Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 22, 1941 Page: 2 of 6
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Today*
Editorials
Midiummsr Nigh! i Oreim
Rorg#r, Texas
Tu^idny, July
1941
Page 2
the defense
the building
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The Effective Phase Begins
There have been three phases of
program since the President called for
of effective defense in May, 19-40.
From May until that autumn there was a great
scurrying to pass appropriations, to let contracts, to
draw plans, everything was on paper It had to be so.
From last autumn through this spring and sum- j
mer, there was a period of "tooling up" of providing
the specialized tools necessary before production
could begin, of building factories from the ground
up
Now at last we enter a third phase—when pro-
duction in effective volume is beginning to roll. Now
we begin to get the stuff, and from now on the stream
of that production must continue to rise in heighten-
ing crescendo until the world comes again, as it will;
some day, to peace.
Watch the needle flicker across the face of the
arms production gauge! |
Now it reads “More than 1500 new-model rif les j
and sub-machine guns are coming off the production ;
lines every day."
Now “The thousandth Hudson bomber is al-
ready on its way to England."
Now “Shells will begin to roll off the production
line of the Army's $20,000,000 munitions plant at
Milan, Tenn., on Aug. 10. Six months ago this plant
was a hayfield."
Now “Every naval ship under construction is far
ahead of schedule."
Now “Three tank plants are simultaneously get-
ting into actual production on medium tanks, the
type the Army has needed most urgently, since light
tanks are already in quantity production, and are
good enough to have been most helpful to the British
in Libya."
Each of these is only a small flick of the needle,
but together they show how the defense effort is
entering the productive stage. It has been a weary
strain to wait month after month., plugging ever
harder at the job, with so little apparent result. Now
the results begin to come.
With casual tangible guns, tanks, and planes
in siqht, it should be easier to redouble the effort
that will keep them com.nq in an increasing stream. S'S-T".
In that lies the best hope for the American future. minum producing plants to meet
the ever growing demands for this
metal. It is, with the cooperation
of the Federal Power Commission,
wording out the difficult problem
. ttf providing adequate power sUp-
We aon t think we ve ever been unduly friendly | pHes to produce this aluminum.
toward termites, especially the Fifth Column kind.
But after all, there was this to be said for ter-
mites: Termites worked silently and privately; no-
body ever bothered a termite, for the simple reason
that nobody ever knew they were there until it was
too late. They were able to enjoy their frugal repast
of door-sill salad unmolested.
Now a super-microphone has been invented
which makes the miniscule munchings of the termites
sound louder than a man eating celery in a railway
station restaurant. The termite's loss will be man's
gain, but it is disconcerting to think that no living
Creature is any longer safe from the keen ear of the pver, have recently changed cer- i saj,j yesterday the United Stat-
SERIAL STORY
Shortage Of
(Continued from Page ONE)
ments.
"These figures clearly show
not only that there will be no
new aluminum available for
civilian use. but there is and
will be an urgent problem in-
volved in supplying enough fab-
ricated aluminum parts at the
places they are needed when
they are needed for defense pro-
duction alone.
‘‘The Office of Production Man-
Tuning In On Termites
There is at this moment a sev-
ere shortage of scrap aluminum
for remelting.
‘‘To make every pound of alum-
inus available to defense, the Of-
fice of Production Management,
in cooperation with the Office of
Civilian Defense, is asking citi-
zens to contribute old aluminum
articles between July 21 and July
27. Such aluminum is always use-
ful in certain indiiect military us-
es, such as the deovidization of
steel, for which purpose virgin
aluminum is now- being largely
used. The military services, more-
that the Russians were “success-
fully holding up the Germans" in
the Pskov sector, where the Nazis
are driving toward Leningrad,
but that the Germans appeared to
be making progress on both sides
of Smolenski, key city 230 miles
west of Moscow, on the central
front.
Losses Scored
Dispatches from Berlin said the
Germans destroyed 391 Soviet
i tanks Sunday, most of them in a
j Dniester river sector where 10.000
i Russian prisoners were reported
] taken.
DNB, the official German news
agency, admitted the Russians
were carrying out Premier Joseph
V. Stalin's order for a “scorched
earth" campaign, at least in some
sectors.
