The Hopkins County Echo (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, August 8, 1980 Page: 3 of 4
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THE HOPKINS COUNTY ICHO,
DEATHS
Hascal Romans Frank Moss
Hascal Ramans, Route 1
Dike, died Tuesday afternoon in
Citizens General Hospital in
Greenville. He was 78.
Born Oct 3,1901 in Hopldns
County, he was the son of
George and Georgia Martin
Romans. He married the for-
mer Bertie Copeland in Wood
County Feb. 8,1933.
A retired farmer, he is sur-
vived by his wife; a son G.R.
Romans of Dike; and a
daughter, Mrs. Dorthie Broxson
ofLovelady.
Other survivors include
brothers Babe Romans, Dick
Romans, And G.W. Romans, all
of Cumby, Pete Romans of
Commerce, and C.W. Romans
of Alba; sisters Mrs. Vera Hall,
Edith Romans, and Estelle
Baxley, all of Cumby, Mrs.
Irene Davis of Miller Grove,
Mrs. Odell Strickland of Alba,
and Marie Goodman of Royce
City; six grandchildren and five
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held at
4 p.m. Wednesday in the
Murray-Orwosky chapel with
the Rev. Dan Newman of-
ficiating.
Burial was in Restlawn
Memorial Park with grandsons
serving as pallbearers.
Merle Beck
Funeral services for Merle
Beck, 85, of Spearman, Texas,
were held at 10:30 a.m.
Saturday in the First Baptist
Church with the Rev. Russell
Pogue officiating. Burial was in
Hansford Cemetery.
Mr. Beck died Thursday
morning in a Perryton nursing
home.
The son of Julius J. and Mary
Etta Lackey Beck was born
March 29,1895.
Survivors include his wife,
Opal Collins Beck of Spearman;
a sister, Pearl Woodall of
Sulphur Springs; a brother,
J.R. Beck of Sulphur Springs;
and numerous nieces and
nephews.
Pallbearers were Roy Beck
and Robert Estes of Sulphur
Springs, Charles Lane of
Houston, Billy Joe Beck of
Balko, Okla., Larry Ed Beck of
San Antonio, Sid Beck Jr., Gail
Beck and Johnny Crawford, all
of Spearman.
Tony Cline
Tony Cline, 16, of 408 Peach
Street, died Monday at 5 p.m. at
the Fort Worth State School
where he was a student.
Bom May 29,1964 in Wylie, he
was the son of Billy George and
Anita Bench Cline.
He is survived by his parents;
a brother, Brandon Cline; three
sisters, Donah Koon, Lory
Martin, and Kim Lancaster, all
of Sulphur Springs; and a
grandmother, Mrs. Ima Wilson
of Greenville.
Funeral services were held at
2 p.m. Wednesday in the
Murray-Orwosky funeral
chapel with Rev. Larry Jordan
and Harold Windham of-
ficiating.
Burial was in Restlawn
Memorial Park with Don
Gowan, Larry Riley, Warner
Gamblin, Don Ridgeway,
Ronnie French and Truitt
Hannon serving as pallbearers.
The family has suggested that
memorial gifts may be made to
Opportunity Center, 602 Church
SL, or at City National Bank in
Tony Cline’s name.
Bobby Evans
Funeral services were held at
2 p.m. Sunday at the Tapp
Funeral Chapel for Bobby
Evans, 45, of Route 2, Cumby,
with the Rev. Calvin Durban
officiating Burial was in the
Harmony Cemetery.
Mr. Evans died at 3:50 p.m.
Friday in the Veterans Hospital
in Dallas. The son of George L.
and Mavis L Murphy Evans,
Mr. Evans was born April 13,
1945inLindale.
Mr. Evans was a member of
the Methodist Church and was a
Navy veteran. He is survived by
his wife, Ethel, whom he
married in 1974 in Tyler.
Other survivors include two
step-children, Pat Dorman of
Dallas and Rickey White of
Cumby; two step-grandsons,
Jeryme White and Rodney
Rosas; four sisters, Glenna
Akins of Redoak, Mary Hollen,
Arlington, Charlene Martin,
Tyler, and Kathy Durden, of
Mesquite; and one brother,
Homer Fred Evans of Tyler.
in, ppii .
