The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 204, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1939 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Cloudy ami warmer today
and Friday
THE DENISON PRESS
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
35 cents
Per Month
EMB E R
THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS THURSDAY, March 2, 1939
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1980-DAILY 1934
VOL. 5—NO. 204
Capt. Clay and O'Neal
To Be Banquet Speakers
Largest Attendance in His-
tory of Annual Event is
Expected, FDR Reveals.
Captain Lucius D. Clay, head of
(he Denison army engineering of-
fice and B. F. (O’Neal, Shreveport,
Louisiana Chamber of Commerce
president and active in Red River
dam yptlrk, will be chief speakers
at the annual Denison Chamber of
Commerce banquet at Hotel Deni.
■ on. Friday, March 10, it was an
flounced today by Dr. T. J. Iaing
president after a conference with
his entertainment committee.
With the banquet theme to be
“The Red River Dam,” Dr. Long
said (he organisation expected one
of the largest attendance in the
History of (he yearly events. Both
Capt. Clay and Mr. O’Neal will
speak on dam phases, revealing
new dam information and reiterat-
ing known facts on the project.
| The speakers will, other than
| music by the Belie Bodamer or
, ehest.rn, lie the only mini1' e- on the
program to begin at 7 p. m.
Invitations will be sent b" Man-
ager Elliot McClung to leaders and
Cardinals Write Out Ballots | others in nil cities in north Tcx.v
and Drop Them On Plat-j and sonhtern Oklahoma, directly
en; Close Record is Kept, j affected by the $54,000,000 pro-
--- ject’s construction.
VATICAN CITY, March 2 (UP) j Tickets for the event will be
Cardinal Paeelli, for years, papa' j olaced on sale Friday mornirg and
secretary of state under the late chamber officials urged tha1 i
Pope Pius XI, late today was ] prompt reservat oils be made be
elected as the new Pope of thi j cause onlv about 300 tickets will
Roman Catholic Church. j be available. Fish will be served
The new pontiff will assume j to Denison Catholics, if they pr.e
the name of Pope Pius XII, an I j fer, and proper oh ervanee w 11 be
will he instated in a ceremony made of the Lenten season, it was
Paeelli
Is Named
New Pope
French
Appoint
Envoy
Marshal Henry Petain is
Named France’s Ambassa
dor to Nationalist Spain by
Cabinet; Franco Approves
Relations Are
Strengthened
Bonnet Claims Franco Has
Asked Italian Troops be
Removed Soon, Report
Lam Hearings
Are Scheduled
Startling
Facts Are
Developed
Public to be Heard in Three States at Meet-
ings Scheduled by District Engineering
Head; Shreveport, Texarkana Meet Sites. :p°cwerf“l AJLid. Ca5.he, in
Storehouse Below Mexican
' Line Powerful Enough to
of representatives at Washington, j Eat Through Metal, Ship.
Public hearings, reviewing a re-
port on Red River and its tribu-i The resolution was passed with,
tariea in Louisiana, Arkansas and u view to determine il modifica-
1 exas, are to be held in the three tion of the recommendations re-
dales soon in obedience to u reso-1 garding the proposed dam is advis-
,1 u t ion passed by the committee on I able at the present time, accord-!
rivers and harbors of the house!ing to a bulletin released today!
—— •- — by Lt. Col. Raymond G. Moses ofjAcid
Italian Runs
Storehouse
Everyday
DENISON
Transported to Cache
by German Freighter;
Near Naval Ship Base.
LOUIS
By
ANDERSON
for his cutting them out of fish-
ing on Red River than the fight
against the dam project
invited to the hearings, Mose
said, and they will be given
i opportunity of expressing thei
Mbany, N. Y. court has ruled thaH view? „„ the most desirable im- ',ht' content*. of ,of the4«
less than two weeks off.
Paeelli was elected on the
ond ballot of the day.
revealed.
Members of the entertainment!
committee which met with Dr. j
Long were: David Platter, Jerome]
McKinney, W. L. Ashburn, Leigh-,
ton McKinney, Ralph Geisenhonerj
nnd McClung.
VATICAN CITY, March 2 (UP)
—A thin pencil-like plume of jet
b’ack ^moke lOae from the silvered
smokc'-tack of the Sistine chapel.
