Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 89, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 26, 1947 Page: 1 of 6
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FIVE CENTS PER COPY •
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 26, 1947
L YEAR, NO. 89
FOOD PRICES SPIRAL TO ALL-TIME HIGH
S CHARGE AGAINST
OVER HOLY LAND
IRKS U.S. CONGRESSMEN
0
$
«
Until the Uni- be admitted to Palestine
ool off
"*N
.4R
t
-
7
f
driven Jew."
• photo.)
mediate future.
people think noma
C. of C. Board
to
I
BY PROCTOR
will at a JayCee luncheon . . . RAY
Mrs. Ophelia Milstead Burleson.
1
DALLAS Tex
Records
10
Cost of the tickets will be $3.00.
Al
per
Legislation to
tonlo 57 per cent.
Sent to Congress
Off on Tour
The dairy meeting will be held
the fair labor standards act.
The Weather
1
o
et,,
CLEBURNE
Dr. Robeif
was idle.
2 HN
t
. ..
G‘
Three Texas Golden Glove Champs
Remain in National Meet Running
ley Decision
ayed Again
Green Changes
View on Wagner
Act Amendment
Ophelia Burleson,
Cleburne Resident
For 45 Years Dies
. Feb
the
. 30
. 37
rectors voted to sponsor the 4-H
and FFA club calf beef show to
Early editions of afternoon news-
papers all over the country benefit-
ina Reds
port Gains
York a few weeks ago on the day
he was to have sailed for London
chapel, with Rev J. W. Bruner of-
ficiating Interment will be in the
Mrs. John Walraven
Dies in Dallas
That newa was tempered, how-
ever, with the prospect that prices
meanwhile may stay at the pres-
ent level or even rise slightly. No
large drop is expected in the Im-
suggested a "streamlined" gene-
ra) assembly session which would
be confined to the Palestine staffs
in New York, rather than dele-
gates coming in from all over
l the world.
lations can deal with it.
the agitation could be at
educed until the matter can
t before the United Nations
Britain
Douglas is a former member of
i conaidering
lion,
7397
■ M
By V. S. Weather Bureau.
Ms arts am Field, Ft Werth
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26. (UR) —
President Truman today nominat-
Louis Moon and wife to J Wes-
ley Hook. Johnson County acre-
age.
of the event were turned over to
the agriculture committee of the
organization.
HOUSE CLEARS WAY
FOR ANTI-POSTAL PAY LAW
Dairy Specialist
To Be Here Friday
J. W. Davis of. Texas A. A M.
College, state supervisor for the
Dairy Hard Improvement Associa-
1 tion will confer with dairymen here
■ Friday at 2 p.m., C. A. Munsch,
SECURE SUGAR
STAMPS AT DALLAS
ROGER ■. COLLINS
STILL GRAVELY ILL
Roger H. Collins, who has been
gravely ill at the Cleburne hos-
pital for the past week, is re-
ported to be very low today.
ou>dy
.. 44 8 a.m. ... .
.. 444 S a.m.......
42 110 am. .....
.. 42/12 Noon ...
Tuesday
2 pm. ... ,
4 p.m. -----
0 p.m.....
8 p.m .i.
10 pan.....
12 pm
Lewis W. Douglas
Named Ambassador
To Great Britain
f
committees present, L.
vice president presided I
1
k 2
viewed the workings of the onion I
acreage plan now being Inaugur- 1c. KFaK
aled in Cleburne. He urged bus- ' Council BaCks ACM
KT. mengrowupgpprogrnam boost ! Anti-Hazing Rules
nl auction by used cars and
sold by the city were $100
Dallas city purchasing
Blan Dysart said prices brbu
SICILIANS FLEE AS ”
MOUNT ETNA ERUPTS
36
as
27
| to assume his post.
Dollar-a-Pound Bacon Predicted
As Hog Market Goes Upward
department
food prices
may turn down again even before
wNvuSTGATON ot «to tremendous explosion that devhsta
block area in the heart at Loa Angeles’ industrial distri
around a missing chief chemist, Dr. Robert McGee, o th
Wlectro-Plating plant which was completely demolished.
ingin the blast, which killed is persopa, to Dr. MoGes
26. um5—
money. the
children and "ovon "reatwrandt
today than during the last
of city equipment two me
ago.