' ~ ■ : -i ... •• :*\r%
Frank S. Moss, 86, who
resided at 301 Oak Ave., died at
9:15 p.m. Sunday in Memorial
Hospital. He was a retired
sawmill worker and was a
member of the Pentecostal
Church.
He was boro Nov. 18, 1893 in
Arkansas, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Moss.
Survivors include his wife,
the former Callie Reppond
whom he married May 3, 1976;
two sons, Bud Moss of Little
Elm and James Moss of
Greenville; four daughters,
Sybil Hilbum of Sulphur
Springs, Ruby Kenney of
Mesquite, Mary Smith of West
Tawakoni, and Willie
Merkelback of Illinois; two
brothers, Ed Moss of California
and Grover Moss of Waco, 45
grandchildren, and numerous
great-grandchildren and great-
great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his first wife, the former Viola
Voiles in 1971, one son and one
daughter.
Funeral services were con-
ducted at Murray-Orwosky
Funeral Home at 2 p.m.
Tuesday, with the Rev. Cecil
Dodd officiating. Burial was in
Turner Cemetery near Emory,
with grandsons serving as
pallbearers.
Eunice Ellington
Graveside services for Mrs.
Eunice Ellington were held at
10 a.m. Thursday in Cooper
under the direction of Delta
County Funeral Home.
Mrs. Ellington died Tuesday.
She was the widow of Dr. C.S.
Ellington. She was born in 1891.
Survivors include two
daughters, Maude Guinn and
Mable Mosely of Arlington, and
granddaughters Mrs. Lee
Teetes of Sulphur Springs and
Mrs. Dennis Peck of Dallas.
Death takes
director of
local group
Lester L May, longtime
Dallas lawyer and a director of
the Sulphur Springs Industrial
Foundation, died Tuesday in a
Mesquite Hospital. He was 60
years old.
May was striken by an ap-
parent heart attack Saturday
while driving on 1-20 near
Mesquite.
His father, the late Chester
May, is credited with a leading
role in locating the Rockwell
International plant here. As a
vice president of Lone Star Gas
Company, he accompanied the
late L,A. Dixon, a vice
president of the then-Rockwell
Manufacturing Company, on a
site-viewing tour of this area.
Lester May was elected to
succeed his father on the board
of the foundation that owns the
building occupied by the
Rockwell facilities.
He was known as an out-
standing criminal lawyer in
Dallas and spent three years as
an assistant UJS. district at-
torney.
May is survived by his wife,
mother, a son, five daughters
and nine grandchildren.
Services were held Thursday
at 11:30 a.m. at Sparkman-
Hillcrest Funeral Chapel, 7405
West Northwest Highway in
Dallas.
Area youth
takes high
show rank
Kris Koon’s Favorite Man
Revival Gay has won fifth place
in the 1980 Natonal Jersey
.JfOuth Production Contest
sponsored by The American
Jersey Cattle Club.
Kris is a student at Sulphur
Springs High School and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Brody Koon of the
Bonanza community.
His cow produced 19,393
pounds of milk and 791 pounds
of butterfat with a value of
$2,389.44.
The contest was open to any
4-H or FFA member under 19
years of age with a Jersey
project completing a DHIA or
DHIR lactation. Winners woe
selected by computing the
product value of the animal’s
production adjusted for age.
Cuff Notes | Local officer credited
with saving child's life
— Atumbltd Sy —
JOE WOOSLEY
m
Brief notes: Marvin Gregory,
who has a sizable dairy and
cattle operation in the Gafford
Chapel community, grins and
says be is diversifying ... He’s
Jumped over to the black lands
of Hunt County and actually
expanded with a farm
operation, where be has har-
vested Johnsongrass hay and
milo and is looking at planting
500 acres of wheat .„ Perhaps
acting like a philosopher,
Gregory added that a cat-
tleman or farmer “Just has to
produce more to keep up with
the cost of living.”... On the
other hand, he thinks the recent
wave of torrid heat and
drought-like conditions in some
areas has helped the dairy
industry by reducing
production and, thereby,
surplus milk ... A caller
identifying himself as
“Anonymous” had a comment
about the reported sighting of a
cobra snake in a Delta County
cemetery. “Anonymous”
recalled an encounter with a
spreading adder in earlier
days, noting it had characterics
of a cobra. He also claimed it
hissed like a goose ... And he
suggested a spreading adder
may have been mistaken for a
cobra.