In signal that the 62 members of
the College of Cardinals had taken
two ballots for a 262d Pope but
that no candidate had received
the necessary two thirds majori-
ty.
'Each Cardinal wrote out his, -—
candidate on his ballot. In turn.1 MEXICO CITY’. March 2 (UP)
the Cardinals had advanced to the I Mexico’s pre-pres dential car,--
nltar with his ballot held high ov- onign continues in full swing,
er his head between thumb and with onlv three candidates thus
Only Generals
Enter Mexican
Political Race
SPAIN’S CREST—This is the coat ot arms of Insurgent Spam
which will become the official coat of arms for all Spain, when
General Francisco Franco is declared victorious. Figures are the
three types of men fighting for Franco—Legionnaire Phalangist
and Navarese
BUSINESS SHOWS
DECIDED UPTURN
and far active. Several others to,lav
forefinger. He had knelt
said in a loud voice: j are on the sidelines waiting to see
“i call upon the Lord Christ, whether or not to plunge
who wi 1 judge me, to witness ‘he race,
that I elect him who I judge ac-| The three candidates are:
cording to God should be elected." I General of Division Manuel
He bad then arisen, ascended I Avila Camacho, of Puebla, form
the altar and placed his ballot on j er secretary of national defense
a platen, a shadow Hi;h. Then he General of Division Francisco, f rs|-jYlfll OpCDinS
had dropped it in a large silver T. Mugica, of Michoacan, former r O
chalice which was the ballot -box. secretary of communications and |
After all votes had been east, public works,
the ballots had been shuffled in, General of Division Rafael San-j
the chalice ami taken to a table jehez Tapia, of Michoacan, once
in the center of the chnpcl. There secretary of national economy,]
th y were coiuifou oni* by one l.v more recently chief of the garri-; Saturday flnu 5unda\
the ballot committee, to confirm j -on of the Valley of Mexico,
that the number of ballots con | Avila Comacho is considered i
formed to the number of Canli rather moderate; Mugica, of the!
mils. Then thev had been assort e-1 j extreme left, and Sanchez Tapia, i
according to the candidates for; rather conservative. The commun-
which they cast. i is* pnrt.y has announced that
As ail this went on, the Vatican -anchez Tan a is not accepts le
alleging he is not a “cardcnist,”
DALLAS, Texas., March 2 (UP) principal cities declined less than
_Business and industry in the seasonally from December to Jan-
eleventh federal reserve district. uary and were nearly as large as a
I -bowed improvement during Jan year ago, the hank reported. ,
"'t0 uary, the Federal Reserve bank of' “Sales at independent retail Pn
Dallas said in its monthly report firms were about the same asj
today. ] those in January last year.
"Sales at department stores ini “The value of construction con-1
tracts awarded, although one-
fourth -mailer than the large
PARIS. March 2 (UP)—Marsha
Henri Philippe Petain, hero of th*
defense of Verdun, was named
France’s ambassador of nationalist
Spain today.
The cabinet met today as a for-] ~y news „tory savj) that ,-0lJ
mat _ council of ministers under] General Enter Mexican Political public hearing-
President A1 ert Lebrun to consi-
der the appointment. Foreign
Minister Georges Bonnet onnoun-
"cd that Jore Marla Quinones de
Leon, who is the nationalist am-
bassador to Paris, had advised him
Gennralissimo Francisco Franco
has approved f the nomination of
Petain.
Thus the cabinet was able to
announce at once that the vener-
"b e hero of tho historic French
defense of Verdun would be the
ambassador of France to the new-
ly recognized government.
The appointment was considered
a particularly happv one because
!’e*ain, the late Gen. Jn«e San-
I iurjo, executed by the loyalists
ear'v in the Spanish civil war, and
I On. Franco iointlv planned the
] French-Snanwh campaign of 1021
which crushed \bcl Krlm. the Mo-
I roecan leader.
To Leave Soon
It was understood that Petain,
now 82. would start for Burgos,
the temporary nationalist capital,
within a few days.
\ comp'ete embassy staff, in-
cluding n general as military at-
tache, will accompany him.