I bers to lay down in block and ,
white the program object ives.
With directors and chairmen of I
IS
ning performance on March
1 House Labor Committee which is
FIELD HOUSE STAND COLLAPSES AT PURDUE—A new bleacher alien collapsed Monday night in the Purdhe University Hold house,
killing two students and injuring 200 more. This was the scene which m • other spectators’ eyos just 20 soconda after the stand* fell. (NBA Tel
baton and pork chopewas 1 newa
from’the used ear markets, 7
trucks
loner
Don Broeking, Purdue senior and
freelance photographer who learned
to take pictures in the Air Corps,
took an amazing shot 20 seconds
after the glands collapsed.
"It was just another game up to
half tnme," Broe king nald. "Then
there was a swelling scream. The
bleachers were collapsing. It was
the most horrifying sound I ever
heurd. My first thought was to get
! ip ther and get someone out. But
i I couldn't from my ponition in the
—eleeny w Uigurcd L'd better geta
picture Everythinz seemed to hap-
pen slowly but I know it couldn't
have been over 20 seconds after
the bleachers fell that I shot the
picture."
Broekinu rushed his picture to u
Cleburne TIMES-REVIEW
—NBA TELEPHOTO PICTURES- — Published Daily Except Saturday United Press Leased Wire Service
Sowell, four lots Bellevue addi-
tion.
labor reform legisla-
small darkroom in die basement of a ,
fraternity house . developed the neg- Cleburne cemetery. The body will
plember, where it can be
full, tolerant and impartial
e
oou Ella Taylor: three song. John
Taylor of Fort Worth, Ray Taylor
ot Clovis, N. M., and Floy Taylor
of Parker; three daughters Mm.
- “ “ C. F.
Parker Resident,
Dies on Tuesday
William Thomas Taylor, 8,
resident of Parker for fifty years,
den,_________________
EuKAupm 0 - E ■
COLLEGE STATION, Feb. 20 (UR).
1 New anti-hazing rules were Sack-
ed unanimously today gy the acad-
emic council at Texas A&M College.
"The primary purpose of the In-
Maximum temperature 40 degrees
in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 35 degrees
in pace 24 hours.
Maximum temperature 07 degrees
a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 51 degrees
a year ago today.
be held about mid-April Details
stitution is to provide opportunity
of educational accomplishment, and 1
hazing stifles individual initiative Wm. T. Taylor, 89,
and seriously interferes with studi- — - — - -
died Tuesday afternoon al the
residence. He was a retired farmer,
and a charter member of the Par-
ker Baptist church.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday afternoon at 2 o’clock
from the Parker Baptist church,
with Rev, W C. Williamson of
Big Spring and Rev. A. M. Bryant
of Parker, officiating. Interment
will be in the Parker cemetery.
The body will be in state at Dillon
Funeral home until Thursday at
1 p.m.
Pallbearers will be the grand-
eons. Jodie Taylor, C. P. Germany,
Jr., John T. Stuart, Tommy Wil-
liams, Harmon Moore, and Pearl
Ellis.
* ’ ’ 1
Survivors are his widow, Mrs.
summer. A labor department eco-
nomist lx on record, however, ns
belleving that the cost of living
as measured in retail prices will
hit a new high by June. The oust
of living includes rent and other
things besidegfood.
-2
dam
determine whether
. . . Patrons standing in line to
catch the reopening presentation
at the TEXAS THEATER
Little JANE PATRICK reluctant-
ly truddling into DR JOWELL’S
arms as NURSE LEE OWENS looks
for a stick of candy while mother.
LILLIAN and Grandmother JOIN-
ER look on . . CECIL STEWART
and WIFE supervising the redec-
orating of the home they pur-
chased on Bellevue Drive from the
GEORGE-CORFIN’S, wbo are mov-
ing to Galveion . . . EARL BANDY
commenting on how much a little
cleanup and paint can change the
complexion of a place, reference
made to co-worker JAMES EARI.
i STANDLEY’S new place of busi-
ness a block down the street . . .
place to be open soon.