DNB said Reich troops, march-
ing with heavy packs, tramped
through the choking ash dust of
burned forests in pursuit of Rus-
sians in the Salla area, in the
north.
On the diplomatic front, the
German government demanded
that Bolivian Charge D’Affaires
in Berlin leave Germany within
three days, in reprisal for the ex-
pulsion of German minister Ernst
Wendler from Bolivia.
The Bolivian government re-
quested Wendler’s departure
Saturday in a move to quash
asserted plans for a Nazi coup.
In Washington, acting secre-
tary of state Sumner Welles
was good cause to believe that
a full hundred would be paid
following the present oil field
pay day. "Two years ago, when
we elected Lou Roberts state
commander, we took 107 paid
dues with us to the state con-
vention, which, at that time was
a record for any post, and it is
hoped that we can do as well
this time," he explained.
“If we want to elect our buddy,
Charlie Maisel to the high office
of Commander for the Depart-
ment of Texas, which will bring
equal honor and credit to all of
Hutchinson county, we must
show that we are behind him, and
that is why Legionnaires are pay-
ing their 1942 dues at this time.”
"Sooner or later, you will pay
your 1942 dues: so, why not
now?" Phillips asks.
Bolivian Envoy
(Continued from Page ONE)
microphone-
tuned in.
that even the termites have
been tain specifications for military
| equipment with the result that
this aluminum can go directly in-
to military uses.
"Any statement which, direct-
ly or by implication, gives the
impression that the supply of
aluminum for military require-
ments does not present a criti-
cal problem, is not in accord
with the facts and can only re-
sult in harm to the defense pro-
gram."
Moscow Reports
(Continued from Page ONE)
War Casualties In The U. S.
Nobody doubts any longer that the United
States is tremendously affected by the war in Europe.
It now has begun to touch every phase of daily life.
But would you think it was actually causing traf-
fic deaths? Col. John W. Bosworth, state police super-
intendent of West Virginia, says it is. Highway acci-
dents actually increase in West Virgina with Hitler's
movements, Bosworth says, and warfare in Europe
is spilling the lives of Americans thounsands of miles
away from it. People feel uncertain and insecure, he
thinks, and thus they grow careless and reckless.
It seems far-fetched, but there might be some-
thing to it, at that, It is surely true that the long
months of uncertainty wear some people's nerves
thin. Trying to pass that car ahead on a rising curve, A Soviet war buUetll»gave this
however, will do Hitler no harm whatever; much more| picture of the main battiefront.
is accomplished by staying behind, arriving two min-1 “During last mght. stubborn
utes later and being on the job the next morning PoioS-N^
instead of on a slob. and Smolensk iMoseow frontl and
--i Novoerad Volynski 'Kiev front1
i directions.”
In all these sectors, the Russians
i have been fighting bitterly and
apparently without losing notice-
es had promised Bolivia full
support if an international inci-
dent developed over the case.
The Germans said their troops
were surrounding and destroying
important parts of the Red army
but gave few other details.
post of foreign minister in a
cabinet shake-up last week.
On the Russo-German war
front, Moscow reports said that
Russia's Red armies were still
holding doggedly in the main
theaters of the 31-day-old strug-
gle.
Roy Broadway
(Continued from Page ONE)
Richards, sergeants-at-arms.
The following Legonnaires were
elected to serve on the execu-
tive committee: H. M. McIntosh,
Roy Cullison, Bill Price, J. Q.
Nelson, L. C. Crumrine, Lou
Roberts, Joe Rives, C. M. Will-
iamson, J. O. Coolbaugh. M. C.
Scott, and Tom Hoodenpyle.
Delegates to the state conven-
tion to be held in Fort Worth
August 16, 17, 18 and 19 are:
Roy Broadway, R. R. Lindsey,
Charlie Williamson, Homer Pruett,
regarded as part and parcel of
President Roosevelt's moves for
| agitator measures against Eur-
j ope. It is interesting, one said
| “that the Bolivian action was
: taken at this particular moment
and that it was followed imme-
| diately by Undersecretary of
| State Sumner Welles’ tirade.”
It was charged that President
Roosevelt tried, by economic pres
sure and political threats, to make
Latin America subservient.
