The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 258, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 27, 1932 Page: 3 of 12
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THE FORT WORTH PRESS
—
Citizen Soldiers Reviewed
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s
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$
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.41
. . 17.00
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nEn
- Book* Closed—Charge Purchases Made Now Payable in September
es of
ACCUSED OF ROBBERY
on
Main and Houston at 12th
He explained’, trusties werp al-
the
TEXAS
7
I Atkinson.
"I. had a lot of drinks.
and of belng held In the Dallas
drunk
charg*."
Atkinson was sent to the Ar-
Smart Swim Suits to $4
12
"I
$*>95
vietlon. He escaped June 11.
2
th*'
N
• \.
>
X P
14th
VETS' EVICTION
HEAT OVERCOMES BOY
)•
|U1
Lloyd Duncan. 17. Fort Worth,
t
$5 Catalina Suits
/)
urday.
to
To Clear Grounds
expected eviction of 1800 bonus
Lost and Found
the .
1 on.
no 606,000
Beach Ensembles
.
*
/
12:45 P. M.
€
OVER STATION
the partnership liquidated.
)
K. T. A. T
/
Girls' Beach Pajamas to $1.95
per cent interest on its investment
V
4
/
Beach Robes to $3.95
$145
4*
0
8
4
L
N
$
800 Main
Corner
(o)
Want Ad Headquarters
utta
Seventh
_e-nXE
A
1
\
■HUL
UNITED
AIR LINES
WHISKY TRADER
GETS SENTENCE
ESCAPER WHO WROTE HIS
MOTHER DAILY CAPTURED
KANSAS ‘WHEAT
QUEEN’ HINTS
AT REVOLUTION
One-Half of One Per Cent
Of National Income To
Be Paid As Interest
1
treet I .
i. r. A.
EXCURSION FARES
to Kansas City-Chicago
The only line to Chicago with
tri-motor planet—2 pilot*—
2-way radiophone. Lavatory.
Cool, clean, fast. Spacious cabin*.
Daylight and Overnight Service
1% Hrs. to Oklahoma City 912.50
RESUBMISSION
VOTE BELITTLED
BY DRY LEAGUE
Informa-
r Phone
PFICE
ITY $5
NS. $9
. $10
Intermediate eredit bank loans
• farm eredtts)
Invested in grain and cotton
stabilization • Farm Boargb
» on
LY
s
X
The accident was reported to
Duncan's mother, Mrs. L. A. Den-
a
:8:55
saltm
2
Advertisements Appearing in THE PRESS
Are Broadcast Daily at
MEACHAM FIELD, TEL.6-2169
Hotels; Postal and Western Union Ofices
40,000,000 MILES
FLYING EXPERIENCE
00
Week
an
after
FARM BOARD BOOKS
.WILL BE EXAMINED
t Clnos
ets
GINNERS RAP
FEDERAL BOARD
Anti e Saloon Organization
Declares Ballot Not
Representative
SERVICE
Wichita,
Coaches,
pers.
B. E. Atkinson Held in Dallas Jail 30 Days Before
Being Arrested on Visit to Home Here
By United Press.
WASHINGTON, July 27.—The
. the’people of Texas did not vote
I learned I had : wet."
Your Lost Ad will be seen by the person
who found the article if your ad is here
when the finder looks for it.
Filling Station Man Tells
Story to Judge
" t*47
aggregate investment of $7,664,-
515,201.01.
Income is High.
stands ।
Vacation Togs
806 Sts 200 |
170 Mo no#
Not everyone is convinced that
repayment of all this money is to
be expected.
To what that will lead is an in-
triguing question—not to be an-
swered here.
I went to a speakeasysaid have voted. All Congressmen who
... " _ ‘0 "" havesheretofore voted for dry leg-
islation were renominated.
Glassford explained his action
by s ying he had no specific or-
ders to evict the veterans if they
did not depart voluntarily In com-
pliance with the Treasury Depart-
ment's order of evacuation.
(
prices below actual A*U," he
clared.
"And now our ginners are I
| finally got out.
been held because I wasn’t able
" ' a4~".