In Cleburne prices an ’ soma
pork and bacon had advanced as
I much as 14 cents per pound. Ham
, also advanced.
LaFAYETTE, Ind , Veb M.-Two
student photographers performed in
I the hiuhest tradition ot speedy pro-
j fessionuls to rush dramatic pie-
i tures of the Purdue buskethall stand
| collapse to the Acme Tvlepho-
. to leused wire, which distributed
i them throughout the country.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26. (U.P) — [county agent has announced.
The House rules committee today
cleared the way for House action 1 in the county agent’s office. All
tomorrow on anti-portal pay leg- dairymen are invited to attend 2
islation despite some Democratic the meeting. Possibility of secur-
objections that It would scuttle Ing GI training in connection with
the fair labor standards act, the testing will be discussed.
6..,
ed Lewis W Douglas, insurance ' to go Man Mountain JAWN’ | in the ahsence of Roy Anderson, _
executive and former budget di- I ROBERSON looking quite spiffy in j who is president. COTTR "THOTTS F
rector, to be ambassador to Great 1 a new dark sutt -fresh hntreut; • Th soart votea to set MoneyVV-- ---VVN-
March 10 at Cleburne Day at the
JACK BROWN spreading good
able to amend the Wagner Labor ।
Act to guurantee omployers "the
right of free speech," mid to require
unions to file finaneial reportn and
register with the government.
He did ku in testimony before the
etalons in last night's third round
bouts while _______________
TThree other Texans dropped out
in the first round last night, while
• presidential prospect and
mer governor at MinnenulA
rold E Stassen. Boards a plene
LaGuardta Field, N. V bonnd
Europe and Asla, where en •
rate citizen, ha will obmere
economic condition in 17
Present were: Gary Knippa, C.
A Munsch, Byron Crosier, Paul
Robertson, Doyle Stalcup, Walter
Pou, Hunter Pearson, Lee Battle,
W. A. Sanders, Jere Swatzell, J.
Lambert Lain. M. D. Carper, L. D.
Aston, William Rawland, H. C.
Custard, Gayland Davis, Herman
Brown, Charles Peyton and Jack
D. Brown.
stive Snd rushed It into Indianapo-
Ils, where the Indianapolis Times
transmitted the picture on the Acme >
Telephoto leased line.
Meanwhile Bob Schmidt, another
Purdue senior who had a small
Speed Graphic, was shouting other
dramatic pictures close up on the 1
floor of the uym. where Injured and
dazed vpectators lay amid shattered 1
timbers. He shot six pictures with 1
flash bulbs then opened his lens ■
and shot three more by gym light- '
Ing
Aided by Don Frankenberry and
Hap Bailey, classmates who hold
pilots licenses, Schmidt tried to ob- l
tain. an airplane to fly the pictures i
to the Acme Bureau in Chicago.
The Lafayette field had no lights
so they took turn* driving an auto- 1
mobile during the night to Chicago. 1
75, resident of Cleburne for the ,
past 45 years, died Tuesday, after- PRICES 83•, HIGHER
noon at 5:20 o'clock, al her home, THAN LAST YEAR
corner of Woodbine und Spruce.
Mrs. Burleson was born on Sept.-
Cloudy tonight and Thursday with
light rain beginning late Thursday
afternoon or night. Not so cold
tonight and little change other-
wise. Lowest temperature tonight
near 36. Highest Thrsday near
44.
EAST TEXAS; Mostly Cloudy to-
night. Thursday partly cloudy,
slightly colder in north portion
tonight with lowest temperatures
26 to 32 degrees in extreme north
portion. Moderate north to north-
east winds on the coast.
chances are you can buy what you
want tediv in the department
stores of Texas.
A survey by the Federal Reserve
Bank today disclosed that mer-
chandise stocks of department
stores in malor.Texas cities were
83 per cent higher to January than
in the same month a year ago.
