The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1922 Page: 1 of 8
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YOL. 1, NO. 303
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U. S. Girl is
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'paralysed nad pulverized."
from
McCumber Uritt act was aigned
An MM was
burned ‘ott.
the
about the
scene."
badly
was on
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Lasater
of the
40
tag
at
g) I A'
session of one half pint of whiskey .
TWO KILLED
U. S. College at Smyrna Burns
The Core—No More
ROADS ASK AID
sas City Southern railroad and
authority to sell $2,000,000 worth
. ■ ,
1
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at
st.
NEW SPEED RECORD
0- "
A hOOdle
ted the
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3
HARDING SIGNS
TARIFF BILL
FIND BODY OF
YOUNG GIRL ON
1 FUNERAL PYRE
Indications Are That It Will
Be Upheld But Slightly
Modified
500 STRIKERS
HERE GET JOBS
Peddy Will Open Campaign
Against Earle Mayfield
Next Monday
roll of $42,000. -He was
wounded by the bandite.
Clark, with two others.
THE
I
JLTIMATUM AT TUI
AS PEACE IS SOU
nounced here today. The men are
expected to return to work la Sac-
ramento and other points tomor- i
row.
Women and Children
Moved From War 2
Clash Looms
City Hall hasn't yet elosed deal
for the new sewage plant site.
American Paymaster Robbed
' By Mexican Bandits nj
prisonment for the murder, by
asphyxiation, of hta three grand-
children loot apring. The jury de-
liberated about 20 hour.
burned tu
must hav
The "Baltimore plan" was the
beats for settiement. ’
FARMER SLAIN
WINNSBORO.—O. F. Cora.
Karl' Renote goes to county jail
and surrenders, asking chance to
"kick the dope habit," while De-
tective George Hale is looking for
him on forgery charge.
here which saved hle
"95 rmnavc 7^71 IB
crowded as wives of
corn and ecores of e
took their departure (
zone.
In spite of the w
upholstery tack w
child’s left lung I
and was removed
GAINESVILLE. — Harold
Young, 40, Wichita Falla, t
brother, Eugene Young. 30, w
klUed sixteen miles went of b
Wednesday when a train stri
their automobile, a tc
<; -I
1
bls way to a nearby aviation field,
from which he intended to travel
to the camps of the company by
plane.
Mrs.
appeals to
overrule
trial
That’s not all ze saya about
NATIONAL LAUGH DAY—not
by two pages, single spaced.
He tells how the American
sense of humor is "our one su-
perb spiritual gift.” Foreigners,
he says, concede this sense of
humor is our dominating trait.
With all the world ill, he thinks
more laughter is the needed ton- t
ic to bring everybody out of the :
doldrums.
FUSIONISTS TO I
FIRE FIRST GUN '
IN FORT WORTH
DEATH AVERTED
NEW YORK. WllUass Consta-
Me, 12. underwent aa operation
was charged against her.
Since her arrest she has been
married and wanted to leave town,
so the judge wedged her case is
between civil matters Thursday
morning.
Many Testify
in Herrin Mine
Massacre Probe
2
8
48
11
Woman Would Ha
Insurance in Li
Ve
s0
Romance of May
And December is
V Failure Once More
Thursday was elected bishop <
" ! Haiti, the new missionary dices
I of the Protestant Epiaeopdl chen
N INTI
was bu
the people, to get hiiei
Notes have been issued by the
elty commfssioh at will. In many
dases notes previously issued have
been extended instead of paid off.
MORTGAGING THE FUTORE.
Thus future revenue has been
mortgaged to pay for the expenses
of today.
Careful economy, a budget sya-
tem free of loopholes, avoidance
of Idersas is in the overdraft, and
a tax rate high enough to provide
for the city’s "brass tacks" cur-
rent expenses each year are the
remedies which will bring the city
government financial health.
heart.
n
hot him In the leg.
