The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Red River County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Red River County Public Library.
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I
VOLUME FORTY-TWO
DEPORT, LAMAR COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1951
*
It is time for the people to
for
N
of land to be sold to veterans.
Sa-
o
See, 51-a, by raising the limits for
V
Mrs I.. ,1
(Jack ) Cooper.
0
m
1
and
glees by 1:30 p. m.
J<
1
9
Many men are pessimists when
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF THE
DEPORT STATE BANK
5
DEPORT, TEXAS
At Close of Business October 10, 1951
At Close of Business October 10, 1951
ASSETS
TOTAL
$678,729.03
TOTAL
$619,377.40
LIABILITIES
TOTAL
$678,729.03
TOTAL
$619,377.40
.................. ; .-y.1
—
— I
County Agent Urges Seeding More
Winter Legumes for Better Crops
Fall Term District
Court Convenes
Car Wreck Kills
Mrs. L. J. Cooper
Luther M. Pettit
Wounded in Korea
Mrs. Z. L. Cotten
Buried at Quinlan
Cotton Advances
Nearly $5 Bale
Mason on Sept 21, 1901.
elected Senior Warden
and served two years ;
She
cousin.
$310,540.16
3.000.00
8,151.00
2,750.00
Funeral service for Mrs. John
Antoine, 69, of Deport, were held
Friday morning at 10 o’clock at
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts
Banking House
Furniture and Fixtures
Other Real Estate ... T...
Other Assets
Bonds and Stocks I
Cash and Exchange
CCC Cotton Loans
NUMBER 30
----- J
26
house
Carol
Survivoi
lbib Km k<
Duke Matlock of
is a cousin oi Mr
f Paris formei ly of
ture. i
importance.
Relatives attending the funeral
from this section were Mr. Green,
Mr. and Mrs. Levi Chesshir of
Bogata. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gro-
gan of Rugby, Mrs. Aleck Grif-
fin of Deport. Mrs. Maggie Ches-
shire and Miss Verah Cotten of
Paris.
Capital
Surplus
Undivided Profits
DEPOSITS
Rus-
M iss
1905
was
of
at
j
C I io.ooo X €L
Joe
H.il
50 Year Masonic
Button Presented
I To A. L. Stalls
First Project in Texas Population
New F-M Program Up 20.2 Per Cent
Ready for Deeds Past Ten Years
Loans and Discounts
Banking House, Fur. & Fix.
Other Real Estate
Stock in Fed. Reserve Bank
U. S. & Other Bonds
CCC & Cotton Loan
Cash & Exchange
DEPOSITS
Capital Stock
Surplus
Undivided Profits
founded
1873
$159,638.61
177,152.94
7,751.51— 344,543.06
$ 42,574.46
61,797.18
240,916.23— 354,287.87
$271,071.34
3,750.00
1.00
2.00
10.00
The first half of October was
unusually dry and temperatures
About three
during
$50,000.00
41,750.00
— 21,753.52
565,225.51
THE FIRST NATIONAL RANK
DEPORT, TEXAS
at De-
ed
I < .i I e I
She vv a> mat ried tn Mr
| Cooper about six wars ago
include .i sister. Mr-.
I ti’ can. a <1 iv I-ion
Mr. and Mrs Eugene Garrett an I
children of D.ill.i-. Mr and Mrs.
Norman Pearson and family of
Milton. Mr and Mrs. Jim Garrett
of Rugby and Mrs. Ois Swaim
and children of Talco.
living in Fort Wi>rth.
and an .uncle I
Miltiat She vv a
J. C King
I )ep< irt
Funeral ’
LIABILITIES
$526,247.38
28,000.00
20,000.00
45,130.02
lion of 81)6,701
state. The 12 .
figure was an increase of 270,740,*
or 52.5 per cent over 1940 |
Dallas, Bexar (San Antonio) 1
and Tarrant (Fort Worth) had in-*
creases in excess of 100.000.
The four large counties
t is, Dallas, Bexar and Tarrant—I for this purpose.
accounted for more than three- been exhausted.
There are two pension amend-
ments.
.. ?
was more than 36 times its pop-
ulation in 1850 when it was first
(‘numerated in a federal census.
Houston, with 596.163. ranks
first in population among the 719
cities in Texas. Dallas, with
434,482 ranks second.
Pink Bollworm
Survey Started
in Harris (
with a 1950 popula-'
largest in the
1950 Harris County i
•»11 >. i \ i >. w t iii i <) doh * |
ham Monday to attend the fall j
meeting of the Paris Presbyter-
ial Mrs. Moore rid Mrs. McDiv-
itt went on to Sherman and were
luncheon guest- of friends, re-
turning for the afternoon meet-
ing.