More notes: Mrs. B.B. (Ada)
Cain came home to Sulphur
Springs from Carlisle, Pa. for a
recent reception marking her
90th birthday anniversary ...
And she enjoyed visiting her
many friends who called during
the event... There’ll be a lot of
talk going on in Quitman this
week as the annual Wood
County Old Settlers Reunion
opens on Wednesday. The
reunion dates bade for 76 years
and always attracts large
crowds... Electricians rushing
a large section near Winnsboro
found unexpected trouble ...
The copperhead snake believed
responsible for the outage
apparently had survived the
69,000-volt shock and was ready
to strike back until an officer’s
shot dispatched the reptile ... A
bat snared near a mobile home
in Mount Vernon recently was
determined to have rabies ...
Judge Grover Sellers recently
sustained a fractured vertebra
in a fall and is a patient in
Memorial Hospital ... Earl
Martin and Jimmy Chapman
have been enjoying a new Joint
acquisition: an airplane... Both
are private pilots and have
been observed flying the
Mooney aircraft in cloudless
skies.
to repair a power outage hitting beautification project.
Court records
MARRIAGE LICENSES in the E.S. Davis survey;
The County Clerk’s office
issued no marriage licenses for
the week.
DIVORCES GRANTED
The following divorces have
been recently granted and filed
in the office of the District
Clerk:
Joyce Ellen Long and Donald
Ray Long, Judith Warren Click
and Donald Richey Click,
Pearlene Golightly and J.H.
Golightly, Gary Don Robinson
and Robin Ttyler Robinson,
Elliott W. Feamley and Eileen
W. Feamley and Deborah Lynn
Roberts and Bobby Eugene
Roberts.
LANDTRANSFERS
Warranty deeds for the
following land transfers have
been recently filed in the
County Cleric’s office:
L. D. and Kate Coke to
Frankie Price, Bobby Price
and P.F. Bradley III, two tracts
in the Mary Ann Bowlin sur-
vey;
Neva Ruth Bartley to A.E.
and Patsy E. Neal, 20.347 acres
in the A.F. Conner survey;
Carl Wayne Hargrove to
Jackson W. Hunt Jr., a tract in
the Josiah Thompson survey;
C.W. Wimberly and wife, Jim
G. Wimberly, to C.W. Wim-
berly and wife, Jim G. Wim-
berly, tract in LA. King sur-
vey;
Ronald L and Mamy S.
Green to Gary L and Paula R.
Oats, two acres in L. Vannerson
survey;
Marion H. and Dorothy Bibby
to Marlyn Darlene Bibby, 95.32
acres in the Smith R. Cherry
survey;
T.G. Coker to Pete and
Francis Cunzalo, tract in the
Santos Coy survey;
Pete and Francis Cunzalo to
Charles E. and Peggy W.
Houser, tract in the Santos Coy
survey;
Charles E. and Peggy W.
Houser to Curtis Mayo, tract in
the Santos Coy survey;
Celia Marjorie and John
Furman Wallace to Imogens
and Suenan Gober, a tract in
the Mary Ann Bowlin survey;
Wallace Ray Robertson to
Lanny Dale and Sharron
Rainey, a tract in the William
H. Ravey survey;
M. R. and Florence Flemens
to Frankie Price, a tract in the
LP. Dike survey;
Jack B. and Hattie Lee
Patterson DuPriest, David
DuPriest, Jackie and Ronny
Campbell and Sandra Haines
and Dak Herzog to Bobby G.
and Jamie J. Martin, 30-ecre
tract in the A. Caro survey;
Ray V. Terry to William O.
and Barbara H. Ramsey, tract
By JOHNGORE
News-Telegram StaH
A three-year veteran of the Sulphur
Springs Police Department was being
hailed as a hero Tuesday after saving the
life of an 11-month old baby Monday af-
ternoon.
Quick action by Cpl. Ricky Roberts was
credited with saving the infant, who had
stopped breathing, after Roberts
responded to a distress call shortly after 2
p.m. Monday at 207 Radio Road.
