Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 16, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 16, 1950 Page: 2 of 8
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DRILY SPECIRL
Monday, September 18
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Tuesday of September at the
church.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Monden
and son of Gainesville visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Camp-
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Bruce Barton Says:
A PROGRAM FOR OUR
RELATIVES
Our pledge to you: Consist-
ently low prices ALWAYS!
TRY US!
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WISHING WELL
Registered U. S. Patent Office.
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30 Years Ago...
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way of making a living,” Bennett
said. “I had to say something
definitely with my songs because,
while I could sing, I wasn’t very
articulate as a speaker.”
The 255th Regiment of the 63rd
division of the 7th Army was
what convinced Bennett that he
should stick to singing.
—ERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every
X X day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune.
Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or "
more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is
your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rec-
tangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then
read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
Copyright 1949, by William J. Miller, Distributed by King Features, Inc. 9-16
Broadway.. . by Mark Barron
NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (A)— The world that Tony
-% Bennett knew was strictly a small section of
New York—it was bounded by Hell’s Gate and
Triboro Bridge and it was known as Astoria. When
he was 18 years, old Tony’s sphere was suddenly
and emphatically changed by a cordial letter
which began:: “Greetings, etc.” The next step was
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Founded August 30. 18 90, by
. (Absorbed Gainesville. Signal.
Published by The Register Printing Company, 308
East California Street, Gainesville, Texas. Entered
is second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas Post
Dffice under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy
service is maintained 25c weekly. In Cooke and ad-
|,oining counties by mail, 1 month, 75c; 6 months $4.00;
one year $7.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month 80c; 6
months 54.50; 1 year 58.50.
R*-2
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53.
“Women of the Scriptures.” The
2. Past
3. Pronoun
4. Energy foods
6. Holes in a
container
6. Gets up
7. Metal
8. Round-up
9. Regarded too
highly
10. Slam
11. Other
16. Brazilian
seaport
19. Pilot
20. Gaelic
21. Biblical word
of reproach
22. Causing sudden
fear
24. Excavation
26. Mechanical bar
29. One of an
ancient race
30. Surface
32. Iniquity
34. Boisterous
37. Idolized
40. Kitchen stove
41. Alarm whistle
43. Eotch
44. Solo from an
opera
46. State in
Venezuela
48. Monkey
49. Greenland
Eskimos
50. And not
51. Jewel
TAP
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ONE OF MY trips back from up everything for everybody. Be-
• Europe was on a small slow fore I went to Arizona last Janu-
boat. There were only a few pas- ary the Times had already
sengers, and we had a very pledged all my savings for world-
cheerful time. The ringleader in wide relief. When I got back, I
our fun was a hearty gentleman found that it had committed not
would have to do it all.
“The effort at European unity
has collapsed,” reported the
Times. “The only unity possible
now is for Europe to lean upon
the United States.” And so on
‘TheCdilonialPage
2—Gainesville (Tex.) Daily Register Sat., Sept. 16, 1950 •
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Sometimes the pantomime becomes a play,
as one of the drivers of a blocked vehicle
“sits” on the horn or yells to the double
parkers. The scene occurs daily in Gaines-
ville just as it does in every other town over
the United States.
Double parking is a minor nuisance com-
paratively in the long list of traffic men-
aces and is not nearly so dangerous as idling
along a highway or driving at excessive
speeds.
It can be one of the most irritating of all
driver sins, however, comparable to sitting
through a green light. The double parker
thinks only of his inconvenience in driving
around the block, not of blocking half a doz-
en other cars and delaying them in their
journeys. When a driver stops to chat with
a friend getting out of the car, it is even
less excusable.
School and church jams as well as down-
town traffic snarls are often caused by dou-
ble parkers blocking the driving passage of
the road.
And double parking can be dangerous.
The bumper-crumpling jams which result
can lead to real mixups at intersections. As
a result of the slowdown caused by a double
parker, drivers sometimes speed up beyond
safety limits to regain lost time.
Every driver at one time or another has
been a double parker, argue the habitues.
Most offenses are by the repeaters, however.
There is no excuse for the dangerous traf-
fic nuisance and no reason other than lazi-
ness or a desire to prolong conversation for
its existence.
There are state laws against blocking the
road. These should be enforced more strin- '
gently against double parkers so that those
few who do not react to courtesy’s demands :
react to the law’s. 1
.---- spect for those in the State de-
(From the files of The Daily Register, partment, whom they call cookie-
Sept. 16, 1920.) pushers.