«tR:1 ’
U.S. WILL REAP
BIG INCOME OFF
NOME BUSINESS
77c
77=
Kiddies’
Sun Suit*
77=
on such a sum will require.$306,-
RA 0,806.04 annually.. The nation-
me now' And I've been a trusty,
and cook..."
Street
I
g"
"3.
.‘03- "o *2
2,
L3--m3csu
Police records show he served
two years on horse theft charges
Ft
K
$095
E
AGAIN DELAYED
from the heat suffer*'
90000t
3
is recovering in
Calif., hospital
“For Positive Re8ult9,t
$1 Women's Slacks or Blouses
> Dainty little linene, printed per-
calcs, linen and drill play suite. %
• Some have hats or send pails
to match. 3 to 0 sizes. For clear-
ance ......................
Meacham'! Second Floor -
lowed to .visit- stores down
htkhway from the. prison.
I
n.ULX 27,1982
"They must have thought I was
a sure enough bad man—there kansas penitentiary February 19 ।
were enough of 'em! • j for two years on a burglary con- l
! had just gone to bed when - - - -
drunk 1 days in the Dallas Jail. When I
Women's gay colored
printed pique and
broadclth ensembles,
in two and three-piece
types. Some have bo-
lero jackets. See them
tomorrow at ........
unds can be paid back at. Many
j believe the prospects for some of
these — notably th* railroads —
may not be bright.
A guy in there was on his way to i
Dallas. He offered me a ride. I
"I thought I was going back for
the rap when they held me 30
CHILD STEALS TRACK
BATTLE CREEK, Mich. —
When Jane Pettibone and Nellie
Collini saw a truck moving down
the street, apparently without a
driver, they followed in their own
car to investigate. To their *ur-
priae, they found an eight-year-old
boy piloting the truck, which had
been stolen. The juvenile auto-
thief was held overnight by po-
lice “for a lesson."
if
s
) D/
Dial 2-9131
- t-----------
.4
2, „3 • ''
To pay interest at
.... 13 NM
0i, •»»<
•12838
00 R. W. COOMBES, Optometrist 94
Down Offices at I
:11:»
am
rakish angle, President Hoover
is shown here (right) at the
White House as he reviewed a
group of boys of the Citizens
Military Training Corps from
By MonRIs DE HAVEN TRACY
United Preas Correspondent
(Copyricht. 1032, by Untted
WASHINGTON, July 27. — It
will take one-half of 1 per cent i
of th* entire national income to |
pay the government 4 per cent
interest on the $7,664,515,201.01
it han invested or has potentially
available for investment in Amer-
ican business.
That means 5 cents out of every
110 received by every man. wom-
an, child, business or corporation
in the United States, will go for
interest to the new, silent parther
In American enterprise. Out of
•very 82.500 income, 212.50 will |
go for such Interest payments.
Interest Must Be Paid.
fowl defeat hawk
MARSHFFIELD, Ore.—When a
chicken hawk. at Port Orford, at-
tacked a brood of chickens, the
mother hen pounced on the hawk
to do battle. The hen was joined
by a drake, who also fought
agalst the common enemy. When
Pearl Purdin, owner of the fowls,
arrived, the hawk was on its back
"taking the count.”
ing the problem of paying out
510,000,000 in unpaid taxes, in-
surance, machinery accounts a i
overhead.”
Other speakers at the meeting
session included H. G. Parr and
Carl Wollner, both of Fort Worth.
C. C. Patterson, Chamber of
Commerce convention manager,
welcomed the ginners. to Fort
Worth, and Robert M. McDonald.
Nacona, responded.
Entertainment was in charge of
T. J. Harrell, convention chair*
man.
Delegates are here from Parker,
Wise, Palo Pinto, Denton, Hood,
Montague and Jack Countie*.
Election of officers arid drec-
tors was scheduled for this after*
noon.
Tatal ---........ .11 SU SU JOO
That sum is equal to 6 per cent
of the aggregate value of all the
farm land In the entire United
States. The Department of Agri-
Duncan left here July 1 to go ■
to the home of his brother. J. A. ‘
SMILING and debonair, with a i
D Hgkt straw hat tilted at a
' $, 2 n
Brassiere type Cat-
alina swim suite.