BiGBLiMPOFF
Try Man Who Shot
Neighbor in Leg
Alienist to Be
Star Witness at
War Hero’s Trial
Noted Naturalist Succumbs to
Accident Injury
Agricultural Clubs Open It at
The CofC '
AUTO-TRAIN
CRASH KILLS
TWO BABIES
Delia Sleigh, who formerly op- farmer, was shot aad killed h
crated the Traveiers’ Hotel. was Wednesday. Diek Gillan, a net
fined $100 by Judge Wilson in her, is la jail, charged with M
federal-ct Thursday morning-' Poe-; der.
Shopmen Return
On Western Pacific
Shopmen Keep Busy and Stay-
Cheerful
C
Daily meetings still are held at
the First Baptist church. Thurs-
. day the strikers heard aa address
by John Wilkinson, president of
. the United Mine Workers, district
21.
While only one southwestern
tailroad, the San Antonio & Aran-
sas Pass, has signed an agreement
ending the strike, the local shop-
men are confident the other Unes
will be brought to terms.
A letter comes to the 3pot-.
light desk, It is personally writ-
ten—not a mere mimeograph.
The writer is Arthur s. Kane,
movie magnate, president of As-
sociated Exhibitors, Iuc.
"Let us have a NATIONAL
LAUGH DAY," pleads Mr. Kane.
"Such a celebration might be
better for us than all our an-
ual holidays rolled into one. A
sense of humor may cause fait- .
ering souls to forget the blues
of discouragement and failure."
1
gba
Raid Crap Gama
And Gat Away
With Big Loot
Negro Joy Riders
Crash Into Bridge
Criminal district-ct was busy all
day Thursday with the case of G.
R Britton, who Is charged with
assault to murder A. I Clark.
—a--
FORT WORTH, TEXAS,
Would Conscript
Everything in
Case of New War
n Film Star
■
—Two babies were
killed and their father was dan-
gerously injured at Alta Loma,
near here, Thursday, when the au-
tomobile in which they were rid-
George Sealy Bird, 2.
Albert Clarence Bird. 3%-
A. C. Bird, the father, who Is a
railroad employe, is in a hospital
fighting for his life. 'He has a
chance to live.
Inspector Stops Use
Of Faulty Engines
Bride Gets Fine of
$100 in Booze Case
DyUnitaFress.o
ADANAFour hundra
fifty villages in the Tur-Gi
war sone have been burned
100 Greeks and Armeniana I
been arrested in the act of son
ing gasoline, the Turkish gov
ment at Angora announced tm
An official denial of the ste
(Continued on Page 2)
gh
NEW BISHOP Mens. 2
By Untted Prees. • 44
tI
1 ‘
----—
--
1007 COMMEI
• I
CONVICT SLAYER
By United Freae
HAUFAX, N. s.—Omar Rob
arts, aged guide, waa convicted
Thursday of buralng to death Miss
.SIGNS GRAIN BILL.
' Pre.
Harding today signed the Ca
Tincher bill which regulates
ing la grain futures.
—
AIRMAN HURT
ny rnitea Teewa
FRANKFORT-ON-MAIN, — Ed-
mund Allen, American motorlees
alrplane gilder, was seriously in-
juted when he crashed to earth
during a flight today.
sume shopwork under nonunion i
h condititons.
W "Ererybody is cheerful." says
Ben coqieywngeretury of the exec-
utive committee.
TURKs'
■
i
INSTANT DEATH
My tnited Press.
ARKANSAS CITY, Kan.--c. J.
tarkwoather, 21, was killed last
416h when riding a motorcycle 30
miles an hour in the eeater of a
lway Arack-tu a suburban sec-
ttoe He ran head on Into an in-
iernunn passenger car.
-
.---20
IPT. n, 1922,
of St. Paul and Kansas Short Line
Railway Co. first mortgage 4 1-2
per cant bonds at 111-1 per cent
of par. to reimburse the Chicago
Company for advances made to the
St. Paul line.
Report to Governor
Will Deny Rangers
Maltreated Miners
WASHINGTON.—Ths Chicago.
Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, sas cily soutnern railroad and
Co. today applied to the ICC for consul for the Netherlands in Kan-
nerves. Perhaps it enables us to
run without stumbling in our
dizzy pursuit of power, preemi-
nence end pleasure. Our sense
of humor makes for health and'
happiness. Thee why not a NA-
TIONAL LAUGH DAY?”