Marriage licenses have been issued by the Louis Johnson took a pro
county clerk’s office as follows: Ernest H. Boggs Chiang Kai-shek position regard-
and Miss Myrtle Lee Abernathy, C. L. Gilliam and ing China—a position which has
Miss Lillian Manning, Ed Hearon and Miss Nancy proved itself to be correct by the
Sorrels, Charles C. Hatcock and Miss Vera Wood- Korean war, and one which Gen-
ruff, Clyde Simms and Miss Gretchel Curtis. eral Douglas MacArthur, in the
Tom Long of Aspermont, Texas, is here for a field, fully supported.
Visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Smith B. Long. Dean Acheson took a pro-Chi-
Frank Dougherty is in the city from his ranch nese Communist position, obvi-
in Floydada. ously on two grounds:
T. T. Pendleton of Fort Worth was in the city A. That it would be too costly
yesterday on business. to support an anti-Communist
M. M. Duffey of Marysville was a business vis- position in Asia and at the same
itor in the city today. time protect Western Europe,
The Producers Refining company yesterday which he regarded as more es-
made a shipment of 25 cars of naptha to Warren, sential:
Pa. The cars were moved on a special train. ’ B. Roosevelt had originated the
Miss Anne Starke, who has been a student of appeasement policy at Teheran:
telegraph at the Western Union office, has ac- It has never been reversed by or-
cepted a position as operator at Helena, Ark. der of the president, and there-
Wood Stonum left this morning for Ardmore fore it is the duty of the State
where he will visit relatives and friends a few department to continue to carry
days. it out until instruced otherwise.
T. A. Scott and daughter returned this morning No matter how antagonistic one
from a visit with friends in Fort Worth. may be toward Dean Acheson and
Carl, Jr., little son of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Flan- his peculiarities, this must be re-
nery, is quite ill at the family home on Lindsay garded as his position. Louis
street. Johnson opposed that position,
Mrs. John A. Hulen of Houston is visiting the believing, and he has proved to
family of Dave Morter on Lindsay street. be correct, that the Communist
------------------------ breakout would come in Asia be-
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The Word of God . . .
They who are looking for slights and offenses
usually find them. We should give others the
benefit of the doubt. We may be wrong our-
selves. Seek peace and pursue it. Psa. 34:14.
DOUBLE PARKERS
A PANTOMIME is enacted daily on Gaines-
ville streets, at one hour on Dixon and
Broadway, at another, on some side of the
courthouse square, perhaps at noon on a
section of Rusk street which crosses the
downtown district, or again on California it-
self.
No matter what street, the pantomime al-
ways assumes the same form. With both
sides of the street filled with legitimate park-
ers, some person sidles up to the middle of
the block and stops, motor idling, while an-
other person gets out of the car. A short
period of double parking ensues while the
two converse or perhaps the pedestrian
dashes into a store for a few minutes.
_ T -—Aic Louis Johnson. Their quarrel has
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 W - This is the time bnn continuous
’ ’ of year we get little Johnnie and Mary back Johnson became
to school. But a lot of little Johnnies and Marys Secretarv of De-
won t be going to school. That’s why the Bureau tense. It has
of Labor Standards of the Department of Labor been intense,
is setting out a campaign to get all American positive, with no'
children into school this school year. holds barred
Some 150,000 under 16 years of,
age who won’t be going to school T
are children of farm families, i T.dhan
kept home to earn a little money ( a-ndaF
or to help the family harvest seemeeeeS
60
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231 ".a
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Jay ALAN- AP Newsfeofur..
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28. Ancient wine
vessel
31. Balance
33. Machine for
stretching
cloth
35. Spike of corn
36. By way of
38. Dutch measure
of length
39. Inclines
42. Notion
43. Pertaining to
the cheek
45. Painting
medium
47. Ireland
48. Bedecking
52. Carol
53. Equal
54. Drive a nail
slantingly
55. Wise
CainesbilleRailgRRegisker ^^5^-
JOHN T. Leonard of editors and publishers, I asked
2 February, 1939.) . him if, in the event of a Commu-
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, nist seizure of Formosa the
standing or reputation of any person, firm or coroo- 9: Sc. 7 7 mosa, tne
ration which may appear in The Register will be •nited States Would prepared to
cheerfully corrected upon being brought to the at- meet the consequences. My ques-
Member of the "sbsqciated Press, which is entitled tion,a little more intricately
exclusively to the use for republication of all the to. stated, was designed to give
cal news printed in this newspaper, as well as' all AP Johnson an opportunity to tell
news dispatches. them in this large gathering what
V “t.
beAt
9%§34
lion, was now to be “astronomi-
cal.” The Europeans were tell-
ing us frankly that they could do
nothing for themselves. We
--O--
OKLAHOMANS’ INVASION
TT’S A FOREGONE conclusion that Gaines-
ville hotels and tourist courts will hang
out the “no vacancy” signs on the weekend
of October 13-14.
