still sipping the hot coffee, and
pulling her old sweater tighter
JAMES F. BY1
don, Moscow,
York to puz
, South Plains
r PPecos valley
the tax-writing House Way*
and Means committee.
LOOS ANGELES. Jan 14 (P—
An inquest is to be held tomor-
I
I
Einws Withideatancday Euthie he said the same thing to Sheritt
"light interested to find out if I
can die like the man I thought I
was." ‘ ip I I
meat slug it out with legal argu-
ments today before the supreme
court.
Attorneys for Lewis and his
United Mine Workers hope to
convince the natiom’s highest
tribunal that the United States
district court here had no legal
basis for fining the union and
its bushy-browed leader $3,510,-
000 during the soft coal strike last
November.
Attorney Genersi Tom Clark,
planning to carry on personally
President Truman’s finish fight
with the mine union boss, was
prepared to argue with equal
vigor that the federal judiciary
has the power to “prevent irre-
parable injury to the people of
the nation."
The court sat aside three hours
for the arguments.
Besides support from the par-
ent AFL, Lewis' UMW is being
backed in the fight by the usually
hostile CIO .Thus organized labor
is presenting a front of almost
unprecedented solidarity in at-
tacking the government’s use of
an injunction as a strike-breaking
weapon
The unions insist the Norris-
LaGuardia act of 1032 outlawed
such court orders even when the
government is a party to the dis-
pute—as it was in the soft coal
shutdown
Ways and Means committee.
The Texas assignments, which
must be approved formally to-
morrow by all house Democrats
include:
West, Ways and Means com-
mittee; Teague, Veterans admin-
istration and District of Colum-
bia: Lucas and Fisher, Education
ana Labor; Burleson, House ad-
ministration; Wilson, Expendi-
tures in Excutive departments;
Pickett, House administration:
Combs and Lyle. Postoffice and
Civil Service; Gossett, Judiciary;
Mansfield, public works; Patman
Banking and currency; Poage
and Worley, agriculture; Mahon
and Thomas, appropriation; Kil-
day, Thomason and Johnson,
armed services; Beckworth, inter-
state and foreign commerce.
House Minority Leader Sam
Rayburn is understood to have
voluntarily declined appointment
to a committee.
— Obnerve Traffic Lawm—
CORPUS CHRISTI, Jan. 14 (JP)
Harold B. Fell, Ardmore, Okla.,
executive vice president of the
Independent Petroleum associa-
tion of America, has called for
for food
The priest called police. The
said, will not be the regular Mon-
day morning ge t-togethers the
president had with Democratic
leaders last year when his party
controlled both hou es
the Edwards ever indulged in was
Delia's custom of occasionally
slipping out to buy an ice cream
cone after her brother had gone
to bed.
Soon the detectives came. In
delusory fashion they dusted off
the documents and papers that
littered the Brooklyn Cold-Water
flat. Then they stopped short—
For underneath all the rubbish
were bankbooks listing $67,000 in
deposits and mortgages and bonds
valued at $100,000.4
Republican and Democratic par- extended indefinitely
ty leaders in congress. ported reachea today at a meet-
These conferences, Rayburn
spreading walkouts, government
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (—
hn t Iewis and he overn- set up fast-moving rhachinery to
negotiate a settlement.
More than 2,000 soldiers —
By DAVE CEHAVENS
AUSTIN, Tex., Jan. 14 (P)— The
181 men and women whose job it
is to say just what is the people’s
path on scores of touchy issues
and fundamental problems meet
at noon today in the 50th biennial
session of the Texas legislature.
Before they can get to work on
their task of passing laws and
voting money with which to fi-
nance the multitude of state
services, their first business will
be to organize.
While there seemed to be no ob-
stacle in sight for quick organiza-
tion of the senate, it was a differ-
ent story in the house. There
a unique effort was in the mak-
ing to seat an individual elected
from a non-existant district.
The object of this was to focus
attention on the fact that the
Texas lawmakers for more than a
quarter of a century have failed
to obey the constitutional man-
date that the state be redistricted
every 10 years to assure equal
representation in the face of pop-
ulation shifts.