“When I arrived the baby was not
breathing and was already beginning to
turn blue,” Roberts said.
Having competed CPR training in April,
Roberts swung into action and began
giving the still-conscience child mouth-to-
moutb resuscitation. Within a minute, the
child responded and began breathing on its
own again, the officer said.
Eleven-month old Lacy Petty, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Petty, was then
taken to Memorial Hospital were she was
examined and released. There seemed to
be no apparent reason why the child
stopped breathing, authorities said.
According to officer Roberts, Mrs. Petty
said the child was lying on the floor crying
and suddenly stopped breathing.
“This was the first time I ever had to use
my CPR training," Roberts said. "I was
afraid I had forgotten how to do it, but it all
fell into place when I got started," he said.
Roberts did have one complaint con-
cerning the incident — a situation which he
says could mean the difference between
life or death in similar situations.
“I was on the square when I received the
distress call,” Roberts said. "It took me
nearly five minutes to reach the house on
Radio Road, even using my lights and
siren. I arrived in time to help this time,
but next time maybe me or some other
officer might not — because many people
would not pull over to the side of the road
to allow the emergency vehick a chance to
get through. >
“People need to pay more attention to
emergency vehicles and clear the way for
them. It could be the difference between
life and death,” he stressed.
Roberts received his CPR training under
Sulphur Springs firefigher Lee Ward’s
direction in the spring — and Tuesday
morning, a child was well and happy.
The infant’s parents could not be
reached for comment.
Last notes: Jack Gibson Jr.,
a 1957 graduate of Sulphur
Springs High School who now
teaches at Weslaco (although
living in McAllen), spotted a
news story in the Valley
Morning Star at Harlingen
Wednesday and thoughtfully
sent along a clipping ... It
concerns Bill Thornton, also a
Sulphur Springs High School
graduate, who is switching to
another banking job in the
Valley come Sept 1... Bill, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dozier
Thornton of Reilly Springs, will
begin work as president of the
Mid-Valley Bank of Weslaco.
Currently, he is president of
Raymondville Bank of Texas ...
Bill also is a city councilman at
Raymondville and will resign
that position when he and his
family, which consists of wife
Jonelle and three children,
move to Weslaco ... In-
cidentally, it you drive High-
way 77 in the Valley, you’ll see
a great many palm trees that
Thornton promoted in a
'Diversion' tactic probed
Thieves hit downtown store
Sulphur Springs police Tuesday were
investigating a possible connection bet-
ween a burglar alarm in the southern part
of the city and the break-in of a downtown
jewlery store in which almost 94,000 worth
of merchandise was taken.
Shortly after midnight, the alarm at
Circle E Western Wear store sounded and
police converged on the scene within
minutes.
Officers found the east door of the
establishment had been smashed in with a
a flag stand that normally sits near the
store. Although the door had been broken,
there was no one in the store when police
arrived and nothing appeared to have been
taken.
Police were still at the Circle E Store on
Shannon Road when another burglar
alarm sounded — this time on the down-
town square.
The front door of Tuck’s Jewerly on the
square had been smashed in with a
crowbar, according to police reports. The
intruders apparently went to the first
jewerly display case, smashed the top with
the crowbar and grabbed several dozen
gold rings before making their getaway
down Main Street.
In all, the thieves made off with one
Masonic gold and silver ring valued at
9195,12 rings valued at 9600, 12 14K gold
Masonic rings valued at 92,400, and 12
birthstone rings valued at 9600.
Police found the crowbar used in the
robbery and recovered one of the Masonic
rings and one of the birthstone rings. One
ring was found near the corner by Winnie
Lee’s Dress Shop and the second ring was
recovered around the comer on Main
Street.
Police investigators working on the case
believe there may be a connection between
the break-in at Circle E and the burglary
at Tuck’s. According to a police depart-
ment spokesman, investigators think the
break-in at Circle E may have been a ruse
to get police in the south part of town while
robbing the downtown area.
No leads or suspects had been uncovered
early Tuesday morning, but Delbert
Harrell, chief of police, said it was too
early in the investigation to make any
judgments yet.