Quinones de Leon took Franco’s
approval of Petain to Bonnet just
a few minutes before the cabinet
met at the president’s Eiysee pal
nee. Premier Edouard Pe'adier
nominated Petain to the cabinet,
and the nomination was unanim-
ously approved.
Thus France moved to strenpth-
its relations with new Spain
in competition with the totalitar-
ian powers.
It was known that at yester-
day’s secret meeting of the Chnm-
IJOS VNGELES, March 2 (UPl
-Secret fi'es of the naval inteiii-
Vicksburg, Miss, district engineer'
jin charge of the engineering corps
| stationed here.
The review* reports are to be
j comprehensive and will consider
flood control, navigation, irrign-jgence department, introduced at
tion, water power and all related j t.he trial of three alleged Soviet
I subjects. In order to ascertain Russian spies, disclosed today that
the desires of local in teres'- in the j United States agents had discov-
ered just below the border in
Race," which means they must- r 4h,el<l a: fo,°ws: „ . , , , a catht’ of I»owcrfuf “id-
have an army to back un their' A1,'xl,n'Jm’ If" March X —tn -.vhich, if poured into the ocean
campaigns Sla ion KTVT at cons,“er lowc'r Ked river and tri- might eat through the armored
v0,.t Worth 'ast ni^ht cut 0rf ‘ al Li‘*»Hes below Grand Ecore. La. plate- of battleships gjid sink
Ranger preacher IrTthe middle of Mirawport, March 15-H them.
his sermon because he was attack-1eons,(ler Re<l r,ver an<i * batar"' r>rums •>* this w,'rf’ trans-
ing John N. Garner, U. S. vice- from Granti Eeor<' to thl Lou''1’ ported to a snot off the lower Cal-
president He had been at 0-lds-ana-Arkansas state line. ifornia (Mexican) coast by the
with the station executives for Texarkan0( \rk. Mal-ch I6.._to] ^™an freighter Edna and mns-
ome time because he had used j cowitler Red river and tributaries the Japanese f.shfag boa,
his sermon hour in attacks on cor- -„ Xrkansas and navigation im- F’Vmir “ W a ,0?k tb? *
tain religious sects . . . Some of provementg at Denison. . bn,r' a EnSennria ln Junc’ 1987,
the people in Denison dislike Gov. officials of any county, parish.!
Leon Phillips oi Oklahoma 01. town ami others interested I
‘he naval report said.
“They wrere stored in a ware-
house nin hv an Italian and kept
guarded night and day,” the report
•’ontinued
“In Sentember, 1937
i*’» okay to cuss your head off [ privements'and'benefits they sec I 'lrun\s were obtained. I’ was. not
over a telephone . . Best laugh expeet. The engineer also sac M'0,,ne’ b,,t “ wh“"
of the week: a Rusk, Texas mer-;ke wou.d take written statement'
chant, fearing burglars might raid j re>rardjnjf the improvements he
his store, hid ail his cash in the | forehand if they were mailed to
wastepaper basket. The next kjg 0ffjce_
morning the basket had been em-| ____„_________...
ptied in the alley and the merchant
is looking nil over the place and
half of Georgia.
mixed with salt water, formed u
solution a life ways under the
water that would eat into any kind
of me<al."
Police Patrol
Dallas District
As Precaution
The report was signed by Lieut.
H. De D. Clayborne, chief of the
San Pedro, Calif., intelligence bu-
reau. Pvcerp’s from it were
read by United States Attorney
Benjamin Harrison who is prosecu-
'ing Mikhail Gorin, intourist bu-
reau manager for Russia, his wife.
Na'asha, and Hafis Salich, former
naval intelligence agent, on es-
pionage charges. The three arc
charged with having stolen from
naval files confidential matters re-
nting to Japan, which was sent to
Russia.
her of Deputies foreign affairs
I,receding mo"n7h,| commission, 'Bonnet asserted that
Franco had asked that Italian
Of Short-Murray
Is Scheduled
volume in the
ho we 1 a gain of 73 per cent over
January last year. Petroleum pro-i^P* h<‘ "ithdrawn from Spain as
w-" ; st
1 Italian air force be withdrawn.
loud speakers outside had broad-
cast an occasional announcement
to the people. \n Italian Air Force
plane had darted over the square,
dipped smartly in salute, and
darted off.