A new warning that the legis-
lature must not let itself loose in
an orgy of spending despite the
state’s current flush financial
status came on the eve of the
session from Sen. Jim Taylor of
Kerens. Slated to head the key
senate finance committee, Tay;
lor’s warning was regarded as of
great significance. He said: I
“We can’t assume that the
Socialist Auriol
Elected President
French Assembly
PARIS, Jan. 14. Socialist Vin-
cent Auriol was elected president
of France's national assembly to-
day, getting 294 votes to 194 for
the MPR (Popular Republican
movement) candidate, Robert
Schuman.
The Communists helped to
elect Auriol, who in two days
will pose his candidacy for the
Fourth Republic.
The Leftist rally withdrew the
candidacy of Claudius Petit for
head of the assembly a moment
before the voting.
The parliaments upper house,
the council of the republic, split ;
widely on its first ballot in an
effort to elect a president.
The socialists then withdrew
their man, Alexandre Reubert,
and decided to support the Com-
munist candidate, Georges Mar-
rane.
Also, in the race were the
MRP's Auguste Champetier de
Ribes and Radical-Socialist Jules
Gasser. The first vote gave Mar-
rane 81; Champetier de Ribes 80;
Gasser 50 and Reubert 47. The re-
quired absolute majority for elec-
tion in the council of the republic
was 130.
Democratic Minority Head Sees President in
White House Visit, Says No Date Set Yet for
First Bi-Partisan ‘Cooperation’ Conference
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (A P).—President Truman has
decided to call Republican congressional leaders in for fre-
quent consultations, Rep. Rayburn (D-Tex) said today after
1
$13: medium and good cows $11.50
to $14.50, cutter and common
$0.50 to $11.50, canners $8 to $9.50;
medium and good sausage bulls
$12 to $14.50, few medium and
good Stocker yearlings $14 to
$16.50; calves moderately active,
mostly steady; good and choice
killing calves $15.50 to $10, few
fed heavyweights higher, com-
mon and medium butcher calves
$10.50 to $15; medium and good
stock calves $14 to $16.50.
Hogs, 1,000; active and mostly
steady on all weights. Top $22.50
paid for good and choice 180-300
pounders; good and choice 325-
450 pounds $21 to $22.25; 145-175
pounds $18 75 to $22.25; sows
$18.50 to $10; Stocker pigs $13 to
$16.
Sheep, 2,500; killing classes
fully steady, some fat lambs
stronger. Good fat lambs $22 to
$22.50; medium and good fat
lambs $17 to $21; medium and
good ewes $7.50 to $8, common
ewes $7.
5,...b
3.- 1k
ge' * s)
2-
.el
29
HOUSTON, Jan 14 (P—Direc- '
lots of the Houston Fat Stock
show have voted to purchase at
approximately $360,000. a 165-acre
ite aa a show grounds The
group also voted to ask the city
city council to spend $2,000,000
in bonds voted last summer for
development of the site.
not indicate whether it would be
before the committee on. on the
floor.
Supreme Court Ruling
Does Not Worry Negro Four of America’s Statesmen in the Crisis
Community Chest
h Meeting Scheduled
would static his grounds of oppo- A general meeting of Gaines-
What the president has inmind, A decision that wartime tax
Rayburn told White House I" rates on Niquor, furs, jewetry
porters, is joint consultations with i
Told by his attorney, Bertrand
S De Blanc, that *a motion will for the robbery slaying of An-
drew Thomas, a St. Martinville
■ “// "paTe
dh
ahh.
—Oberve Trarfie I.nwm--
CONSIDER NOMINATION
WASHINGTON, Jan 14 (/Pl-
Chairman Wiley (R-Wis) of the
senate judiciary committee ha*
named a subcommittee composed
of Senators Moore, Langer (R-
Mo) and Manguson (D-Wash) to
consider the nomination of Joseph
B. Dooley of Amarillo, Tex., as
district judge for the northern
federal Texas district.
Cattle, 2,100; calves, 1,400; fairly
active, generally steady, mature
beef steers scarce. Few good and
choice heifers and yearlings $18
been stand, to $24, medium kind $14 to $17,
cutter and common lots $10 to
police physician studied the an-
cient figure knealing as if in sup-
plication. He took out his card
and wrote:
“Dead on arrival. Natural
causes.”
pose, either before a senate com- and from the upper
mittee or on the senate floor, the
confirmation of Herbert E Ar-
be filed for another supreme
court bearing, Francis said sim-
p!v: ' . [ ---------------- --------
“It's the same think. The same day on page 2 for further com-
bld thing A man's got to die ments.)
angrily termed “blacklegs in uni-
form" by the strikers—and 800
service vehicles meanwhile began
their second day of lugging meat
and other food to retailers serv-
ing 10,000,000 inhabitants of the
greater Londan area.