Houston ledthe parad otni
If you have
byionanaona sa
Truman and former Secretary of
Sol Eloom D, N Y for- : Sta te James F Byrnes......
hairman of the committee, I "Bevin. Celler,said. is simp >
Bevins statement "just seeking excuses for his damnable
stupid" Bloom said Repub- conduct and forthe continuance
and Democrats agreed therelo the nefarious MateDonald White
othing »olitical an Mr Tru- , paper of 1939 whish slammed the
r__j gates of Palestine against the
Nally, Lloyd Abbott, Lionel Set-
tles, Oste Wakeland, Melvin Bolt
and Walter Lightfoot.
Survivors are two sons, George
Earl Milstead of Cleburne and
Elmer Milstead of Godley; two
daughters, Mrs. Opal Scott of Ft.
Worth and Mrs. Ruby MeHanna
of Denver, Colo.; two sisters, Mrs.
Cora Roberts of Venita, Oklahoma
and Mrs. Eddie Smithson of Was-
co, Calif.; two brothers, Charles
Pope of Wasco, Calif., and Daniel
E. Pope of Stinnett, Tex.
Congress from Arizona, He has
been President of the Mutual
Life Insurance company of New
York since January 1910.
As ambassador to Britain, Doug-
las will take the place that was
to have been filled by O. Max
Gardner. G ardner died in New
Baggett had little trouble in de-
cisibning Lyle Seydel of Cedar
Rapids, la., but Henderson had to
come from behind to pound out
a decision over Grover Masterson
of Chattanooga, Tenn.
Welterweight Wallace Willard
of Houston was nosed out in the
final round by Cornelius Smith
of Los Angeles after battling on
even terms for the first two:
middleweight Tommy Barron of
too JACK WHITWORTH prowl-
ing around and about the town , Southwestern Exposition and Fat .
with his camera, ready for a ; Stock Show to be held in Fort
. . . , "wv, pvle i » •'Worth. A block of 100 rodeo tick-
quick shot PHIL PRINE plan- leta has been Ordered for the eve-
ning a fishing trip nuw that bas-
ketball season has closed.
Amarillo. Tex attorney has Lie. UN secretary general. In New
nominated to be federal York
PRICE ON BACON UP.
CARB DOWN — DALLAS *
DALLAS, Tex., Feb. 26, (U.RTh
news was fifty-fifty today ‘tor
people without either bacon nor
an automobile
Balancing all-time high priees
for hogs which experts said
would result (a dollar-a-pownd
WASHINGTON, Feb 26 IU.P
AFI. President William Green con-
ceded today Umi it might be denir-
ENGLAND MAY SEEK
TO BUSH UN DELIBERATION
LONDON, Feb. 26 (U.P— A high
government source revealed today
that Great Britain is exploring the
possibility of bringing the Pales-
tine issue before a special gen-
eral assembly meeting of the '
United Nations before the sched-
uled September session.
Sir Alexander Cadogan. Britain's
representative on the UN Security
Council, the source said, has
opened discussions with Trygve
Chiang Kai-Shek to oust the'
nunists from the Province.";
broadcast said.
must and will bring about
gravest consequences to the
ralissimo’s armies.”
s Communist-claimed victory
ved reports from Mukden that
00 Communist troops in Man-
a had opened a great offen-
across the Sungari River in
sumption of China's smoui-
g civil war.
' one pursuits,” the council declar-
i ed.
Regulations opposing hazing at
। the tradition-bound cadet school
touched off a week-long dispute sev-
eral weeks ago, when members of
the Cadet Corps staged a midnight
protest march to the home of the
President Olb Gilchrist. ,
Wednesday
42 2 a.m
41 4 a.m. .
CHICAGO, Feb. 26. (UP—Three
Texae Golden Gloves champions
remained in the running today as
the ■ tournament of champions
moved Into the quarterfinal round.
They were flyweight Buddy
Baggett of Dallas, featherweight
Bill Henderson ofi Levelland and
lightweight Pvt Dan Stipanovtoh
of Fort Sam Houston
Baggett and Henderson won de-
ANGHAI, Feb. 26. (U.P—The
nunist radio at Yenan said
r that "seven Nationalist di-
u were annihilated'' in the
n area by Communist troops.