Fire Losses
Are Smallest
In History
DEBATERS GO BEFORE
1IONII AM ASSEMBLY
Denison high school
were m Bonham this morning for
a forensic bout with Bonham high
debaters, according to
“Agricultural and livestock con-
to be ditions showed a marked improve-
Given Over to visitors; nient following the heavy, general
Modern Equipment Used. I tains which broke the prolonged
----- ; drouth."
A formal opening of Ihe recent- Consumption Increases
lv completed Shot t-Murrnv fun ] “Domestic consumption of cot-1
era I home at the corner of YVood-!|on increased by a smaller amount j
ard street and Burnett avenue, than is usual from December to Qn|y $95 Lost in February in
's ill lie belli Saturday and Sunday. January, hut the rate of consump-i prison; First Two
and it has urged that the forces of! From 0 a m. to !* p. m. Saturday..ion in the latter month was main-] Months 'Here Very Quiet
Avila Camacho and Mugica urit<- land from I p. m. to 6 p. m. Sun-i.aincd at a re'ativcly high h'vel, ___
'morn- those who are being] d-.y the now building will be open the survey said, “being 37 pen pir(> log8es in j)t.niaon during
inked about as potential cnndi-> the |>u lie and visitors will bcjctmt greater than in January, 11t38 FobruarV»Are lowest in the record-
dates are General of Division Juan, conducted on tours through it and 7 per rent greater than Lie orf history of th(, city for n cov.
Programs will he held at inter- 1928-1037 average for that respon(];n'u. month, a report from
during tho days, consis’ing of month. The bureau of census re- ch)ef pat j(0Wp am, pjro
of cot- „—u_o p -yj Gray showed to
Those who have witnessed
“King of the Turf" claim it is a
great human interest saga that -
deals with horse flesh less than Street Fights Break Out as
one might think . . . Sally Rand,] Trucking Firms See Strik
who makes more by having less on,, er*; Regular Schedules.
has been sued by Billy Rose for] ----
plagerism. Rose charges that Miss| DALLAS, Tex., March 2 (UPt
Rand, famous fan dancer, swiped! Squadrons of police patrolled
an idea he presented at his Fort | d'stricts near three transport
Worth Frontier Fiest in her Nude] trucking firms today as a pro- Ensenada is onlv 00 miles from
ranch show at the San Francisco] wution against new disturbances can Dl-eff0 th„ ,Iritpd Sta.
world’s fair . . . Lynn Landrum between striking drivers and str!!;ejtp, n#va, ^
says one of the best ways to stop breakers.
commercialism in collegiate foot-, _ They broke up several street
ball is to shoot all alumni as soon "ffhts and detained a out 20 men tp{] whi)p somo 0f
as they graduate . . . You should las* "!=**• ^ven,' wen pjd „ ,,,. r ,ean n0#r Temine,
hear some of the high school track ” n r'1** a,1( 11 1 Island, in Los Angeles harbor, ar.d
men sav what they think of the no 0 * "' 1 ” ni that naval agents in Hawaii haJ
meet with Tio^a tomorrow. P.ir- OJ •°r! ,in 1 * ° v 4 ‘ rli«c*wprF‘d another attempt there
ticularly because physcial shape i,. yesterday asked an injunction in
something thev have nothing of . . federal court to prevent union
A Denison youth who works fori members from interfering with
the armv eng neers, sav thev are I interstate commerce. The com-
the best bunch to work for he has; Pany also operates in Oklahoma,
ever been under, in fact he say' du'iee W. H. Vtuell of the U. S
thev are a great bunch of fellows, j district court set n hearing for
Amen. Butch. .Friday.