For that is the one day in the year that
it seems all of Oklahoma comes to Texas. It
is on Saturday, October 14, this year, that
the annual meeting on the gridiron of Okla-
homa and Texas university football teams
occurs in the Cotton bowl in Dallas. It is
also the second Saturday of the State Fair.
And as usual, Gainesville will witness the
spectacle of Oklahoma automobiles in great
hordes, coming through the city Friday and
Saturday morning, en route to Dallas.
Dallas has many hotels, motels and room-
ing houses. But all their accomodations
have been reserved for months. Now the
Dallas Hotel association is seeking private
homes with rooms to rent, in an effort to
take care of a few more thousands of visi-
tors.
But many wise Oklahomans have and will
make reservations in Denton, Gainesville
and Ardmore, which are in easy morning
driving distance of Big D.
Furthermore, the restaurants and service
stations of Gainesville and other cities and
towns along the route, will have a big week-
end.
Welcome, Sooners!
---o---------
NO SENSE TO COMMUNISM
WHY SOME Americans are communists
does not make sense.
Take for example millionaire Frederick
Vanderbilt Field. He is the subject of a re-
cent article in Saturday Evening Post, as
“The Millionaire Communist.”
The Post meticulously points out that all
of Field’s some $4,000 a month income comes
from big business—the very thing that com-
munism is fighting.
Field’s income was inherited from the
Vanderbilts of previous generations — men
who built big financial empires. Each month,
Field receives checks from a score or more
corporations. These checks are dividends
bn the stock which he inherited.
I Despite all of this, Field uses his mansion
for meetings to introduce prospective com-
munists to the leaders, and he liberally
spends his free enterprise income to fight
free enterprise.
I This sounds crazy. But is no crazier than
the principles on which communism was
founded.
PURE
APPLE BUTTER
Get your "apple-a-day" here folks!
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8. Garment
12. Self
13. Air: comb,
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14. Egg-shaped
15. Elevation of
land
17. Lairs
18. Inquires
19. Woolen fabric
20. Formerly
23. Portion of a
military
front
25. Assessment
rating
27. “Sunbonnet
Each spring I leave my little LAUREN BACALL, born Sept,
bungalow in Arizona and turn my 16, 1924, in New York City, Ac-
face back toward New York with tress and wife of -........................
something of that man’s home- Humphrey B o
coming feelings. „ . , . . .
The Western and Middle West- gart she started
era newspapers are full of domes- her career as a
tic news. The talk is of growth fashion model,
and progress, and hope for Amer- After :
ica’s future. on the stage in
But I know that the minute I “Johnny Two-
open the New York Times my by-F o u r” and
peace of mind will be ended, It ‘Franklin Street’
is full of bad news about our she went on the : y
relatives all over the world. screen in 1944 in ! a
It seems that somehow—with- “To Have or d
out any chance to vote on it—the Have Not ” LAUREN BACALL
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“We hadn’t seen anything but K-rations, run
ning Germans and a lot of other headaches when
the war ended and they started organizing a regi-
ment band just to keep our minds off of plans to
be sent home,” he said. “There weren’t any names
in it, but I think it was the greatest band I ever
heard or sung with.
“When I stepped up to sing before the GIs, it
was their first entertainment in months. After a
few verses, everyone in the barn was crying. And
I was crying so much my self I could hardly sing.
From then on, I was determined to be a singer
only.”
After he came out of the Army, Bennett began
studying at the American Theatre Wing. Bob Hope
saw him on a television show, brought him over
to Broadway’s Paramount theatre for a stage show
and then began giving the young veteran lessons
in stage presence. He taught Bennett how to go
out and give with a bang in singing. If you don’t .
believe it, just go out and listen to Bennett sing I e 1 c —c,, Mrs. Tom Blankenship and fam-
‘Boulevard of Broken Dreams” or “I Wanna Be 111656 DdyS ...by George E. bokolsky ily, Mr. and Mrs. Stout, Mr. and
Loved.” --------------— Mrs. Clifford Odom, Mrs. Bud
Or ask Bob Hope. ACHESON’S VICTORY I knew he was saying privately, Kitchens and Mrs. Nila Case.