With the soldiers taking over
delivery duties, food in limited
quantities began re-appearing in
London shops that had been al-
most drained of supplies during
the work stoppage.
— Obnerve Traffic Law
Texans Listed on
House Committees
CORDELL'HULL was to con-
trol of the department during
moat of the depression, the
preparation* for war and most
of the war against the axis.
my mind when I leave. A lot
of men never find out. A lot
crats, and Senator Barkley, of
Kentucky, senate minority leader.
Rayburn said he discussed the
setup generally with the presi-
dent today, but that his call pri-
marily was for discussion of a
“personal matter ”
He said the "quarterback" con-
ferences the president has in
mind, which already have been
discussed with Republican lead-
ers, would be periodic rather than
weekly.
H I
1 _L
“Now I guess maybe I’m gon-
na find oat. And I‘m gonna
find oat the hard way, boss,
so there won't be no doubt f
as he rode to meet Texas forces
at the Alamo, died here yester-
day after a long illness Herrera
served with Juarez in the Mexi-
can revolution against Maximi-
lian. He moved to Texas a half
century ago.
DALLAS, Jan. 14 (P—A pro-
posal that the Federal Power
commission be given ho jurisdic-
tion or authority to determine
or control the use for which nat-
ural gas may be old has been
adopted by the National Oil and
Gas committee to session here to
consider possible changes to the
atural gas act
Temperatures: High yesterday,
74. low last night, 40; noon today.
51; high for year. 68. low for the
Ye year. —2; baro-
• h B0 metric pressure,
E 7 29; rainfall.
E4 k MPKFEa trace.
m Aah East Texas
the session run for 120 days, and
full pay for lawmakers extends
only over this period. There were
some predictions that the session
—because of the numerous con-
troversial issues before it—would
extend into July. One senator
was asked what the session's big-
gest issue would be and his face-
tious response was: “Final ad-
journment.”
For one week the legislature
will operate along with the out-
going administration.
Coke Stevenson—who has been
governor for a longer time than
any other man in Texas history—
will continue in office until the
house formally declares Beauford
H. Jester governor, and Jester is
inaugurated. This comes one
week from today.
The historic legal scrap began
when District Judge T. Alan
Goldsborough fined Lewis $10,000
and the UMW $3,500,000 for con-
tempt of court.
Three days after posting secur-
ity for these record penalties
against a union, Lewis on Decem-
ber 7 abruptly directed his men
to go back to the mines—until
March 31 The work stoppage had
run 17 days.
Saying the case had been ap-
pealed to the supreme court.
Lewis told his 400,000 soft coal
miners he ended the walkout to
relieve the tribunal from the
pressure of “public hysteria”
which he said might prevail if
the nation was in the grip of a
c‘T i
h,
F
k
B ’
ft
I/ -
Fg
The constitution suggests that
Casual Question Leads to Finding of Fortune
NEW YORK, Jan. 14 (P)—The about her to fight off the cold, remains of unfinished meals, lay such poverty as long as they
wizened old ladv slowlv climbed the woman muttered: Miss Anna Edwards. 87. Dleading could remember. And they re-
called that the only extravagance
a White House call. •
Rayburn. former speaker and
now leader of the Democratic mi-
nority in the house, said no date
has been set for the first bi parti-
san conference.
Maine, Speaker Martin of Massa- . . .
chusetts. Republican Majority throwing flowers at the feet of
Leader Halleck of Indiana, Ray- the Mexican General Santa Anna
burn, representing house Demo-
HAT STUFF
BOSTON, Jan. 14 (A—Perhaps
M'lady's hat isn't so important
after all.
Among unclaimed lost items,
the Boston and Maine railroad
today listed 17 women's hats All
but 10 of the men's lost hats have
been claimed
Also unclaimed were snakes
preserved in alcohol and a bass
drum.