He would have newspapers,
civic bodies. and merchants get
together and wake up the town.
"Interview your mayor and
| leading citizens,* he urgee.
s a ■
| ■ And then—ah, here comes ths
Big Idea.
When shall we put over this
NATIONAL LAUGH DAY?
Certainly there can no longer
be any argument against the
proposition. It's all settled ex-
„cept the time. ' But Mr. Kane
solves that problem, too
"Spring it,” he winds up his
missive, "ths day Harold Lloyd
comes in 'GRANDMA'S Bor to
start the town laughing and it
will go over big."
• • •
Yes, there are publicity men
who are clever and those who
are crude.
There's nothing crude about
Mr. Arthur S. Kane’s publicity
efforts.
Witness the fact that today
he occupies the entire Spotlight
column.
We have fallen for his stuff.
Let Fort Worth, by George,
have a LAUGH DAY when Har-
old Lloyd comes in "GRAND-
MA’S BOY.”
AIN HURLS NE
I FARM FAIR
The publicity man—have you
ever.met him?
Newspaper folk meet him in
large numbers every day. ’
Sometimes he's clever. Some-
times he's crude. Sometimes
he’s about fifty-fifty.
Usually ae is drawing' a sal-
ary of somewhere between fifty
and one hundred blmoleons a
week for his efforts at filling
space in ths newspapers.
But this Introduces a puutic-
ity man who is far, far above
the average.
Umlesa opponenta of annexation
succeed in overturning the results
of the July 22 election in the
courts. consolidation of Greater
Fort Worth will be one of the
greatest tasks on the hands of
City Hall in the next few years.
This entails the extension of
public serviees to all the suburbs
which were annexed- water, pew-
age, light, police Mid flftl
Enos Milis visited Fort Worth
early this year and lectured st ths
high schools. He highly praised
Lake Worth and recommended it
for the playground of Texas..He
was a guest of the CofC. *
HELDUP
Turks were bringing up an
and cavalry, preparing Tor t
tack.
At Chanak, key posltion I
Dardanelles, British Mnes
been established. It to op
this front that Turkish on
men are comcentrating.
Mustapha Kensal has M
Immia, so
to make the law effective at mid
night tonight.
This ends the long, bitter fight
which had been waged over the
measure since congreas flrat ho-
gan work on IL nearly two years
ago.
President Harding used two
pens in affixing his signature. One
was presented to Senator MeCum-
ber, chairman of the senate eoni-
mittee, and the other was awarded
to Representative Furdney who led
the fight in the biul’s behalf in
the lower house of congress.
Both MeCumhe and Fordney
are retiring from congrens this
year.
PORTLAND, Ore—Arch-De
H. R. Carson of the Canal
RAIL MAN DEAD
By United rgesa
KANSAS CITY. Mo— Henry
V lose her, treasurer of the Kan-
Denial that state rangers have the cut. The mines were closed
Harding Names
First Woman for
Diplomatic Post
this. There has been little system
in expenditures. There has been
meat’s case would be uphold but
the injunction would be modified.
If the court holds the govern-
ment has won the suit the next
move will be to call witnesses and
present additional evidence to
make the injunction permanent.
Attorneys for the defense have
not ashed for a modification. They
have staged their fight on an "all
or nothing" basis. In the argu-
ments attorneys declared that if
the original bill was adopted ths
By United rress.
ESTE8 PARK, Colo.—Enos A.
Milla 52, noted naturalist, died at
his home, Long's Peak Inn, near
here, today. He was injured in
a subway accident in 'New York
last January, from which he never
completely recovered.
Mills was known to thousands
of tourists who visit Estes Park
annually.
In a series of articles The
Press will set forth .what it bo-
lieves will be the moot impor-
tant questions confronting the
city administration which to
nominated in the primaries
Nov. 7. This is the first. Edi-
torial opinion necesserily to in-
volved in these nrtlclea.
Annexed suburbs will be divid-
ed into Id or 12 wards, mayor an-
nounces, prelimina., to election of
dity Democratic executive commit-
icemen Nov. 7.