“His insinuations regarding
German intentions toward South
America are so absurd that there
is no necessity for a factual re-
buttal,” it was said. “He is try-
ing to carry the war psychosis to
Latin America to find colonial
vassals there who will support
his anti-European policies."
U. S Announces
(Continued From Page On*)
In the country life is what you make it and
the city it is what you make.
companies, was described in the
statement as adequate to amortize
the entire loan by the end of the
maturity period.
The loan agency's statement
said this new financial assistance
to war-harried British was au-
thorized under a law enacted last
month which specified the FRC
could make loans to a foreign gov-
ernment to enable that govern-
ment to get maximum dollar ex-
change value for its property in
J. C. Phillips, Lou Roberts. Rev. i this country.
An eastern thief broke a display mirror while abil6oOUnd,for ,our davs-
grabbing a tray of jewels. A |udge gave him the seven ported that a Russian tank unit
years of bad luck. had crashed through the Nazi i
_ j forward wall in an undisclosed
sector and attacked German com-
munication* and supply lines.
London military quarters said i
“Let's go'' seems to be the slogan of our country
-and of our money.
THE BORGER DAILY HERALD
Puhlub*d at 20S North Main Stroat. Borqcr. Taxa. Every
Evening Excapt Saturdav and on Sunday Morning by
Panhand!* Publishing Company. Inc Publiahar.
J. C. PHILLIPS Editor and Manager
On* Year
f?.M
Six Months
Three Months
WaokJy
MM
S2 10
.11
Entered as
ttio Fort Office
ler *the Art of 15arrh
a. mr»
Ti ,, Acwif
lated Pwv U rxcluto
rely entitled to the
a rie a . **
use of rspubli
ration of all new* di?
.patches credit to it
or not other*
Any erniiM
or reputation
eous reflection upon th
of anv individual fir
itiwwar.aymi
<»r corporation, and corrections will be made when
warranted and as prominently as was wrongly published
in the reference ,,r article
All unsolicited, articles, manuscripts, letters and
pictures sent to the Herald are sent at the owner's risk,
and the publishers expressly repudiate am liability or
responsibility for their custody or return The utmost
care will be taken, however, to see that they are hot lost
or misplaced In this office
The Herald reserves the
til
•>P<“.
state
poratai
will Is
of the
deemed by il to
position or conlrn
| war. inflation of
emergencies beyond control a
j».ny shall not be held for
The Herald vetll not be
ttie advertiser throurh the 1
than those quote I in the Ad
of correction and will give
Harold Scroggins, Claude Ruby,
Charlie Maisel, B. T. Brmton and
Bill Price. Roy Broadway, incom-
ing commander, was elected
chairman of the delegation.
To Serve Coffee
The new administration will
take over its duties on the
first Monday night in AugusL
The next meeting under the
present administration will be
at Phillips Community Hall,
next Monday night. July 28,
at which time and place Le-
gionnaires will be served cof-
fee and doughnuts.
On a motion made and passed
lust night, the present adminis-
tration went on record to pay all
outstandng bills, leaving a cash
balance in the bank for the com-
ing year's activities. The post also
received a report from Frank
Ivey on the July Fourth celebra-
tion, in connection with which
it was stated that an offer of
settlement had been made by the
fireworks company and that the
commttee would probably be in
When the lend-lease program
was enacted the British already
had piled up huqe orders for
munitions here. It was said at
the time they had funds, securi-
ties and other property avail-
able to meet those obligations
but required lend-lease assis-
tance in supplying future needs.
To turn the securities into dol-
lars. however, meant marketing
them in this country. In discuss-
ing the loan now authorized, sec-
retary Morgenthau said recently
that conditions on American mar-
kets had presented difficulties in
this regard and a lean at this time
was desirable to assure the British
of obtaining max;mum value.
Whether one loan will be ade-
quate to meet all British needs
was not stated. Morgenthau said
Britain's obligations to U. S.
manufacturers at the first of the
year amounted to between $1,300,-
000.000 and $1,400,000,000 but he
could not estimate how much this
had been reduced in the six
months since then.