Just the type you’ll
love. In colors of
Jockey, Avalon,
Jade, S upset or
Black. Sizes 82 to
38. Featured at.,.
County jail 30 days on
But the suma involved are large
Agriculture, the railroads, many i
other enterprises are not ytelding I
much profit from which borrowed
Editor*! Note: a United Preu
iurvey reveah that federal ef-
fort! to cope with problem! arie-
ing largely from the World
War and economic Hit have
J made th. United State! govern-
ment a powerful partner in
American buiineu. Only Soviet
Kunia in the patt if month!
hai poured government fundi
into .ommercidl, induitrial and
agricultural project! on a icale
comparable with the flow of
money from the United Statei
government to iuch undertak-
ing!. Today the United Preu
preient» an article deiigned to
thow how federdl emergency
’ relief and other lending poli-
ciei affect the pocketbook of
every citiren and to measure
in underitandabte figurei the
ertent to which government is
in business.
agriculture can be reduced
more earily understood terms.
In financing agriculture.
uty, who were passing by and
picked him up.
thru the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation, the home loan banks
and other agencies it is ready.to
4 per cent they rapped on th* door.”
• az . Six detectives surrounded
ilation from ,
in the coun-
races shows;
nNKY
:::::::::: «#
w28
i cvNi ’ „
to pav my fine on
SHAWS
Phone 2-3988
United States were turned over
to pay the Interest, it would fall
about 54,000,000 short. The en-
tire peanut crop could.be thrown
In and would just about make up
; the difference.
It paid in wool that interest bill
du* the government would take
nearly the entire crop, or it paid
in hogs, it would require every
10th hog raised each year.
Even tho it is spread over th
entire gricultural industry, the
hog raiser* contribution to hit
silent, financing partner, comes to
89,669,270, That is equivalent to
the hog raiser contributing one
out of each 133 of hi* hog* to
I this purpose.
• Interest* To Be Liquidated.
Th* governmeht in all of this
, financing of bustness, specifies
from tima to time that it 1* a
j temporury measure, designed to
relieve a temporary situation. The
government’s investment
like this:
Outstanding loans to tarmers
texe lusive of farm mort-
Laans for farmer co-opeFa:
tives (Parm Board i
Lonns on tarun mortences
zig. One hour before this'pic-
ture was taken, a group of
bonus marchers who attempted
to picket the Executive Mansion
had been dispersed. . “ •
It will require $72,953,648 out of
the nation's farm hcome to pay it.
The aggregate income of agricul-
ture, Including the livestock indus-
try and the Income from forest
products of all kind, in 1929 (the
latest Department og Agriculture
figures available) was $10,146,
720,000, which means that, on
the basis of that figure, It will
take three-quarters of 1 per cent
of the total cash income of agri-
culture, livestock and forest prod-
uct industries to pay the bill.
stated differently, it.means that
out of every $2,500 of agricultural
or allied cash income, 918.75 will
go directly or Indirectly toward
making that Interest payment,
if the entire beat cup of the
Telling a story of an escape
made while he was drinking in a
speakeasy near the penitentiary '
proceed 'immediately with the
work.
In Oklahoma In- 1915 and two
years from Tarrant County In
19 25 on a burglary charge.
Glassford Without Orders
the l
army veterans from government ... ____
buildings near the Capitol failed i ton, 715 Essex Avenue, by te
to materialize today when Police I Impertal County sheritt and a dep-
318.000.000 Superintendent Pelham D. Glass-
ford said he was without orders
ilj
COMMITTEE
13,28
: 1 80;
:x22 #
ii//8222
.... 464
RAL
41 « 44 Kansas City . 28.00
814 “ “ Chicago . . 49.00
113 “ “ Cleveland. . 70.45
18 “ “ Nsw York . . 102.45
10% Off on Round Trips
Fores include Lunches Aloft
2 Services Daily—10:20 am— 9:00 pm
to clear the grounds. Glassford
permitted the men to remain in
their ’billets.
Wrecking contractors, sched-
uled to begin razing the buildings
after th-y had been emptied of
the veterans,^abandoned plans to
charges, Atkinson laughed at
Fort Worth detectives for *ur-
house while Detectives J w
Sweeney and Ed Weatherford
made the arrest.
