The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1937 Page: 2 of 4
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——
JPAflE TWO
the denison press
KetabHithed In 1*30
TViepUone No. *04
Issued Dally Except Sunday
Brtered ■ Second Claw Matter June IS. 1#36,
it tlie post office at Dcnlaun, Texai under the act
u MaiOi *, 1*7 .
Dedicated to c'ean and rtapooai** Koveiumeut;
Lu individual and alTlo Integrity; to Individual and
ctvle commercial pcorreaa
tiUBSCRiPTlON RATES
One Week ., I'
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Three Months (In advance) TSc
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THE DENISON PRfifflS
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I uiv
52, 193T
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ers. The Denlsoc Dally Press assumes no responsi-
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price of the advertisement.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10:00 a. m
n order to avoid publication In current Issue.
Eyes Of Industrial World
Look To Texas
Texas is a state in itself. It has po-
tentialities that at once attract all of the
northern and eastern industrial leaders,
who during the'past several months have
been having turmoil in the ranks of labor
and which has well night sent the note of
discouragement to industry.
They are looking from some haven
where they may go and carry on without
the constant and annoying elemet which
has sent disturbances into iheir lines for
several years, and which has grown worse
during the past few months.
They are beset by a foreign element,
easily the prey of agitators ready to capi-
talize on the slightest provocation to fur-
ther their own Interests and send stagna-
tion in the business world.
There is no doubt, the strikes have
practically wrecked business in those
towns affected, but the business men are
keeping it as quiet as possible.
They are looking toward Texas as the
land that is a country almost in itself.
They feel that this state is one state able
to stand up and drive back the invading
horde of disruption and say to them "thus
far and no farther." They believe that
Texas will not stand for the foreign in-
vasion of discodant elements which has
well nigh wrecked the industries of some
of the other states, and polluted much of
the politics and officers to where they are
afraid to speak out against such. . (
All of which means that Texas occu-
pies a position of opportunity* and
uniqueness. That position, however, can
be maintained only as we elect men to the
Legislature and the governor's chair who
will maintain that ideal in Texas and keep
its shores clean of the thing which is caus-
ing alarm in industry.
iTexas is the envy of many states for
its present relatively industrially peaceful
situation. Keeping that status, we shall
attract many of those wishing to get away
from a condition which is encouraged only
too much by local officials, politicians and
others who have become allied with these
reactionary forces to the point where they
are shorn of their power to serve all the
people.
Texas will want to know of its candi-
dates this coming year what it proposes to
do about such matters.
00
We can't undertand how a boy could
be sent to an orphan's home when he had
two sets of grandparents, two brothers,
two uncles, and other relatives living. Nor
can we understand how a father is getting
relief from the government when he has
children able to take care of him. Yet we
are sending missionaries to China to
evangelize them from the un-Christian
' way to the light of our American ways.
NONE HURT IN
FREAK ACCIDENT
when thev saw another car around of them slightly injured, from
the bend approaching.
CHICAGO—When a speedin., . ... . , . . ,
„ .. ,. , ,. ^ ' The wild car rocked back and
roller coasting train stalled at the , ,, _ . . . ,
® ,, . ,. , ! forth settling down to a level of
top of one of the inclines ami i , , . - . , ,
about ten feet, above ground.
doubled back, the passengers i
' . . , The passengers scrambled, some
screamed and were panic stricken
the car while frantic parents rush-
ed to the scene just before the
car was struck by the approching
one.
No one was seriously injured.
Revolution
. On Main Street
GIVE a thought to Main Street as you scan today's
headlines! All the world's excitement isn't in Europe.
For, in our town . . . and towns like ours clear 'across
the country . . . there's a daily revolution going on.
Changes in dress styles and food prices . .. the rise of a
hat crown ..the fall of furniture prices- these matters
vitally affect our daily living .. . And the news is ably,
fully covered in advertisements. Here, in concise,
meaty form, makers of the word's goods tell you what's
new, what's good . . . and how to make your dollars
S-T-R-F-T-C-H.
Smart people who like to be up-to-the-minute in living
and current events, follow advertisements as closely as
headlines. ! They know what's doing in Europe and
America .. . but they also know where money buys the
most!