The loan agenev statement said
MURDER IN CONVOY
BY A. W. O'BRIEN
COPYRIGHT, 1**t,
NBA *«KVICt. INC.
right to r»)ect any idver j
be uxkdesuubU- as to style, i
s In event of flood, tire i
currency, strike or other !
u ,■ "Company" th* "Cam - a position to make a final ac- j that collateral for the loan fell in-
isZobl. for on,,..,, or durm* the I to three categories:
-quern -—tamed by 1842 Duet Paid i Securities of 61 United States
lie of goods at prices les
t I.« IIH 111 % i !>«•• I* »Mirl«it
u( •m f hr nr%» «ln». .form trlr*
144 comfort It oil I or for flu Ihm of
liU old frlrnd. I.liter, I leuleMiiHt
Sflley ijurRtloMR Itulllit* further
hr to whether he itn* alone when
he aniv Teen Ji»Rf before the mur-
der. Mint nly.ht, ItolllriR look* nut
of hlR porthole, *ee* n Huht. .%»
hr prepnreR to l»i% ••Minnie he
hntr« ii rltfr ■ li o t. firlloweil im-
mediately hy the lifeboat tilnrin.
* * *
STRUGGLE IN THE PASSAGE
CHAPTER VII
A UTOMATICALLY, Lieutenant
- Rollins shifted mental gears
as the emergency gong sounded.
Army discipline went to work. He
bad an official post to assume at
Lifeboat Station 15, and every-
thing else became secondary. Re-
gretfully he shoved the revolver
back into his pocket, but the
(bought Wished through his mind
that it didn’t matter much because
whoever had flashed the light
would be swallowed up in the
men flooding the decks.
Hurriedly he slipped into his
trousers, donned a balaclava, slung
on his shoulder bug and gas mask,
and dashed into the corridor. Ex-
cept for a pulling gentry, he was
alone; but within a few seconds
other officers were pouring from
their cabins, and Rollins marveled
at the general coolness. One
would think that a lifeboat alarm
in the dead of night aboard a
troopship riding angry waves was
an everyday occurrence in the
lives of these men.
Outside it was pitchblack, and
j cold spray filled the night. Murky
figures bumped one another as
they passed. Rollins walked
quickly with both hands out-
stretched to prevent himself from
crashing headlong into others be-
fore he reached Lifeboat Sta-
tion 15. ^
His sergeant was only seconds
behind and breathing heavily from
the run upstairs with heavy equip-
ment.
"What’s up, Sir?” he gasped.
“I didn’t feel any explosion and
the ship's whistle isn't blowing
the regulation blasts.”
Rollins had been thinking along
the same lines. “Perhaps it’s only
a drill, Sergeant. Don't have the
men climb into the boat yet. It’s
a bit dangerous with the ship
heaving around and the planking
wet. Wait until there is further
cause for alarm.”
“Very well, Sir!”
Within two minutes more, the
full complement of men for Life-
boat Station 15 was on hand and
standing in position, ready to hop
into the boat on order. Members
of the ship’s crew stood by the
lowering apparatus.
After the first wave of excite-
ment, the men standing in the
ket price value of $250,000,000.
Unlisted securities of 46 United
States corporations. The estimated
value of these securities was put
at $115,000,000.
Th* capital stock of 41 British
owned United States Insurance
companies estimated to have a
total net worth of more than
$180,000,000.
“There will be no change in
the control or management of
thes* direct investments, includ-
ing the insurance companies.”
the statement said. "Their fin-
ancial position and stability
will continue unaffected."
Anti-Sabotage
(Continued from Pag* ONE)
scheme.
Protective fences have been em-
ployed as special guards. The
men are being trained at the
plants of the power company, the
officials reported.
Plans for plant protection in
power companies throughout the
state were drawn up at a recent
meeting of officials of Texas pow-
er company, the officials report-
ed.
Plans for plant protection in
power companies throughout the
state were drawn up at a -recent
meeting of officials of Texas pow-
er companies and federal power
commission representatives in
Dallas, Powell said.
The full complement of Life-
boat Station 15 was on haud,
waiting for orders.
black-shrouded night began to
grumble in approved soldier fash-
ion.
• t •
rpHEY stood there for a full half
^ hour before the adjutant,
heavily clothed, came around.