_______ j The striking drivers, member;
An expert on marriage problems! *h* International Brotherhood
Lieut, riavborne's report sa>d
’hat two Janane'e had been arres-
Andreu Aimaznn, highest ranking
off eer in the army today, who Isiva..........- .........
bead of the military zone with organ and other musical ‘elections, ported that 591,991 luilc
—, ------ , . . Marshall
headquarters in Monterrev; Gen- fh'mo have been installed on th ■ ton were consumed in January, ns
I oral of Division Gildardo 'Magana, i building and will operate during| compared with 565,35. bales in i(0aw>s amounted to onlv *95,
debaters 0f Michoacan, who con- the two days of the opening. December and 433,258 bales m]compared with $2,043.85 for th
sidera himself ns the lender of the j Mnd-mUtie Construction January last year ' same month in 1938. For the first
revolutionarv forces led in South The new two-story structure has! , , x , Prican cotton two months of this vear losses t< -
Mexico by the late General Emi'.i- been built with all of th.- modern ,ow lovpl iaU.d but S2.507.53, whi’e for the
Otis L.
Hilliard, conch here. Competing ano z„pata and
Ben
been built with all of the modem "Ex,, ^,s
few others, i features that make for beauty * Januarv nggre- j Hrat two n onths last year showed
for Denhnn were David Dorchest-] Brig.Gen. Francisco Castillo Na- and utility. It is constructed^ oi on,y oHo :,n la'es,Which i< « loss of $50,664.56.
has announced that he is not a trim. The architecture is semi- ]ba'' ""7u''fand *’
candidate. , colonial, being a combination of for that
The election is far off, as Pvesi-i Englisli and Colonial periods. Ivo _’ ____
dent Gardena’s term does not ex-:
! of Teamster.*!, Chauffucrs, Stabb
linen and Helpers. \FL nffiliaK
first film in two years,
just about ready to give up trying
to break “in" when the big shots
called him hack to make “Gordin
'illmms, negi
from1
in-
er, Charles Hagans and
Hearn.
A group of Denison teachers,
Mr. Hilliard. Mrs. II. Y. Parrot’,
J. L. Kimble. Miss Ruth West and
Yliss Dovie Mae Arnold, will assist
in judging intercollegiate debates
at Durant Teachers college Sat-
urday.
Four Baylor university debaters I
inct in an i-xhi-' it ion debate before
Denison high school students at 2
p, m. today.
CLAY RETURNS FROM
VISIT TO WASHINGTON
After conferring with Gen. Jul-
ian L. Schlev, chief of the IT. S
army engineers at Washington, re
garding progress now underway
pire until Dec. 1, 1940.
(Continued On Page 4)
(Continued On Page 4)
Thirteen calls were answered
compared | during th ■ past month, bringing
December the 1939 total of 28. Only thirty
__1 cal's were answered last year in a
corresponding period, the report
says that the greatest tragedy of
the day is the young people who
wish to marry, but arc financially sou*ht reeogmt.on and wage
unable . . . Ile a Lugosi, the horror, averagmg 10 cen-s an
man of the flickers, is making his ho“1'- . , ,
. , , it, „.ot The other companies- involved
in two years, tie was ‘ „ _1 .
were the Dalla' Transfer company
and the Dalias-Fort Worth Mo-
| tors.
Winzell Williams, negro re- Company official claimed their
prieved with a sta-ement from *™rks were meeting the regu'ar
Gov W. Lee O’Daniel that rocked ^ules and that only a portion
_________ of their drivers were on strike
; Union leades said “at least 12t'
] drivers” of the 150 employed were
: f«rt eipating.
Temperature* Lower
Temperatures in Denison fed
to 26 degrees 'his morning fol-
lowing a high of 4 I degrees Wed
nesdav afternoon. Partly cloudi-
ness and fair weather have been
forecast for tonight nd tomorrow
to test the acid.
It was said that the Ensenada
ware house had burned shortly
after a U. * immigration officer
had been shot while trvne to stop
two unidentified men from cros«-
Ing the Mexieon border into Cal-
ifornia Naval agents got th-
acid sample after the warehouse
fire, the report said. The drums.
- Continued or !“i»se 4)
(Continued on page four)
shows.
Physicians Puzzled as Woman Eats Fr^etrJsAnd
Herself To Death; She Loses crew Saved
KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 2
(UP)—Mrs. Dorothy Barber, 20,
wife of a WPA worker was slowly
eating horse f to death today.