El Centro. 1
a collapse
d last Sat-
“In the light of these facts, it
is clearly evident,” the Anti-
Saloon League concluded, “that
1 3
177c
There is no extra charge for this service.
You may place your ad before 10 a. m. for
publication in that afternoon’s PRESS.
Just call 2-9131 and a courteous adwriter
will gladly assist you in writing a result .
producing advertisement.
Says Farmers Will Revolt
Unless Farm Board
Is Stopped
By pited Press.
KANSAS CITY, Mo., July 26.-
The people of Kansas will revolt
“if something is not done about
this farm board,” the state's
wheat queen told the congres-
sional committee investigating
government interference with pri-
vate enterprise here today.
Her sleeves rolled above bare
arms, tanned and strong, Mrs. Ida
Watkins, of Sublette, who seeds
4500 acres of wheat each season,
pounded the table as she empha-
sizd her remarks’.
“I just want to kick the devil
out of the farm board,” she said,
■her tones bitter as she addressed
Rep. Joseph B. Shannon of Mis-
souri, committee chairman, and
other members,
A large group of wheat growers
who had come to the hearing with
Mrs. Watkins nodded approval.
“No matter whether Hoover or
Roosevelt is elected, if som
is not done, there will be a re-
volt," Mrs. Watkins continued.
"That is what the people of Kan-
sas are talking about.”
Shannon interrupted, asking if
the wheat farmer, in her opinion,
was capable of taking care of him-
self.
“You bet your life he is," was
the defiant reply, and her eyes
flashed as her fist crashed down
on the table to emphasize her
words.
Shannon smiled, apparently
well satisfied, and asked 'Mrs.
Watkins who she blamed for the
farm depression. The reply was
prompt:
“The doggoned, damnable In-,
terference of government in husl-
EESEXAMINED
- c -ntiHc Methods
B, nw— Sei
-mE—
By THOMAS HURST.
Because he wanted to see his
80-year-old mother here, to whom
prison officials said he wrote
every day, B. E. Atkinson is head-
ed for “the walls" again.
“Sure, I knew I Shouldn't come
to Fort Worth," the 34-year-old
fugitive from- the Arkansas pent-.|
tentiary grinned in city jail. "But
I wanted to see her."
Atkinson rubbed a blond stub-
ble and sighed.
"I guess it's The county road for
N
Gay little affairs of slacks with
bandana blouses, some have um-
brella to match. Others in nau-
tical designs. 6 to 16 sizes.
Priced for clearance, now......
Catalina, all wool
swim suits in sglid
colors with ap-
pliqued designs. In
red, Avalon blue,
navy, green or
black. 34 to' 42
sizes. Formerly to
$4. For clearance
culture estimates that the farmer
is in debt to an aggregtte of $9,-
468,526,000. On the basis of that
figure, roughly stated, the govern-
ment holds onerfirth of the entire money all |f to be |(, back |
loan business of the agricultural I - — -i- •e. I
industry.
Agriculture Pays.
A glance at what.it will require
to maintain this Investment of the
government in agriculture, may be
even more revealing. •
If the government is to get 4
Fort Washington, Md., and Fort
Myer, Va. At the President’s
right is Lieut. Col. C. A. un-
N
—
.... . .i . .. .2.. rounding the home of his mother
indtton.Po tentia wt.dd 8185,514 in southwest Fort Worth.
77c
s! income according to the De-
partment of Commerce, for the
year , 1 930 was 160.000.000,000.
The 1306,640,605.o<| required for ;
a 4 per cent return on the gov-
ernment’s hare In American bust- l
nesa is on-halt of 1 per cent of
that sum.
Perhaps the 21.545.541.200
mortgage,the government has on
Detectiyes had been watching
the house since receiving a letter
from the warden of the Arkansas
penitentiary saying Atkinson
'wrote his mother daily and prob-
ably would attempt to see her.
Blames Liquor.
Atkinson insisted, he wouldn't
have run away from the peniten-
tiary "If I hadn't been drunk."