Another alarm at almost the same time
sent police to the Unclaimed Freight Store
on 1-30 when the owner reported the glass
doors to the store were shot out. The doors
were valued at 3300.
Witt takes over post
as tax appraisal chief
Nathan Allen to Glenn Irvin
and Don Deaton, 1 Vi acres in
the Mary Ann Bowlin survey;
Ella Ferguson to Scott
Ferguson, tract in John H.
Crook survey;
Nellie Bell to Jeff and Vickie
Godfrey, 1.25 acres in the
Jasper County School Land
survey;
Neal Whisenant to Craig and
Dene Langston, three tracts
(about 3 Vfe acres) in the M.D.
Jackson survey;
Sam and Mary Bonham, Ed
and Rose Enix, J.W. and Jackie
Spencer, Charles and Elizabeth
Spencer and Annie Spencer to
Ola Worsham, tract in the
Nacogdoches University
survey;
Della Irby to Dale D. and
Anne C. Seymore, 16 acres in
the W. Wilson survey, 35 acres
in the H. Wilson survey and
eight acres in the William
Wilson survey;
Olen and Delores Gillean to
G.G. and Twihla Y. Callan, 1.25
acres in the Elizabeth Melton
survey;
G.G. and Twihla Y. Callan to
Olen and Delores Gillean, 200
acres in the J.J. Box survey,
and a tract in the Michael C.
Garroutte survey;
Keith and Rena Hale to Olen
and Delores Gillean, a tract in
the Michael C. Garroutte
survey;
Helen Buroker Norman to
Martha B. Sprague, a tract in
the Mary Ann Bowlin survey.
Members of the Tax Appraisal District
of Hopkins County Monday night con-
firmed the employment of Thomas Witt as
Chief Appraiser of the district.
Witt, married and the father of two
children, will be moving to Sulphur
Springs from Farmers Branch, where he
was employed in the deliquent tax section
of the Dallas County Tax Department.
Employment contracts for Witt, which
will provide him with a 920,000 salary,
were approved and signed and board
chairman Ray Johnson officially
welcomed Witt to Sulphur Springs as the
new Chief Appraiser.
The Tax Appraisal District will be
headquartered at 214 Connally St., office
space recently acquired by the board from
W.A. Carothers, and the members present
at the Monday session agreed on and
approved the terms of the lease.
Witt presented the board with bids and
data packets from seven office furniture
and supply companies, (one local and six
from out of town) with whom he had
personally visited. After a lengthy
discussion the board unanimously ac-
cepted the bid of 92,729.00 from Office
Equipment Co. of Dallas. That sum will
provide office furniture for Witt and one
secretary as well as a conference table and
eight chairs. The board also approved the
motion to purchase an IBM typewriter,
unanimously agreed that Witt and his staff
would need at least two office calculators
with special memory features for use after
Jan. 1 and also agreed, on Witt’s
suggestion, that the office would not need a
copy machine at the present time but that
it would “be almost impossible for the
office to function without one later.”
The board also reviewed its current
expenses and issued five checks. Each that has been broken by other districts
check issued by the board must have concerning conflicts or potential conflicts
Witt’s signature as well as that of the of interest,
board chairman and the secretary.
Witt recommended the board consider Witt will also visit with the local service
Linda Murr as the office secretary and the organizations, beginning with the Lions
board approved the recommendation. Club, and will present an overview of the
“However, under law the board has no district’s function. Witt also expressed a
jurisdiction in the hiring of personal office need to meet soon with city, county and
staff,” Johnson said. “That is the school tax representatives,
responsibility of Tom himself.” The board authorized Witt to “seek out
Mrs. Murr, who currently lives between and purchase personal health insurance
Quitman and Yantis, “has an extensive within the guidelines set forth in the
background in real estate and legal contract.” The board also amended Witt’s
matters and would definitely be an asset to contract (as drawn up subject to terms
the office,” Witt said.
In discussing organizational matters
with the board, Witt suggested the board
“come up with a code of ethics or some
sort of written policy to abide by." The
agreed upon in a prior board meeting) to
increase car allowance expense from 18%
cents to 25 cents per mile, with Witt to
furnish his own automobile until after Jan.