“Dismiss your station, Lieuten-
ant!” he ordered. “The captain
doesn’t wish to sound the regular
dismiss signal on the ship’s whistle
because it might alarm the other
ships.”
He turned to the men and
shrugged in the darkness. “You
heard him, my hardies—on your
way and pleasant dreams!” Ik-
smiled as he heard them shuffling
off muttering complaints about
drill-crazy O. C.’s and the army
system in general. They had
really enjoyed the bit of excite-
ment but didn't want to show it.
There was no talk about rifle
shots. Rollins didn't stop to chat
but went directly into the cabin.
From the folds of the sweater in
the cupboard drawer, he ex-
tracted the bottle and poured him-
self a stiff shot of brandy. It sent
a glow of warmth through him.
As he lighted a cigaret, Greg
noticed on his wrist wutch that
it was a few minutes after 1
o’clock.
They had been on deck for
about half an hour ... a few
minutes previously he had seen
the light on the deck . . . that
would make it about 12:30. There
was something familiar about that
time . . . things seemed to happen
regularly at 12:30 or thereabouts.
Tonight—the unexplained life-
boat alarm.
Last night—the murder of Tees.
The night before — Rollins
frowned—he had seen the light
on the deck and found Joan there.
age across the Gulf of Siam from
the Malay Peninsula.
(Neutral military observers in
Shanghai, where the same report
was issued, said they were skepti-
cal of its origin, saying they
doubted the British Hongkong
censor would pass such a story.
They said they felt there might be
a similarity between the report
and Nazi accusations of British
intentions before the invasions of
Scandinavia and the lowlands.!
Koh Ishii, spokesman for the
Japanese cabinet board of infor-
mation, told a foreign press con-
ference he could neither confirm
nor deny the accuracy of the Do-
mei report.
Japanese Say
(Continued From Pag* On*)
1842 Dues Paid
r?i.*r S onmn.r.'opv but I Adjutant J. C. Phillips r*-
P<_ publication I ported that sixty 1842 member-
ships had been paid and there
for the Ad-
I corporations listed on the New
1 York stock exchange These were .
i said to have a total present mar-
and Manchoukuo, which borders
Siberia, also were reported.
(An authorized British source
asserted in London that continu-
ing reports of prooable Japanese
demands on French Indo-China
were disturbing, “particularly af-
ter cabinet changes.” He cited the
removal from the cabionet of for-
eign minister Yosuke Matsuoka,
who “assured the British govern-
ment last month that reports of
Japanese territorial demands in
Indo-China were false.”
Say British Will Invad*
(Oriental observers recalled
Japanese reports of a British-
Chinese military agreement, den-
ied in both the war capitals of
Chungking and London, preceded
Japan’s 1940 military and econo-
mic penetration of French Indo-
China •
Dom*i. Japanese news agency.
ar*crted in a report datelined
Hongkong that Chinese forces
in Yunnan and Kwanksi pro-
vinces. free French units of
General Charles De Gaulle and
British native troops in Malay*
w*r* prepared to go into the
Wrench oriental country.
<An invasion from A la va would
require either land passage
through Thailand. Indo-China's
western neighbor, or a long voy-
May Hold Draftee
Army 16 Months
WASHINGTON. July 22—(A’)
—Senator Taft (R-Ohio' proposed
today that congress limit the ser-
vice of selectees, reserves and
national guardsmen to 16 instead
of the present 12 months.
Taft laid this proposal before
the senate military affairs com-
mittee after a group of witnesses,
most of them opponents, had tes-
tified on the effects of pending
proposals to extend indefnitely
the period of service for citizen
soldiers.
Chairman Reynolds (D-N. C.)
directed that Gen. George C.
Marshall, army chief of staff, be
queried as to the effect of Taft’s
plan, which the Ohio senator said
would provide for the release of
75,000 draftees from the army
each month, with none serving
more than 16 months.
Gen. John McCauley Palmer,
retired told the senate military
committee today it was his opin-
ion that Adolf Hitler, in order
to accomplish his aims, must
"conquer or encircle the United
States.”
Testifying in support of legis-
lation to retain selectees, reserves
and national guardsmen in army
service beyond the present limit
of one year. Palmer warned that
the army would disintegrate at
a critical time if this course were
not followed.