Charles Edwards, 77, covered
with an old-fashioned nightgown,
leaning on the floor beside his
unmade bed, his head buried in
his hands in an attitude of prayer.
In another dusty bedroom, piled
with yellowed newspager and
WASHINGTON, Jan 14 (A—-
The federal communications com-
mission has approved a request
from radio station KWFT at
Wichita Falls, Texa, to increase
Arnold has been acting collec-
tor under a temporary appoint-
1 ment. I _
FIRE REPORT
CHESTER, Ill (A") — Chester's
fire house, in a report by an un-
derwriter* association after a
fire prevention survey, was cited
as a fire hazard.
The report urged correction of
five specific conditions.
Fire Chief Hobart Stoeffel as-
sured the cit ycouncil the cor-
rection would be made.
He was referring to the comp-
troller’s estimate that this legis-
lature will have available for
Cloudy to partly
cloudy in north-
west and north
--m central portions
Finals in the election are $FWV, ths aleru...
April 1. \KdF and in north and
—Obnerve Trarrie i-«— _N) estdentralpor-
O’Daniel to Oppose CLOUDY
Arnold Confirming Iyeraloudy ‘ttsechatfsotherT,
spending during the next two
(p__ years the record total of $185,-
F,,e 352,807 from the general revenue
fund. While this fund finances
M Leonard, Jr.,
charge of the inf
cr ing.
will be held tonight at 7:30 p. sn.
at the Charmber of Commerce to
gauge whether sentiment is for
the organization of a Community
Chest in this city.
The meeting has been called by
Cecil Farr. president of the Jun-
ior Chamber of Commerce, and
all persons -interested in the
health and social welfare of the
community are invited to attend
Members of the Jaycees have
gathered much information con-
cerning Community Chest organ-
izations and will bring it up for
winds on coast.
West Texas: Partly cloudy. L
took ofrice EDWARD R. STETTINIUS, JR.,
" was named secretary in No-
vember, 1044, dealt witf
end problems and direl
setting up of United 5
Mr. Truman will cull the lead-. row in 99nnection with the Sat-
ors to the White House to dscuss unlay death of Kenneth Gunn,
measures where there is prospect i 38, assistant manager of Acme
of cooperation Similarly, the Newspictures bureau here whose
Capitol Hill spokesman would be beaten body was found on a side-
in a position to initiate conulta-walk.
tions by notifying Mr. Truman of
matters they wish to take up with
him. . . ,
In Line With Desire tional Association of Postmasters
The consultations would be inwill meet in Dallas Feb. 10-11 to
line with the president's ex-study proposed legislation and
pressed desire to cooperate with | improvements in the postal serv-
the Republican majority ■ Ice, Burns C. Jackson, of Hill-
They would involve the calling boro, first vice presiden ne
of Senator Vanderberg. president i association, has announce
Stevenson was putting the fin-
ishing touches on his final mes-
sage to the legislature.
He was expected to urge cau-
tion in spending. Stevenson was
also expected to submit as one
emergency matter the question of
establishing a full-fledged uni-
versity for Negroes.
The time for delivery of this
message was not yet set. It de-
pended on how long it takes the
house—jampacked with rookie
members—to get under way.
Lieut. Gov. John Lee Smith
will preside over the senate until
Allan Shivers of Port Arthur
takes over Jan. 21. Smith will
announce Shivers' committee ap-
pointments.
Election of Rep. W. O. Reed
of Dallas as speaker of the house
was still considered certain de-
spite some murmurings of pro-
test from new members who
thought they were being slighted
in prospective committee assign-
ments.
— Obnerve Trnftle Lawn--
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Jan. 14 (A)—
B 1 I
5. » v?
— -------------------------—• The decision, which may affect
A Ar • | all of London’s 24,000 organized
GInvornmonf I OWK dock workers, was reached at a
UWC1 ALAICIIV) HCVI 40-minutes noon hour meeting at-
tended by between 1,200 and 1,400
men who ignored appeals of the
union: leaders to remain at work.
With food distribution through-
out England threatened by the
“I always sort of wondered if
I wm a brave man,” the tall,
cocoa-colored Negro said in an
interview.
M. % '
...
* ’ k ■
Ee, e
.F A
Mby- ■- A
A A
‘ E 4 "
4>
(S2.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 118, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1947, newspaper, January 14, 1947; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1470841/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.