B broadcast claimed that
nunist forces had captured
1 and Laiwu, towns 50 and
lies from Tsinan
lie unprecedented victory in
lung province has thoroughly
ered the plan of Genera lis-
"Mr Bevins statement is stu-
pid stupid, stupid.' Bloom said
"He just doesn’t know what he's
talking about. Everything he
said is just not true,"
Rep. Emanuel Celler. D.. N Y.,
another—heavyweight Ralph Judd
of Corpus Christi—was disquall-
fled because of a swollen thumb
received in training.
STILL MISSING IN COAST BLAST
nomination reopened a Iqng-
ng feud between Texas
rs Tom Connally and W
Daniel over patronage ap-
nib.
Epiteena
DEEDS FILED
Pearl Westbrook to Charlie
Boyd, et. ux., 'to acres Shelton
It was the first time Green had
gone on recot d thut some new labor *
leuislation might be desirable. In it
receut yuppeurance before the Sen-
ate labor committee he made u blan-
ket denouncement of pending labor
legislation and was advised then
to abandon hin "negative" attitude.
Under intensive questioning by
Rep Clare Hoffman, R., Mich., an
advocate of stringent labor legisla-
tion, Green suid-
"The Wagner Act might be
amended to grant free speech to
employers and to make unions file
financial reports and register with
the government.”
---- ----------------— * * *
New Manager College Students Secure Pictures
eets " Of Gym Bleacher Collapse at Purdue
Jack D Brown new manager
of the chamber o/ commerce out-
lined his prospective program
of work at a meeting of the
board of directors held Tuesday
! afternoon. Brown, whose suggested
I program -was given the approval
________ [ of the board, will start imme
__________ ' diately to blueprint a program o
_________ [ work for the chamber of com
i merce in 1947 and in tuture years
it f .This will be handled by a serieL,
JOI Rs! of meetings with board members,
' standing commiteemen and mem- i
ted by their enterprise, which was
highly praised by Acme executives.
For the benefit of Cleburne
housewiyes who have been in
doubt about information concern-
ing sugar ration stamps, all such
problems will henceforth be
handled by the OPA sugar di-
vision. 601 Fidelity Budding. Dal-
las. Texas. It was learned here
today.
Several courthouse offices have
been receiving many calls daily
from people with rationing diffi-
culties.
counters with stocks up
rent over a year ago.
23, 1871, in Oklahoma She wan
a member of the Baptist church.
Funeral services will be held
i Thursday afternoon at DHlon
AVIS BOYD and LAVERNE
SMITH, looking pretty as they en-
gage in conversation over cups of
coffee . . MARGIE BREWER and
LELA GOBER following the same
pattern in an adjoining bootli . . .
JANE LIGHTFOOT looking fresh
_ as a daisy and smart as a new
'Unify' Armed Forces "AUKn arlkir
bent to Congress : Introducing a guest at a luncheon
lie in state al the chapel.
Pallbearera will be L P Me-
s .lbte bidu
04
and VICINITY:
DAVIS dressed for work and ready | pnnanK
survey
The chamber of commerce dl- * Cecil Stewart and wife to T M
WASHIGTON, Feb. 26 (UP) —
President Truman sent to Congress
legislation to "unify" the army,
navy and air forces under a single
secretary of national defense.
The "unification" proposal
agreed to by the army, navy and
chiefs of staff ts not an actual
merger of the services, but rather
their coordination under one sec-
retary.
The navy which had opposed
the proposals for an actual mer-
ger. won a major point by preserv-
ing under its command its own
air forces. -
SHINTON, Feb 26. (U.P —
Senate judiciary committee,
ng along straight party lines.
I voted 7 to 6 to delay' de-
1 on the Texas judgeship
sation of Joe B Dooley until
BI "character and back-
d" report on the lawyer can
btained.
CATANIA, Sicily, Feb. 26 (U.P
— Mount Etna erupted today,
spewing down its slopes a six-
mile long river of molten lava
which had crept within a mile
and a half of the village of
Passo Piscario.
The spectacular eruption of
Europe's highest volcano threw
thousands of Sicilians in terror.
They .fled from the slopes and
hills of Catania and many
gat tiercel nt churches to pray
for safety.
Sherman was outpointed by Bob
Stover of Cincinnati. O._ when the _________—
latter used his longer reach to Joe Nunn Ot Tarkor, Mr. _ -
advantage, and light-heavyweight Germany ot Parker and Mr. C' h
"onmod, 0, -.EanS.
despite an aggressive third round, children.
LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Feb. 26. (U.P)
(USDA)—Cattle 1,700. Active and
strong. Medium and good slaugh-
ter steers and yearlings 16.00-
22.00. Medium and good stocker
yearlings and steers 15.00-18.00.
- Calve/ 550. Active and strong.
Good and choice slaughter calves
1750-21.00.
Hogs 1100. Butcher hogs 50-1.00
lower than Tesday’s average.
Stocker pigs mostly 50 lower. Good
and chice 180-399 lbs 27.00-50.
Good and choke 325-450 Iba. 26000-
7B. Good and choice 150-175 Iba.
24.50-26.75.
A
4s --
steers, hogs, sheep and
lambs. Only raisins and cur-
ranis of the 31 foods on
which the Index Is based showed
declinen
Although commodity markets
I me booming now, agriculture do-
। partment officials believe the
second hnlf of Ilie year should
liilng substinitially tower prices
for most food* " 33 5 •
The agriculture
fa ' 1 , 3:
Kuss Gh-Ada
et judge in the northern dis- special session Is feasible
or Texas I The British were said to have
nmittee chairman Alexander
. R„ Wts.. said it "should
cessed" that there “la no re-
n whatsoever on Mr Dooley
king for this report."
□in May Take Palestine Issue
Special UN Assembly Meeting
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26. <«’•'—British foreign sec-
y Ernest Bevin was denounced by several congress-
today for his charge that President Truman wrecked ,
Its to ‘settle the Palestine problem with his pre-elec-
appeal for Jewish immigration into the Holy Land,
rhe angriest reaction came from Democratic ranks.
Rep. Charles A. Eaton, New Jersey Republican and
man of the House foreign affairs committee, agreed
Bevin's remark was "fraught with passion and fear."
ton said the Palestine
em should be allowed man's request that 100,000 Jews
Ije
Ah,
! G. E Milstead el. ux., Io Jaffer-
Charles Peyton expresacd nis“onebrg“mnecominteanapdirtion
pleasure in working for the cham- Cecil Stewart, three lots Bellevue
tier of commerce the Pas three i addition N
year. Board members, through a J0e Whitley 3 A Miller, Tar-
special mot ton voted into the rant County acreage
minutes, extended a hearty vote DIVORCES
of appreciation and gratitude fori John ( Singleterry vs Charlie
job well during try “ i Marie singleterry, granted.
' Catherine Johnson vs. T. J
C A Munsch, county agent, re- Johnson, grunted
New High on Foods Will Drop
Before Summer Officials Say
NEW YORK, Feb. 26, (U.P Wholesale food prices
have reached an all-time high with recent sharp advances
I in hogs anti wheat, Dun 4 Brailstreet, Inc., reported today. J
The Dun 4 Bradstreet index for 31 foods In general ]
। use reached $6.62 yesterday, as compared with $6.47 in
: the preceding week, and was 13 cents above the previous
high of $6 19 established on Nov. 19, 1916. A year ago
the index stooil at $4.16.
Price increases during the week were registered in
flour, wheat, corn, rye, oats, barley, hams, bellies, lard,
I butter, cottonseed oil, cocoa,
Word has been received here of
the death at Mrs. John Walraven.
81, at the home of a daughter in
Dallas early this morning. Mrs.
Walraven, who lived in Cleburne
for yean.' had been quite ill for
the part week.
Funeral service* will be held
from the Weaver-Holt funeral
home in Dallas at 10:30 o’clock
Thursday morning, and a short
service will be held at the Sand
Flat cemetery when the cortege
arrives, about 1:30 o'clock in the
afternoon.
Survivors are one daughter, Mrs.
E. H. Ellermann of Dallas, and
one son, Fred Walraven of Ennis
baf
hhh "U <
"-392
L 1VhE, c"
Christi reported a gain of 104 ner
rent.- Dalia* of 67 per cent, Fort
Worth 79 per cent and San An-
AllceShemitaibe --m
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 89, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 26, 1947, newspaper, February 26, 1947; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562632/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.