Five hundred of the striking
railway shopmen here now are
employed at other than railway
work, officials of the shoperafts
estimate.
Many are picking cotton. Others
have odd jobs about town. The
men laugh at new efforts of the
railroads to induce them to quit
the ranks of the strikers and re-
continue. The overdraft had
3.x comraviponeae e - m—"
Haines in their love retreat
Caseville
County Tax Colletcor Bell will
nold all school tazes until city
straightens out annexation mud-
dle.
By Enited Ptea
DALLAS—Georgs B. B. Poddy,
coalition candidate for the United
States senate, will open his cam-
paign at Fort Worth Monday
night.
Psddy plans an intensive apeak-
tag campaign between next Mon-
day and the time for the seneral
election. He expects to make at
last one address a day.
James E. Ferguson, former gov-
ernor. against whom Poddy led a
demonstration while in college,
came out with a statement this
morning declaring for the 30-year-
old lawyer against Earle B. May-
field. Democraite nominee, who
defeated Ferguson in the Demo-
cratic primary.
B’WASARGTON — General con-
scripton of all individuals and
property would automatically fol-
low a future declaration of war by
the United States under a resolu-
tion introduced today by Repre-
sentative Royal Johnson. Republi-
can. South Dakota.
By Tnired Press.
WASHINGTON—President Har-
ding called upon the country to
set aside Monday, Oct. 2, as fire
prevention day, "and to observe It
in such a manner aa to impress
upon ths people the importance of
precautionary measures for the
avoidance of fires.”
* The president estimated Amer-
ica's fire lose has approximated
By United rress.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The part-
ly burned body of a girl, resting
on an improvised funeral pyre was
found in the weed covered bottom
tends of the Missour river near
here.
The girl apparently had been
murdered and an atteempt made
to hide the crime by destroying
the body. Evidence also was found
that animals had molested the
body.
H. E. King, farmer, attracted to
the scene by a traveling peddler
who happened on the body, re-
ported ths murder to the police.
"The girl is young and the con-
dition of the body indicates she
has been dead about three days."
King said. She had been murdered
and the body carried to the spot.
There a funeral pyre of driftwood
had been built.
"The wood had been piled high
and the body of the girl placed
upon the bier. A torch was ap-
plied. The flames reached the
body, one log being burned away.
other advantages. All school mat-
ters are in the hands of the
schoo-bd. ’ . Ga-
Underlying the problems of oon-
solidation is the question of city
finances. •
A SIMPLEE BOLUTION.
The simple solution of the fi-
Worth has had and now has is for
the eityto "pay as it goes"—not
in notes, but in eash. This has
reference to current expenses—
not to the cost, of improvements
which properly should be paid for
out of bond issues.
Past administrations and ths
one now in office have not done
THE WEATHKR
Fori Worth sad yicinity: Tonight
and Friday fair and warmer. Ught
to moderate southerly winda tonight
and Friday.
Weather Conditions: Cottea re-
gion reporta parity cloudy to clear
weather, with scattered showera in
portions of Tennessee North Caro-
lina. southemn Florida and la the
Rio Grande valley of Texas.
It's no use. May and December
can't make a go of it.
R. B. Eprayberry, well along in
years, asked polios Thursday to
help him find his 18-year-old
bride, who wss pretty Gladys Ma-
rlo Lopp.
They were married in Dallas
Sept. 6.
"She lived with me two days.”
said Sprayberry. "I haven’t any
idea where she went.”
Spray berry at the Ums of ths
wedding wss reported to be a civil
war veteran of 76. His bride told
The Press he wasn't born unUi
after the elvil war.
"A girl is sure of her living
when she marries an old man and
she isn't when she marries a boy
was the bride's comment.
$7,000,000,000 in the last
years.
Flora Gray, Ms houdekeeper, he
cause she refused Ms adrancea.
- -- . - ----- - - ■
s struck by a Santa Fe fast
ger train.
dead:
By United Preeu.
SAN FRANCISCO- Agreement
between the Western Pacific and
its striking shopmen was an-
down for a short Ums, then re-
opened under open shop condi-
Uons.