EAN Acheson, Secretary of namely, that the State depart- Mrs. C. T. Martin, who has been
• State,has won an outstanding ment policy was making the sit- confined to the Gainesville hos-
political victory against his arch- nation impossible. He dodged the pital this past week, is improving,
enemy in the administration, question altogether. Mrs. Ellis Johnson visted her
- ' ‛ 3. Temperamentally, Acheson daughter, Mrs. O. V. McKinzie,
and Johnson were incompatible, and, family in Gainesville last
Acheson has the polish of an Eng- Week. ,T
lish gentleman, suave, smooth, „ Mrs. Harve Henderson of
A slick and oblique. He can say in Gainesville visited her daughters
5. 500 or 600 words what most of us here last week.
M could conclude with a “yes,” a . Joe Fox was a business visitor
‘4428 “no ” or a “mavbe ” To straight- in Gainesville Tuesday afternoon.
7 shooters, his circumlocutionsTan Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Burgess
n1 be tantalizing. He covers his er- and sons of near Gainesville vis-
7 rors with brilliant briefs which ited her mother, Mrs. Nila Case,
3 come down to the letter of the Sunday.,
1. The Depart- E » law or of his instructions. Some- „ Jack Holt, who is employed in
ment of Derense K. . one else always originated the er- Dallas, spent Labor Day here
the State De- ror. With his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
partment over- "==. Johnson is free of tongue. His M.D. Holt.
lap in the sense 000RG8 s. soKoLsK temper is not of the smoothest Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lewis and
that the latter and even the long experience of sons attended the funeral of his
forms the policy his under-secretary, Steve Early, grandmother, Mrs. Ready, in
which the former must imple- could not save him from hitting Gainesville last Wednesday,
ment. For instance, it was the out sharply when smoothies .Mrs. S. L. Thompson was shop-
State department which forgot to would have counted not 10 but ping, in Gainesville Wednesday,
arrange for an entrance to or an 1,000. He made enemies by telling Miss Kathryn T. Blankenship
— — - —a--exit from the American zone in the truth as he saw it. Unable to will leave Thursday for Hunts-
time. Now no child under 16 may Jane Eads Berlin, except through Russian compromise with public opinion, ville, Texas, preparatory to be-
be employed during school hours ' territory. which is often wrong on intricate ginning the fall semester at Sam
on farms raising products for interstate commerce. But the Department of Defense problems, an unwillingness to lie Houston State college where she
The provision does not apply to children working had speedily and at great cost to gain popularity he became a teaches in the art department
on their parents farm. t0 conduct the Berlin 3r lift liability to Harry Truman, whose The WSCS of the Methodist
Mrs. Olive E. Clapper, widow of the late col- °04e-i—m,, outlook on great affairs is nar- church met at the church for a reg-
ummst Raymond Clapper and an author in her I;. Ashptmlkpatmem rowly political and partisan. ular meeting Tuesday afternoon,
own right, who is now an information specialist Whqnbunsedour resatons with So, Louis Johnson was ditched. The president, Mrs. W. R. Huney-
m the Bureau of Labor Standards, tells me that .1° nines. To suggest that he wanted to cutt, presided for the business
more is needed than a law to get the children „ But it is the Department of De- quit is to go beyond the facts. He meeting. “Women Then and Now”
to school. fense that has to fight the war was fired! was given by Kathryn Tice Blan-
“The public must understand the need and voice in Korea. (Copyright, 1950, King Fea- kenship and Mr. Huneycutt re-
its support of education for all rural as well as Unless the State department, tures Syndicate, Inc.) viewed the last two chapters of
urban children,” Mrs. Clapper says. “The migrant the Department of Defense, the , "55 " ' ”
child and his parents, moreover, must be reached joint chiefs of staff and the presi- |
and convinced that education means a brighter dent are as one as to policy, there -
future for the child.” must be quarrels over responsi- CALLISBURG Sent 15_Mrs
Mrs. Clapper says that the drive to get all chil- bility. These have occurred con- Lou Ola Parker of Coesfield vis-
dren to school has been given a new impetus be- stantly. Particularly as the De- ited her sister Mrs Bessie Idej
cause of the critical international situation. “The partment of Defense is expected Tuesday. ’ ’
federal government,” she says, “feels it is par- bv the public to keep expenses Jack Boley has returned to bell, Sunday,
ticularly important that in time of crisis we see down when there is no fighting Galveston after a visit with his Mrs. Howard Perkins has re-
to it that our most precious possession, our chil- and yet always to be ready, no parents, Mr. and Mrs. Weldon turned to her home after receiv-
dren, are prepared for the future by continuing matter how difficult the State de- Boley and family. ' ing surgery at M&S hospital last
their education. Their ability to give patriotic partment may make the situation. B. T. Haws and H. B. Newberry week, and is improving satisfac-
service is in direct proportion to the training and 2. Information reaches both de- of Gainesville were business visi- torily.