1, 1981. The board agreed to consider at
board agreed to let Witt investigate other that time the purchase of an automobile
areas of the state concerning the matter, for Witt and his staff to use in performance
and report later to the board on the ground of official duties for the District.
Echoettes
Yantis gears hr school year
The Yantis Independent since the fourth birthday;
School District will officially rubeola (measles); rubella weeks,
begin the 198W11 school year (German measles); and Feb. 23 — Begin 5th six
with teacher in-service Monday mumps. It is also suggested weeks,
morning, Aug. 18, at the that each child over four years March 16-20 — Spring break.
Mineola High School cafeteria. 0f age have a TB skin test prior April 10 — End 5th six weeks.
Superintendent P.J. Ponder to starting to school. April 13 — Begin 6th six
said students are instructed to Superintendent Ponder listed weeks.
MRS. JOHN Snow of Sulphur ONE OF the many things
Springs and her daughter and occupying the attention of
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sulphur Springs High School
Brower of Fort Worth, have principal Jack Chubb this week
returned from a flight to is the policy handbook for
Athens, Greece, a cruise on the students. He has sent the
Mediterranean Sea, and a visit handbook to the printers. He
in the Holy Lands. Mrs. Snow also is nearing completion of his
said the entire 12-day trip was staff of teachers for the new
filled with interesting year. _
highligits. _ A SPECIAL seminar on free
enterprise will be conducted on
NAVY PERSONNELMAN Monday, Aug. 25, at Commerce
3rd Class Lewis E. West, son of High School as part of the in-
Mrs. Lola M. West, Route 1, service teacher training. Area
Dike, recently was graduated schools, including Cumby and
from Personnelman School at Campbell, will participate. BQ1
the Naval Technical Training Gray, president of the Texas
Feb. 20 — End of 4th six Center in Meridian, Miss. He is Association of Business, will be
a 1968 graduate of Sulphur Bluff one of the featured speakers.
High School and joined the navy -
last March. OFFICIALS OF the Wood
___ County Electric CoOp have
figured bills for the average
LETTERING HAS been customer during July. The
posted on a building on Con- figures show the average bill
report for classes at 8 a.m. important dates as Mow for April 16 - Teacher in- nally Street indicating that it for home patrons in July 1979
Friday, Aug. 22. the Yantis system: service; student holiday.
Students who are entering the Aug. 18-19 - Teacher in- April 17-20 - Easter holiday.
Yantis school system for the service at Mineola. May 25-26-Semester exams,
first time are requested to bring Aug. 22 — Local in-service. May 26 — End of 6th six
a birth certificate, im- sept. 1 — Labor Day holiday. Weeks.
munization records, and school -'“DcT 5,— End of 1st six weeks. May 27 — Teacher workday
records if they are available. ‘ ^ 6_ Begin 2nd six weeks.
New students other than QCt 17 _ T.s.T.A day; _
kindergarten students are student holiday. ’ COUNTY EXTENSION agent
urged to come to sdbool priorto Nov. 14 _ End of 2nd six Janie Crump reports that Cathy
Aug. 22 so tM school records weeks. Nordin, Kay Elmore, Diane
may be secured before classes 17 _ Bqgin 3rd six McKinney, Loretta Meeks,
Norene Moore, Barbara Mamo,
will be the future home of was 935. It was up to 965 this
Brown’s Office Outfitters. year.
weeks.
Parents of kindergarten Nov. 27-28 - Thanksgiving
students will need a birth holidays,
certificate and an up-to<iate Jan. 84 - Semester exams,
immunization record, Ponder Jan. 9 — End 3rd six weeks,
noted. This includes three doses Jan. 12 - Teacher work day; Mrs. Crump said that beginner
each of DPT and poliomyelitis, student holiday. and intermediate courses are
one of which has been received Jan. 13 - Begin 4th six weeks, planned this fall.
Judy Brown and Carrie Brazeal
are participating in a cake
decorating course this summer.
Ed Crawford is the instructor.
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Postmaster: Send address changes to The News-
Telegram, P.O. Box 598, Sulphur Springs, TX 75482.
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Keys, Clarke & Woosley, Joe. The Hopkins County Echo (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, August 8, 1980, newspaper, August 8, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth780525/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.