A few miners went back to
( Continued on Pegs 2)
B ' c'poar
I - d2
—2
By United Press,
MARION, III.—Scores of wit-
nesses today testified befofe the
grand jury in the Herrin massacre
probe. They included men and
women living on the Mghgway be-
tween the Herrin cemetery and the
spot in the woods where some of
ths 19 strikebreakers of the Les-
ter strip mine were shot to death.
i
Motor Co. here will reopen to-
morrow. Orders for aD Ford
employes to return were given
out at moon today.
A supply of coni sufficient to
keep the Ford plants* going in-
definitely, had been assured by
Kentucky and West Virginia
coal operators. The offers were
presented to Edsel Ford to Cin-
cinnati Wednesday.’
oe An
no budget. There has been Mi - ----- 2. ..
hard and fast apportionment of shop crafts organisation would be
income to the various depart- "paralyzed nad pulverized."
Two Frisco engines were taken
out of service Wednesday by Fed-
oral Inspector Scott Andrews, and
a number tagged for repair.
General Manager Sissons of ths
Frisco is out of the city and
clerks refuse to give out the num-
ber or engines tagged by ths in-
spector.
f
MATHIS GUILTY
Ly Unit a rress
HOUSTON—Yulee S. Mathis.
62, this morning was found guil-
ty snd sentenced to 1* years im-
Uy United Presa
SAN ANTONIO — Three un-
mashed men mad. a haul when
they raided a private crap game
here. The raiders had a brown
stain or grease-paint on their
faces.
A Dallas man lost 11.000 in
cash and a check for $9. The
hoot of the party was out a dia-
mond ring worth $160 and a gold
watch worth 920, while the third
player lost $7.
BABY’S LIFE SAVED
By United Preas,
WICHITA, Kan.—Mary Louise
Cline, 21 months, was rescued
from death Wednesday bytheune
of the X-ray and bronchoecope. An
Three
Cents j
By United Preas.
HUNTINGDON, Pa.—Dr. John
H. Ladd, alienist for the District
of Columbia, was expected to tea-
tiry to the insanity of Dr. Her-
bert J. Bryson, former Washing-
ton physician and war hero, whose
attorneys are fighting to keep
him from the electric ehair for
the alleged murder of Helen Irene
Smimhsmahnesuznduuv.ot- codtnk
ties the last legal Stop was taken b—
................restotontoesm
g Turning On The
spotlight
E.220009 0 h
u5.
mmmtge
sas City, died today. Death was
caused by a complication of all-
ments. < - . 4
sHi '
2222* 822232
x-3638 cage9ea ' 8883
• vi
g
By United Fress.
CHICAGO.—Preliminary fight
on the Daugherty injunction is
near and end.
Federal Judge James H. Wil-
kerson must decide Thursday
whether the strike of railroad
shopmen was a conspiracy in the
restraint of interstate commere
and if so whether the government
can go to the extreme measures
asked In the injunction.
Indications were the govern-
By linited ivsae
VERSAILLES.— Flying at the) RAN ANTONIO—Taking off an
terrific speed of 211.71 mhen as'easily as in daylight boors, the
hour, Sadi Lecointe, French avia-1 army balloop c-5 left Brooks field
tor. beat the world’s airplane for Kl Paso MH night ahortly art-
spend record here today. ‘ar mfanieht. V , 3 ,
Hartford Life Insurance Co t
pay her the lump sum of UH1
for the death of her husband. T
policy is now being paid at th
rate of >11 a week.
Lasater was killed two yeas
ago When he fell from an oil dm
rick.
"That we are the most resil-
lent people on earth may be
dne entirely to our inborn sense
of humor,” he goes on. "It con
duces to buoyancy and hopeful-
ness. It is a stabiliser for the
80282
hle
•88ESFa2869MMF: .3% <
Ie
' s
1’WASHINGTON—The Foraney-
Five men and one woman, all
negroes, were joyriding - on the
Dallas pike ats Wednesday night.
Thsy had beer and whisky in the
car. The party ended when the
car crashed into a bridge three
miles east of Handley.
Two of the men escaped injury
and fled. The others lay on the
roadside for.three hours. They
were picked up and carried to
Dallas. The woman, Lula Mas
Thompson, 2520 Maln-at. Dallas,
suffered a broken leg.