education they receive in early years.” partments from many sources, in- tors here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. McKinzie
.o-n.the third-year of world war II 600,000 men, eluding their own. Army and Tom Blankenship served on the and sons of Whitesboro were re-
lo through 37 years of age, were rejected be- Navy intelligence may provide grand jury Monday in Gaines- cent visitors of her mother, Mrs.
cause of educational or mental deficiency. Many different data from State depart- ville. Ellis Johnson.
were fully able to learn. They just had not had ment data and from central in- Some of the visitors at the Fair Mr. and Mrs. Ray Davis have
the oPportunity. telligence agency data. in Gainesville Saturday night returned to their home here after
bo the government, says Mrs. Clapper, has this The collection of information is were: Mr. and Mrs. Marshall living in Dallas the past few
advice to parents and youngsters today: The not too difficult; the appraisal of McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. months where he was employed,
temptation to take a job and earn some money is such information, however, in- Spoon, Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Boy Kitchens, Victor Lewis,
great; the desire to join the armed services to volves experience, knowledge, Boley and family, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thrasher and Jack Thrash-
serve your country is great; but the best way you background and judgment. Mili- Ralph Winger, Mr. and Mrs. er were business visitors in
can serve your country is by going to school and tary men, fresh from war experi- James Hollandsworth and chil- Gainesville Wednesday.
learning because “in not many years from now ence, are likely to differ in judg- dren, Clyde Crawford, Charlie Bev. and Mrs. Henry Mozingo
you are going to be running the country.” ment from Washington desk-sit- Dozier, Mr. and Mrs. Emmit of Gainesville visited Mr. and
ters. Usrey, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lewis Mrs. L. M. Campbell last week.
Furthermore, it cannot be de- and sons, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. -----------------------------—
nied that our military men have Huneycutt and children, Mr. and Classified ads bring results,
never been famous for their re------—.........-—----------------— ........—
V,
M .J. 8689
38
GUNDER43
6.99 ‛‛
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children’s earnings.
: The cost of rearming Europe,
which had started off with a bil-
a career with all expenses paid
in the U. S. Army. He served in । ■ 'T1"-1 'mil
France, Italy and Germany. 7 ;
When the Army got Bennett to}A ' 8
Germany he enrolled in the Uni-,g • W
versity of Heidelberg There he 6 •
found out about Bach and Bee-gamg
“That was when I realized that K V
singing had to be more_than ak g
n
A
ML A
crops. Just last year Congress
passed an amendment to the Fair, 2“" 1
Labor Standards Act to give chil-a
dren on farms the same protec- i
tion that children in industry "o
have had for a long time. Now no
child under 16 may be employed
during school hours on farms™
the same protection that children p
in industry have had for a longuad
of around fifty—successful, gen- only my children’s but my grand-
erous, full of en- 7 0288enzea. children’s earnings.
thusiasm. But on d
the last night of if I
the voyage I was 191
amazed to find 9
him drinking |
alone in a dark
corner of the
bar. 8
“What’s hap-
pened?” I ex- amegse
claimed. “B a d S "G ]
news?” ' • La J
hedmhrnkuhjs BRUCE BARTON and so on.
“No news,” he said. “But my fun , -n place, of these fantastic and
is over; tomorrow comes the pay- astionomical commitments I
off. I have let myself get into a Suggest the following simple pro-
position where eighteen different gram. „ Suppose we say to our
relatives regard me as Santa allies : Its time for you to make
Claus. For these last couple of plans for yourselves. From now
months I have been too far away on we will quit suggesting. You
for them to visit or telephone me- decide how you expect to work
I haven’t even opened their let- out your own salvation. Then we
ters. Tomorrow morning they will will tell you where, and to what
all be on the dock, each with his extent, we think we can help.” ’
private tale of woe” Only on some such basis will
His worst fears were realized we ever be able to get an honest
The next day they were there measure, of progress, and some
all eighteen. 71 watched him go reas°nable control over costs.
down the gangplank, like an early p, _
Cntheifonsafbr aoout to be ted Todays Birthday...
Traffic blocks up behind the double
parked automobile.
I
AP Newsfeatures
394
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 16, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 16, 1950, newspaper, September 16, 1950; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567331/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.