THIS PAGE FOR YOUR DAILY WANTS
EXCHANGE
that
EXTRA
ROOM for
CASH
The "Rooms to Rent" and
"Board and Lodging" col-
umns will bring you desir-
able people—and rooms ad-
vertised generally rent with-
in 3 days.
THE DENISON PRESS
LOST—Black Scottie. If found,
please phone 1191. Mrs. L. M.
Tibballs, 514 W Gandy. 26-lt
REPORT SHOWS DECREASE
IN FEED ACREAGE
RATES
INTERESTING BITS ABOUT
OUR FRIENDS
Texas fanners this season
planted increased acreages to ma-
jor cash crops but the total is
still under the 1928-82 average,
the Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
nomics July 1 report shows.
One outstanding feature is the
decrease in important feed crops
—ame hay, corn and oats. An-
other is the marked increase in
rice acreage, 244,000 acres having
been planted, compared with 20C,-
000 last year, with gains coming
in the Houston, Beaumont and
Big City territories.
[Acreage to cotton is 12,&26,-
000, 7 per cent higher than last
year. This compares favorably
•with the etsimate of 5 to 10 pe*
cent made by The Dallas News
agricultural department.
' Final figure on the 1936 grap?-
John Shields, who lives at 93
West Coffin srteet, is another
of our new regular readers to the
Press who oders his name enro.
ed Tuesday. 'Mr. Shields is one of
the dependable employes connect-
ed with the looming department
of the Cotton Mills, one of Deni-
teoB'b impojrtant inustries. Wei
come to the ranks of reader*
the Press Mr. Shields.
OTHER EDITORS' THOUGHTS
GIVE YOUTH A CHANCE that youth is a helpless creature,
Speaking to a luncheon service j unable to do anything for itselt,
club in Corpus Christi recently a tat that it must be cared for and
Houston man, prominent in youth
work, told his audience that youth
■will make themselves ^successes
in accordance with what adults
today provide them in leadership
—that the future of youth is up
to the adults, so to speak.
That leaves a somewhat cloud-
ed outlook for youth, for much
leadership today is at a low ebb
so far as doing worthwhile things.
Most of the efforts of leaders,
some of them self-appointed,
seem to be to take care of num-
ber one and show a fine disre-.
gard for others. Their voices
cry for equal opportunities and'
tfor better conditions but their
actions do not always follow their
words.
It is true that much is wrj}«
ten about what must be done for
youth, many dollars are spent In
doing for youth, but summed up,
it amounts to an apparent belief
1 Time lo per word.
! timed. Jc per word.
6 times, 8c per word.
Minimum charge is for 1J word#
(For consecutive Insertions)
Contract rates wll be given upon
application. I^egral rates at onf
cent per word Insertion.
CHIGGER CHASER
Protects from chiggcrs and
otiher Bimilar insects
Generous size can
HIATT SEED HOUSE
104 W. Main
M
(!)
Answers to
News Quiz Column
1.—It ia termed to all articles
left on trains unclaimed.
2.—Sixty-two
3.—.Several articles of food.
' 4.—She declared that there
would likely .be no woman who
would have the daring of Amelia
Earhart to take her place in this
flying world.
.5—Grover Cantrell.
0.—It means "Divine Wisdom."
' 7.—«A "face towel or a nice
dish towel."
8.—The blood supply in the
Urain.
A^^^naoasiiiraiiWi
Short-Murray
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 113
606 W. Main 8t. g
N E WTATACI~H OT EL ~
Carl Thomas, Mgr.
Special Attractive Summer
Rptes.
Weekly 2.50—3.00—3.60
Monthly 10.00—12.00—14.00
109 8. Burnett .~>ho. 608
m
FJF
K
S.
Dav
to fiv<
glary
Dor
' Loii
divorc
Am
voice
Dui
Umph
mot i o
or se.
ed.
W.
er's
W. F. WEAVER
PLUMBING GO.