-By MARHALL MeNEIL
Corrupondsnt for Ths Press
WASHINGTON, July 27. — Po-
litical observers here hold that
more than a quarter of a million
Texans can’t be wrong, and that
the state’ actually wants to vote
again on prohibition and actually
is damp.
But the Anti-Saloon League of
America issued a formal statement
today, w.hlch began: “Claims that
Texas has gong wet are mislead-
ing.”
The manifesto, which pooh-
. poohed the referendum and call-
ad it a "raw ballot,” contihues:
Democratic Pledge.
"There are several significant
facts to be considered with re-
spect to the straw vote taken in
the Texas Democratic primary on
July 23, for or against submis-
sion by the 73rd Congress of the
question of retaining or repeal-
ing the 18 th Amehdment to be
submitted to conventions especial-
ly elected to consider that ques-
tion alone.
“It was taken in a Democratic
primary in which only Democrats
could participate. The primary
law of the state is so framed as,to
require a pledge to support party
nominees, a rule designed to dis-
eourage voting by thousands Of
dry citizens who refused to sup-
port the wet Democratic presiden-
tial nominee in 1928 and who did
not care to commit themselves to
vote for a wet presidential Candi-
date in 1932.
"Non-Binding Vote."
"The vote was of a non-binding
or straw ballot character. Mere-
ly requesting the people,to express
themselves upon whether they fa-
vored petitioning Congress to sub-
mit the question of the retention
or repeal of the 18th Amendment.
In non-binding referenda it has
been the general policy of the dry
organizations to discourage par-
ticipation. The question was not
mandatory, as is shown, by the
fact that the authorities in ap-
Tlny tots' 2 to 8-year
sun suits in yellow,
blue, red, green or
orange. Regular tUic
values, tomorrow, for
clearance, 77c. —
Meacham'!
Second Floor
gp
printed, or diagonal striped
slacks. Some have bandana tops.
Also white, colored and striped
sport blouses. Formerly 81, now,
each................... ,., J
Kiddies' Play Suits to $1.50
Comptroller Will Investigate
Group Affairs
ByUniteiPreas.
WASHINGTON, July 27. —
Chairman MeNgry of th* Senate
agriculture committee reported to
President Hoover today that
Comptroller General J. J. McCarl
had been instructed to “take over
the books of the Farm Board” for
examination of all transactions.
McCarl will report to the Senate
sub-committee which has been
authorised to investigate the
board.
gan and Ernest Gray, police (
characters who have been sought
in connection with the Grapeland
bank robbery, were charged here
today with robbing the Spring
State Bank of 87,380 last May 24. j
The two suspects have not
been arrested.
The charges were filed after
employes of the Spring bank In-
spected pictures developed from
films found in an automobile near I
Grapeland shortly after two men
robbed the Frrmers A- Merchants
State Bank there of 81,700 July !,
The pictures showed Morgan
end Gray with two women.
Smart white, red, blue solids,
Kiddie*’ Beach Hat*
Novel straw hats
for kiddies' play C E ’
hours. Formerly "/ ) 6
79c, Choice, now 4 • %
\
___________________________________________■
(Farm Loan Nari 1,156,707,000
proximately one-fifth of the coun-
! ties, some of them among the }
most populous, refused to put the i pict... Fim. w..... , e , .11
, question on the ballot. No one ’ tureEilm Found In Car Lead I
(knows how these counties would . " -nares
> By United Press. I
HOUSTON. July 27.—Ivy Mor-, I
Greater Reductions On
ness. I am holding around 40,-
000 bushels of wheat from last
year's crop, and' the mortgages
are going to take every acre of
my grain land if something doesn't
happen soon.
“I trusted to God and the farm
board and built three large gran-
aries in which to store my wheat.
I’ve been working hard ever since
shoveling the grain.” I
I
CINCT *
A
CINCT 1
1#
"‘im
INCT t
M
I. PLAC I I
g
' "aBes
hagu
Meacham'! Second Floor
I Fine for lounging upon the sand, -
J Terry cloth, basket weave and
A Crash robes in solids and prints.
( Formerly to $3.93, now........
The citizen probably never will ,
reatize this, for the payment will I
not be made in taxes. The gov-
ernment, thru loans to agricul-
ture; to business thru the Recon-
s'ru'ion Finance Corporation, and
thru other channels, has taken its
Interest in business ss s lender
of. money, not as a stockholder.