“In my opinion” said Palmer,
a former assistant chief of staff
under Gen. John J. Pershing,
"our peril is greater than it ever
has been in our history.”
IJOl.l.lNS Jumped to III* feet and
I p.u c-d the ' btn (loot A -tor
tling (bought had hit him. Could
Te< have Men somebody flushing
a light on deck and been mur-
dered wheij he attempted to grap-
ple with that person?
Again, Rollins’ brow clouded—
the girl always entered the puzzle.
She had admitted being responsi-
ble for the light on the first night.
Rather, at least, she had admitted
smoking on deck. There could
possibly have been, Rollins con-
ceded, another person on the deck
flashing the light seen by the
•sentry and repot ted to him. When
he rushed up he had found the
girl. She wus not flashing any
light. In fact, she wasn’t even
carrying a lighted cigaret.
Still, the fact remained that
about the sume time every night,
something extraordinary seemed
to happen around the same section
"A” deck.
At long last, he had come upon
u plan that might give him a
chance to solve the mystery and
lay his hands upon the killer. It
all depended on one detail, and
he intended to put himself straight
on that detail without delay.
Throwing on his bathrobe, Rol-
lins stepped out into the corridor
again and walked to the first
cross-passage. He turned into it
and made his way towards the far
side of the ship where Lieutenant
Mtley's cabin was situated. As he
turned along the corridor running
parallel to his own, some slight
movement in the curtain shelter-
ing a deck exit caught his eye.
Quick as a flash, Rollins stooped,
apparently to adjust his slufe lace,
meanwhile studying the curtain
tensely. It hung about two inches
off the floor and even in the dark-
ness he could see two shoes stand-
ing motionless!
Rollins waited until the ship
swayed downwards. Lithely, he
straightened a bit before diving
headlong at the spot in the cur-
tain where he judged the knees
belonging to those feet should be.
It was a tackle that would have
warmed the cockles of any rugby
coach’s heart. His arms scissored
around a pair of strong legs, and
with a heave of his shoulder he
bowled over his opponent, the cur-
tain coming down with a ripping
sound over the struggling figures.
Rollins heaved again and rolled
on top. With a single deft move,
he grabbed a struggling arm
through the folds of the curtain
and twisted it upwards.
“Easy—you’ll break it!” a voice
groaned.
Rollins released his hold—it was
Harry Miley!
(To Be Continued)
other's rights and comforts than
they have been before.
Perhaps the brief news item
from Columbus, Ohio, saying that
Police Corporal Edgar N. Butler
has asked fruit and vegetable
hawkers to be more quiet when
shouting their wares out of def-
erence to night workers in de-
fense factories who must sleep in
the daytime, is the beginning of
a new era of thoughtfulness for
the other fellow.
London correspondents have for
the past year been writing of the
good manners, gallantry, and
neighborliness of the once self-
centered, stand-offish Britishers
— brought together in under-
standing and sympathy by a
c< mmun determination to conquer
that threat.
There’s no reason why the
same spirit shouldn’t spring up
in America, where we, too, are
being drawn into closer under-
standing by the common purpose
of seif defense.
In fact there's no reason why
we. as individuals, shouldn’t start
today to think a little about the
other fellow, and so make life
a little more pleasant and u lit-
tle more bearable for euch oth-
er,
MANNERS CAN
HELP MORALE
We're all depressed about to-
day and worried about tomorrow.
Many of us are thinking of the
member of our family away at
an army camp. All of us face the
probability of having less in the
future than we have today.
So why not make things a lit-
tle easier for each other by be-
ing thoughtful of the other per-
son's feelings, his comforts, and
his rights?
Good manners can help a lot—
even in a national emergency.
• We, The Women
By RUTH MI^LETT
Don't be surprised if one of the
by-products of national defense
is national courtesy.
A whole nation of people work- >
ing toward a common goal, and
called on for common sacTificeK.
may become more aware of each
Joan Carroll, who starred in
Broadway musical, dfinks her
milk and likes it in Hollywood
studio where this 9-year-old
actress will play title role ia a
' Mri tactile*
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 22, 1941, newspaper, July 22, 1941; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth738797/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.