Police rbund the car early
Thursday morning, aplotehed with
blood and containing a woman’s
shoes, hat and puns.
Months ago, Britton's and
Clarke's children had trouble. The
parents then quarreled. They
were neighbors.
Jandary •. Britton met Clark in
front of the letter’s house snd
j by the triennini convention HH
Areh-Deacon Carson wan eleri
by the house at binhope yester
but the election was not tine—f
in by the house of deputles Mi
today.
| ----------------- -J
’ess
F. 2
ai
“A PROBHET IS NOT WITHOUT HONOR SAVE IN HIS OWN
country," so while Pola Negri comes to the United States, .Fern
Andrea of Watseka, Ill., becomes a great film star in Germany.
"Unsere Fern” (our Fern) is what German-fans call her.
i eeeeeeeeeeeeneneeeeneeeeeseeeaeenecerebeeeesmeseeeeeeneneneneea
City Needs Policy of j
Paying as It Goes |
Tarrant-co agricultural clubs
are holding their two-day fair at
the CofC auditorium Thursday
and Friday.
Dresses, pretty embroideries,
canned vegetables and friuta, all
manner of farm products, includ-
ing watermelons, cotton, peanuts,
maize, eon and sorghum, chick-
ens. eggs and scores of other prod-
ucts produced under the direction
of the county deuhosntration
agents are exhibited.
Many people are visiting the
fair. Prices were to be awarded
Thursday afternoon.
FIGHT NEARS
END ON GOVT.
INJUNCTION
ments. There has been no ad-
vance determination of how much
money would be available and
there fore how much could be
spent without going zato debt.
BUDGET SYSTEM A CURE.
A budget system ‘such as Mayor
Cockrell proposes would. If ac-
cepted in good spirit by all the
commissioners and rigidly ad-
hered to, would sure this evil.
I fit to not cured, pyramiding at
Fort Worth's indebtedness will
■.........
117
VV
DEATH CALLS
ENOS MILLS
maltreated striking miners at
Mingas will be made In a report
to Governor Neff by Ranger Cap-
tain R. W. Aldrich, who spent
Wednesday at Mingus, returning
to Fort Worth Thursday morning.
He was' accompanled by Ranger
Merge ant Gillon. "We found ont
all we wanted to know,” Aldrich
said.
Aldrich will go to Austin Thurs-
day night.
John Wilkinson, district presi-
dent of the United Mine Workers,
x protested to Governor Neff, Sen-
P ator Sheppard and U. 8. Attorney
a General Daugherty against al-
leged threats to drive the strikers
from theirxent colony, where they
are maintained by the union.
STORY OF STRIKE.
The strikers now entamped at
Mingus formerly were employed
by the Texas-Pacific Coal A Oil
Co. In the coal mines at Thurber.
In March, 1221, the Teras-Pacific
announced a wage reduction, low-
ering the day wage from 97.60 to
95 and the tonnage wage from
92.40 to 92.
Wilkinson declares this was in
violation of a cuntract which did
not expire until March 31 of this
year. Miners refused to accept
Measure Will Become Effec-
tive at Midnight *
B8AN‘ANTONfo —x.a. Clark.
American paymaster for the Amer-
ican, Gulf A West Indies Oil Co.,
was held up by bandits near Tam-
pico. Mexico, and robbed of a pay-
By United Pres
CONSTANTINOPLE
With Turkish forces rapid
concentrating on the bord
of the neutral zone, Gen
Harrington, commander i
Britain’s Near East arm^^
day served notice on Mi
tapha Kemal any advanceti
to the inter-allied territo
would be considered an acti
war.
This was Britain’s reply
the threat that the Tur!
would cross the neutral aa
to invade Thrace, it th
province were not turned ov
immediately.
Thruout the night Brt
troops dug iu on the Neer M
front. Rallway stations m
FORD ORDERS
ALL PLANTS
OPEN FRIDAY NOT TO
"HtA"Arteratour-any
shutdown the plants of the Ford
- I
i
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Siler, Leon M. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1922, newspaper, September 21, 1922; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547050/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.