PLUMBING SATISFACTION
624 W. Main Phone 272
fruit crop shows a production of t1 jt.—Their semi-annual return.*
provided for by statute and «P
propriation. It is a vicious doc-
trine and if followed through,
will result in encouraging the
youth to make no effort, to ex-
hibit no sense of initiative, to do
nothing except to sit and receive
Youth today, if left to its owi
determination, is just as viril"?
just as able as youth of yester-
day or of years before. Adults
have not made so great a success
of life, as a rule, as that they can
with good conscience urge youth
to follow its leadership. It mu*
develop a different brand of lead
ership or abandon some of tha
kind that is being practiced, if
youth is to become adult without'
handicaps that may never be or-
erconie.
Give youth a chance to use it.
own faculties and to work ou^
its own salvation without too
much nursing.—.Paris News.
9,231,000 boxes compared with
tonly 1,457,000 for the 1928-32
a'veiage. This is the biggest ci-
trus year in the Rio Grande Valley
history and the 137-38 output j
will be even greater, reports from
growers indicate.
The report places wheat pro-
duction at 41,090,000 bushels for
the biggest crop since 1931. Last
yoar only 18,927,000 buhels were
produced, and this excellent crop
for 1937 will add some $42,000,
000 to farmers' pockets, nearly
$28,000,000 going to South
Plains and Pannandle.
The 72,048,000 bushel corn
crop is nearly 4,000,000 highe"
than last year, but still far under
the five-year average of 81,922,-
000 bushels
I
on savings in the Ford investment
plan.
10.—Travis Meitzen, son of
Mi . and Mrs. Victor 'Meitzen.
KEYS—A.o« ana found will
advertised free of reward to the
owner with the exception or a
small advertising coat.
Drive SAFEl Y—Not Recklesily
FOR L.IFE F1RR
WINDSTORM AND HAIL,
AND AUTOMOBHJ5
INSURA NCE
AND AUTO LOANS BEE
B J. V. CONATSER
% Pho. 173 11S S. Burnett Ava.
f.WAWM.V&S.V.VAW.V
WANTED—Those who have
empty rooms they desire to convert
Into good money. Posts hilt little
Try the rhuntlfled.
WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
>n onything you might want rned.' of iron. We have Jt
complete stock of used angle and channel iron, I beams an<
other iron ind can weld, shape or cut it to any shape you need.
GEO. W. CLARKE'S WELDING SHOP
Electric and Acetyline Welding— —113 W. Chestnut
Hich Cargoes*
by C.
J^ptuuuicl
A-THOUGHT-A-LINE
Jay Waliker, 45, was fined for a
traffic charge in South Bend, Ind.
Prisoners are moved by trailer
in the Texas prison system's
"traveling jail."
Kansas employment increased
8.6 per cent and pay rolls 13.2
per cent since January.
Members of the CCC have
spent more than 3,000,000 man-
days fighting forest fires.
Judgment for $60 damages was
given in a British court for disin-
fecting a house without giving no-
tice, this being "wrongful inter-
CHAPTER XVIII
Their departure might or might
uot have been reported at the house,
'<ut they went unquestioned. Mouse
lumbered along on the elephantine
quickstep that consumes the miles.
Once started he seemed in haste to
get somewhere. He gave every indi-
cation of definite purpose. As if it
had needed only Mike's encourage-
ment to precipitate an action on
which he was already deliberating.
It was Sandy's opinion that Mouse
fiad been courteously waiting for
•Mike to Anish his morning's toilet
before starting off on investigations
of his own.
At the end of about a mile they
overtook a group of natives heading
toward Turtle Pawn, a fishing vil-
luge on a narrow strait through a
constriction of the island, and
forming a boundary of Colonel Carl-
ton's terrain, which by this shallow
tduice was made an island iu its
f.ntirety. Though hating to break
(he continuity of Mouse's course,
jSandy felt that he ought to question
f he natives, and ordered a halt. Iso-
I el had said that Mouse's reputa-
tion as a mass of wisdom and
John Ed Franklin, 26, of Hugo, bentvolence had become established,
Okla
officer
ference with propeVty."
Although South China and Bur-
ma were original homes of the or-
ange, China now imports 50,000
pounds of oranges from the U. S.
a month.