But ths interest has to be paid,
and is paid iudirectly out of ths
national Ihrome—just as interest
is paid to J. P. Morgsn & Com-
pany on the bonds of American
Industry that It holds.
Surrey-by the United Press has
shown that ths government, sines j
1916' when it departed from Its
’traditional policy of keeping out
of business with the launching of
ths United States Shipping Board,
has loaned or invested In Amer-
ican bustness $3,096,320,687.01
Duncan, Ocean Beach, Calif., and
was found unconscious under a
railroad water tank at Niland.
Calif. ’
M"h*a "
Me*,
-d-i
Beach Sandal* to $1.65
Women’s and Children's
White, suntan,
red, green, yel-
low, red beach r •
sandals, with or *de
Without heels. •d 7 ke
Now ........
Meacham’i Main Floor
STOP THAT ITCH
In One Minute
tt la netually surprisine to ms how
quiekly sura, coolins liquid, antiseptie I
ODD Preneription relleves thszUehlns l
tostures of eczema, scales, eruftiona,
rashes and other akin atrietiona. Thirty
years' suecess recommend thia remedy,
orisinated by Dr. D D. Dennis, Its eentie
olla penetrate tha akin, soothine and heal-
ins the inflamed tissues. Clear and stain-
leea—dries up elmoat Immediately. Try
D D. D. Preseription today. If the very
flrat Applieation does not inatantly re-
lieve even the moat Intenae itehine, your
money back 3Sc All drusslate—Adv.
Mmmmde?-s
Blame President Hoover For
Low Ginning Prices
Cotton ginners of the 22nd and
28th Districts of the Texas asso-
ciation today blamed President
Hoover with reduction of the price
of ginning below actual costs of
operation.
The charge came from J. C.
Thompson of Dallas, executive sec-
retary, Texas Cotton Ginners As-
sociation, as he addressed 60 gin-
ners of the two districts at The
Texas.
In his plea for fair returns to
the cotton ginner, Thompson, te
of the need for a general survey
to show the cost of ”e' teient gin-
ning.”
He deplored government inter-
ference in agriculture and its re-
lated industries, criticizing espe-
cially the work of the Federal
Farm Board.
"President Hoover’s patriotic
attempt to save American farmers
resulted in reducing ginning
Trading whisky for gasoline
soon got him overstocked with
liquor and he had to sell some of
It, an aged and bent filling sta-
tion operator told Judge James C.
Wilsn today in federal court.
Allen Bayer, 62, Mineral Wells,
the operator, told his story in
pleading guilty to a charge of sell-
ing two pints to federal liquor
agents. The judge suspended a
six months’ sentence.
William DeLong, 19, Palo
Pinto, was given suspended sen-
tences on nine counts of raising
bills.
He told Judge Wilson that he
learned how to counterfeit the
certificates from a fellow patient
in an Arkansas hospital.
He was given two years in the
Chillicothe, Ohio, reformatory and
two years in- Leavenworth peni-
tentiary, suspended for two years.
Others sentenced on pleas of
guilty were:
Ira L. Bradafear, 20, Paducah. Ky.. 11
months, lor violation of ths Mann set;
Aines Jean Hill, 10. one year, suspended,
tor impersonatine a tederal agent; Bud
Spuril, 10. 30 days and 11.000, suspended,
liquor violation. B F. Underwood. elx
months and 1100. tor liquor violation;
Jack Harper and Leslie Parks, 11 months,
tor transporting stolen auto; John Mat-
thews. 22, negro. Six months and 1500.
suspended, for liquor violation; Arnold W
Fuller, 15. 11-months in the penitentiary I
and 15 months, suspended for theft of I
moll: Ed Tisdale, Oklahoma City, 11
months, for transporting stolen eutof Al i
■tar. schenctady. N. T„ three years In I
Leavenworth penitentiary for trehsportlng I
stolen auto.
mayg
,7
i \
..)
4 •
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Sheldon, Seward R. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 258, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 27, 1932, newspaper, July 27, 1932; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547339/m1/3/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.