She ate and ate and ate, while
physicians at General Hospital
rapt Lucius D. Clav, Denison dm-1 numerous test in an effort to a -
,-iet engineer, resumed his duties! rive at ai true diagnosis lhey aal
” .6,. would died unless her strange
ere us mouimg abnormal appetitle could be sa-
tinted or it be returned to norma!.
in
it might
year of misery in which she was I Dr. R. K. Simpson, w o is
always hungry, but never stisfied. | charge of the^casc, said
“I want to eat all the time,” ’
she said. "Why, I can finish a
normal meal and he back in the
kitchen in ten minutes, eating
again. My appelitie becomes es-
pecially bail at night. 1 have to
get up several times to eat.”
Although she personally has con-1 causes
sullied enough food in " vear to an(j nKqnrmsi flow
Mrs. R ta N. Ransford of Los
Angeles, reporting here for duty
today, has been assigned to the
Red River records section.
Mrs. Barber appeared at the
hospital clinic last night, munch
ing a candy bar, and told of
CHATHAM. Mass., March 2
I (UP)—The freighter Newfound
be three or four days before a ]and F|ehfod t)„, distressed seal-
true diagnosis could bo determin- jr(, skjp tj,p i;anger on which 150
cd. Meanwhile, she begs for food mpn wprp fating for their lives,
and is fed. every few minutes. ' ,<arly today, the Radiomarinc cor-
From his observations so far, jporat.ion station here reported,
was indicated she has a rare con- j through t),e Parly morning mist,
dition of the pancreas which | the anxious watchers on her
Fuel Record
Set By Roads
During Y ear
Net operating income of Class 1
railroads in January amounted to
$32,090,711 compared with $7,-
144,036 in January, 1938 and $54.-
645,698 in January of 1930, ac-
cording to figures of the Asssoeia-
tkm of American Railroads.
The association states the in-
come for January was at the an-
nual rate of return of 2.4 per cent
of railroad investment. The return
for the same month last year was
only .52 per cent and January,
1930, rate was 3.81 per cent.
These figures were compiled
from reports of 136 railroads.
Wood* Service*
Fnneril services for Mrs. Pet!-
iro Woods. .58. who died at he/
home. 82] W Nelson street Wed-
nesday morning, will he held at #
n. m. today from the Assembly
of G id church with Rev. Iwnard
Nerve! officiating.
Rur al "dll he at Cherry Mound
-vi-h She* Aturray directing. I’al'.-
|hf>crov« with 1o Adams Sowder,
Farnest Sowder, Frank Sowder,
Robert Biffert, R. R. Harrison,
and Jim Wopier.
1 rucker* Arretted
Nine truckers were arrested by
state highway patrolmen in Deni-
son last night and yesterday for
overloading. Hearings had not
been set today
feed a normal family of 10, she
has lost 25 pounds in that time.
Normally a stout woman, she now
a | weighs 101 pounds.
a low blod sugar count and j bridge saw the little 68-year-old
nt rli»e»+lve | steamer still was afloat and that
her five hour dn«h under forced
juices. He said it was the first
case of its kind to come to his
attention.
steam had not been in vain. She
was proceeding at once to save
the* men.
Cares and duties of the office
were forgotten a brief period this
morning and other clerks were
shocked at hearing laughter and
song floating out of the transpor-
tation office.
The occasion for the hilarity
was the birinaay of Gladys
(Continued On Page 4)
15 MISSING IN
HALIFAX BLAZE
HALIFAX. N. S., March 2 check and soon spread to the Nov*
(UP)—The Queen hotel was de- Scotia Liquor commission, the
stroyed by fire early today and Canadian General Electric com-
notice reported that 15 persons pany and the orthodox Greek
were missing. - church.
Police said “at least 10 persons” The Halifax hotel was also in
had been taken to hospitals. the path of the flames.
The fire spread to several ad- The Queen hotel is in the heart
jacent buildings. ; of downtown Halifax.
The fire broke nut at 6:45 a. i______ ____ ■—— ,]
m. and spread rapidly through the | NOTICE
hostelry, a landmark. Flames,! if you do not receive poor
fanned by high winds blowing in Press belore trM |M«m* phonf
] from the sea, were difficult to.SOu and one wtll he *vnt you
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 204, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1939, newspaper, March 2, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526945/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.