" i Miinini, 6U, ui jiugu, | ucirnuitiae wc*u uvtvint louwwhoiivu,
., is the youngest probation I ?° l,hat he ™Lhe'd ln «we but not
. . „ Z . .. . . *«n fear, and Sandy was therefore
er in the U. S. In addition, ho aurprised to see trvi blacks sheer
supervises more cases than any
other su^h officer.
Howard Miller, 62, blind farm-
er living near Berne, Ind., can lo-
cate hiding places of rats and has
trapped 489 in the past 11/
months.
Following The
Air Routes
6 p. m. NBC—Rudy Vallee, W
gAF WLW WOAI WMAQ KVOO
KOA WSM KPRC WHO. CBS—
To be Announced, WHAS KRLD
KTA KTUL KTRH KMOX WBB
M WBT KOMA.
7. NBC—Show Boat, KPRC W
SM WDAF WOAI WKY WLW W
HO WFAA KVOO. CBS—Major
Bowes, KOMA KTRH KTSA KR
LD KMOX WHAS WBBM KWKH
WACO KNOW.
8. CBS—Floyd Gibbons, KR
LD KTSA KOMA KTRH WHAS
WBBM KMOX KSL. NBC—
Bo,b Burns, WDAF WOAI WMAQ
WFAA WHO KPRC WLW KOA
WSM WKY KVOO.
8:30. CBS—March of Time, K
MOX WHAS KSL KOMA WBBM
KTUL WBT WACO KTHM. Mu-
sical program, KRLD.
9. NBC—Amos 'n Andy, WO
AI WSM WDAF KPRC WKY KO
A WLW WBAP WMAQ. CBS—
KMOX KSL KTUL. NBC-North-
ern Lights, KPRC KVOO WOAI
WKY WBAP. News, KRLD.
10. CBS—George Hamilton's
orchestra, KRLD KGKO KNOW
WHAS KWKH KSL KMOX.
Sports, news, WFAA.
10:30. CBS—-Al Trace's orches-
tra, KWKH KNOW KGKO WAC
O KTSA KSL WBBM KTUL WB
T. NBC—Fletcher Henderson's
orchestra, KPRC WDAF WOAI
WENR KFI KVOO KOA. Orches-
tras, WFAA, KRLD.
11. CBS—....Nocturne, KTUL
KWKH KOMA KTSA WACO W
BBM KNOW KTRH. NBC—Don
Fernando's orchestra, WFAA WE
NR KPRC WREN WMAQ KOA
WHO. Orchestra, KRLD.
Kidneys Must
Clean Out Acids
Th* only wr jr your body can elrtn out
Aold* and polaonoi,* ">ntM from youi
Mood la thru 9 million tiny, dallcnts Kid-
h«y tuti.B or Alter., but bowar# of chpup,
■tra.tir irritating dru*. If functional
surprised
wide.
He called and beckoned, but they
would not approach. More than
that they began to hurry on their
way, in a wide detour, eyes rolling
back over their shoulders. Sandy
ghouted a peremptory order to the
nearest of them, a young negress
standing haughty and aloof as if
disdaining actual flight, to- come
nearer as he wished to «r onk to her.
She answered shuily ti, a few
words that he con' I not understand,
then set off aUei the others.
"Whnf.'s the li.-r with thein?"
Sandy asketl, ve- etlly " \i <• they
afraid of Mou°« or ol ttnf
"Ajthei. sir,'' Alike .towered, "or
both, mnybe. fclncu all the native*
hereabouts are by now used to seein'
Mouse and know there is no harm in
him, it looks like they do not want
to be asked questions."
Mouse's ears were moving rest-
strap. Mouse plumped down with
a lurch but eurefootedly, then
stopped. His trunk extended itself
toward the bushes at one side its
delicate tip reaching for some ob-
ject. He picked it up and curving
back his proboscis offered to Mike
a gold watch dangling from a fob.
"Saints . . ." Mike handed it to
Sandy who saw that it was en-
graved with the letters G.O.V.
"Vinckers* watch. Now what do
you know about that?"
"And that is not the half of it,"
Mike said drily.
Sandy turned the watch In his
"Half past two.
hand.
It's
stopped—the crystal's broken and
jammed the hands. Well, here's a lie
nailed. Four strings of lies that
were nicely spliced.
"And did Mr. Vinckers claim he
had not been off the premises, sir?"
"He didn't need to. The others
volunteered enough to check up his
being in the house all night."
;e gave a grunt. "Sure it's the
r'rand little detective we have un-
no g(
ting around a stopped watch, when
ler us, Mr. Crewe. There is no get-
'tis stopped by gettin' jammed
'Twould bo about that hour of the
morning that Miss Isobel set out
on Mouse."
Sandy slipped the watch into his
focket. This brings us to here,
ells pretty clearly what happened
so far. Vinckers saw Miss Isobel
ride off on Mouse. He followed,
probably afoot. He took a spill off
this ledge and his watch slipped out
and fell and broke the crystal and
stopped. I don't like it. Mike.
"Me nayther, sir. All the same,
I do not think Miss Isobel wud be
n danger the top of Mouse."
"She might have tumbled
off.
tessly as If impatient at the delay.
•Go on," Sandy ordered, and they
resumed their way along the trail
Kldnay or Hlad<f«r ill.ordara inaka you
"" " , " "JS . „ tuffar from Uattlnc Ud Nlfhta, Nervoua-
Poetic Melodies, KRLD KOMA K I ma, L,eK Palnn. Backac-ha, Clrclaa Und.r
.... ,i,nrm.«>™. DlMlnaaa, Hhaumatlc Pain.. Acid-
TRH KMOX KTSA WWL WBBM nr. Burnln*. Smarting or {telling. dont
WHAS.
8:30. CBS—Bill Osbone's or-
chestra, WACO KWKH KTRH K
GKO KOMA KNOW WWL WBT
tak« chances. Get the Lfotftor'a guaran-
teed prescription called • Cyatex (Hiss-
Tax). Worka faat, aafe and ■urn. In 48
tours muit bring new vitality, and la
guaranteed to flx you up !h one week or
mqn«y back on return of empty package.
Cyatex co te only 0c a day at dn •
tad th guarantee protects you
arufflttf
that skirted the flank of a low mole
partly covered by a growth of lea-
grape. Mike looked back and s&idt
—"Ever since Mouse Bnatched the
dress off a wench that plagued him
by putting snuff in his troonk they
are none so sure about his good
nature. Sure I have known iliphants
would have treated her dommed
rough for such a tr'rick."
Mouse swung along on his self-
appointed way. Presently Mike
leaned back and said:— "Yonder
is the cove where the Colonel is
thought to have been lost, sir. Wan
of the naygroes told me that some-
times the place swarmed wit' what
he called 'heavy fish.' He said they
were not sharks, but worse."
"Barracuda, perhaps. They will
attack • bather, like wolves. Tear
at him. That might have happened
so that he fell and had a stroke or
heart failure. But It scarcely scetVis
possible. He was a strong man,
young for his age."
The trail, a mere footpath worn
by the natives, dipped down to the
beach and passed around the head
of the little bight. Mouse scuffled
down a short sleep descent forelegs
stiffly braced, hind quarters sliding.
Nearly at the bottom there was an
abrupt perpendicular drop of about
three feet, over the rim of a ledge
of igneous rock. "Hang on. sir,"
Mike vautioned, holding < th* head
X
That was a steep pitch."
"Mouse wud pick her up again,
sir. See now how he do be pushin'
on with no doubt at all of where he
is headin' for. The ould baste has
something in the mind av 'im."
There could be no question of this.
Mouse was if anything,more pur-
poseful than ever in his onward
course. He passed around the head
of the little cove, then swerving
from the path struck up a tangled
slope with thick growths of scrub
alternating with bare ledges of
rock. It was apparent to both men
that the elephant could not long
continue on this route. Higher up
the mole he must be stopped by the
roughness of the formation.
This presently happened. They
came to a precipitous ledge that
was fissured and eroded so that a
man or even a dog or goat might
scale it with no great difficulty but
where the big pachyderm could not
pass. There were dwarf cedars and
other trees that were scrubby and
of a sort with which Sandy was not
familiar. Below them was a thick
sone of coarse vegetation, a line of
straggling palms and then the
beacn. Beyond the sea lay in bands
of aquamarine over the shoals.
Mouse had stopped and now stood
quietly but panting from his climb.
His attitude seemed to say:— "This
is as far as I can take you. Now
you'll have to swing on your own
hook. It's up to you to do the
rest."
Mike turned, looked at Sandy
with eyes that twinkled like blue
stilleto points and asked:— "What
do you be makin' av it now. sir?"
"This much, at least Mis? isobel
was writing at the desk In the office
The chair was beside the open win
dow, and the Venetinn shutters were
drawn high Mouse hail pulled off
the chain she hud seonrrd too looselv
and "onif tip to look for the Colonel. 1
Mis> Isobel :ntw if courts that
Mouse was there, outside the win-,
dow, but she was busy with her
work, examining papers and writ-
ing. The safe door would have been
open."
"And much of value in it, sir?".)
"A considerable amount in rash,'
I . should say, some jewels to the
value of about seventy thousand
dollars, and the Colonel's will, by
which he had left a fortune run-!
ning in a million and odd pounds,
to Miss Isobel."
Mike softly blew out his breath.
"And then, sir?"
"Then Vinckers appeared in the,
doorway. Miss Isobel had reason j
to fear the man, now that her uncle.,
seems to have lost his life. This,
was not entirely due to the fact
that she stood between her rela-,
tives, Vinckers of course included,
and a big fortune of which they are
all badly in need."
"The divil, Mr. Crew*. And is he
as bad as that?" ^ 1
"We don't know yet how bad he
is," Sandy said. "When she saw
Vinckers standing there she was
terrified. There would have been
plenty in the brute's face to terrify-
her. In his hand, for all we know."
"But would he dare put a gun on ..
her?"
"Perhaps, to scare her into sil-
ence. A beast like that would dare
a lot, with three cool backers who
had everything to gain. At nny
rate, Miss Isobel turned to a big
protector that was standing by. She
called to Mouse. He reached inside,
whipped her up out of the chuir and
through the window, then either
cradled her, an you say, or raised
her so that she could scramble up
his trunk onto his head. Then they!
started off, and Vinckers followed.,
She hadn't counted on that. All
she thought of in her panic was to
get away. Or perhaps he kept close,
threatening to shoot her if she
raised an alurm."
Mike nodded. "He would claim I
that ho shot at Mouse, fearing the
iliphant meant to do her some hurt."
"Yes, and then shot Mouse
through the head. In the ear.
They'd have fixed it. Vinckers has
been a big game hunter, u crack
with firearms. Look here, Mike, /
could Miss Isobel have urged Mouse i
ahead at a speed that would have j
left Vinckers far behind?"
"1 am none so sure, Mr. Crewe. I
Mouse has the speed, but 1 do not I
know could she hold him on it,'
were Vinckers a good runner. 'Tis;
likely that a man who is young und I
him an athlete cud have caught them !
up when they struck the rough goin',!
back yonder by the ledge. And shei
might think sne had left him far.
behind."
Sandy looked up at the steep
ledges above. "Mou*e brought her
this far anyhow. Let's go up."
They slipped to the ground, then
started to climb, about twenty
yards apart. Mike, a clown and
tumbler before the fall thnt had(
crippled him for aerobatics, was
still as agile as an ape. He reached
the top of the steep ridge ahead of
Sandy by some yards, and about the
same distance to the left, passing;
out of sight over the top. Sandy had
gone at the climb to make more
haste than speed, been careless in
picking a place to go up as no part:
of it lucked impassably But now he
found himself stalled on a narrow
ledge with no proper hand or foot-'
holds above, so that he must either
descender work sideways for some,
distance. Above him the rock rose'
sheer. i
(To be continued)
Copyright 111! aj Url. a.nn C Rowland I
OlltrlfcuUd br King fMturai Syodlcatt, lea
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1937, newspaper, July 22, 1937; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth327653/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.