A bale-by-bale survey
>fton I’inned in
inducted
COMMUNITY ( BEST
WORKERS NAMED
Theron Jones, superintendent
of Deport schools, and Tom Jef-
fus. Deport banker, have been
named chairmen of Lamar Coun-
ty Community Chest drive in the
Deport area. Donations may be
made to either of the chairmen.
iW'iir S ','i J
' I
Mrs Joe Ex ( i heart, Mrs. Wal-
ter Grant, Mi- .1 H. Moore and
Mrs. R E. McDiv itt went to Bon-
were above normal.
inches of rain fell during the
month Record high for Oct 30
was set Tuesday when the mer-
cury went up to 90 degrees, an
all time high for that date.
Rains for the past week baited
all farm work-.
Mr and Mr- Othor Pearson
I had as guests ov< r the week end.
Franklin Countv, receives cot-|
ton from those counties. plus
Hopkins. Rain-. Upshur and Titus
; Count ics as well
I ink bollworm were found in
trash samples at a Winnsboro gm
Oct. 5. and a quarantine has been
How
ever, the USDA is conducting the
detailed survey
State Fall Award Best Small Town Weekly Newspaper in Texas. Second Place Beat Editorial Coin me
Class A Katln< University of Illinois. N. E. T. Press Aso n Award Best Set Ads
An upward trend in the cotton
market the first of the week caus-
ed the price to advance nearly
$5 per bale. Middling 15-16 was
bringing 38.25 cents and snaps 35
cents per pound. Seed remained
at the season's high of $80 per
ton. Gins have been it a stand-
still for a week, due to the rainy
weather.
toine and Bobbie, Paris; Mrs. H.
Yeary, Farmersville; Mrs.
I nugh Hammeii, Longview, ivlai-
i colm Oliver, Rev. and Mrs. Hugh
j Anderson. Dallas; Mr. and Mrs.
One liberalizes the pro- Ler°V Wright, Crandall and
..... j many others from Bogata, Ful-
i bright, Clarksville and nearby
Mr and Mrs Sam Hastings
and daughter. Joyce, and Frank
Griffin, spent the week end with
Mr and Mrs Bob Helms at Hills-
boro Accompanied by Mr and
Mis Helms, they attended the
Bavlor-A .1 M football game at
College Station on Saturday.
Deport State Bank
DEPOBT. TEXAS
in
>ps recently planted, pastures. 1 cracy
If ' audit,
remain away !
winter ;
Immorality Breeding Grounds
Actually it is difficult to deter-
mine whether these continual at-
tacks on our constitutional insti-
tutions and fiscal responsibility-
have bred immorality in high
places or whether the immorality
in high places has brought about
the attacks upon our institutions.
But in any event, the moral situ--
ation in Washington has grown
so bad that James A. Farley, one
of the most honorable of men, re-
cently summed it up by saying;
“We are told that if the act of a
public official is not illegal, it is
necessarily proper and always ex-
cusable.”
It is unnecessary to go through
all the revelations of the RFC in-
I vestigations; the five-percenters
i investigation; the situation in
which the army officer said he
was “just one who got caught;”
the patronage peddling in Missis-
sippi; the revelations of the Crime
Committee and the tie-ups be-
tween government activities and
the underworld, etc
A code of political ethics haa
been proposed. But if the time
has come in America when we
must pass a law and appoint a
commission to establish a code of
ethics to tell public servants they
should be honest, to tell public
servants they should be loyal to
their government, to tell public
servants they should not barter
public trust for greedy personal
profit—if the time has come when
Congress has to set up a commis-
sion to rewrite the Ten Com-
mandments with special applica-
tions to political opportunists,
then the basic virtues of our form
of government have been cruci-
fied. In the Blue Ridge Moun-
tains of Virginia, there is an old
saying: “You can’t measure a
snake until it’s dead.”
Texas had a population of 7,-
711,194 April 1, 1950, an increase
of 20.2 per cent in ten years.
Final figures were released by
the Census Bureau. Texas is sixth
in population.
Texas population in April, 1950 |
was 1,296,370 more than the 1940 1
took place
, , | (Houston),
-*2. include:
- iiteman's Chapel, |
fifths of the population gam of
' the state. !
The 1950 population of the state visions of the present Art. Ill,'
;---------.... .i..,„ .... ... Se(, 51 ;1 by raising tbe |lmits for '
old-age pensions and pensions fop I cofnrnun*t*es-
dependent children and the blind. I
Another amends Art -
63. enabling the Legislature to ;
provide a statewide pension sys-
tem for appointive officials and
employees of counties.
grassland and fall gardens,
frost and a free,
for several days, good
1 grazing and an abundant cover
crop are expected.
Another slow, easy rain began
falling about 9 o'clock Tuesday
night and overcast skies, showers
and mist prevailed Wednesday.
A cool wave, accompanied by ram
moved in about noon Wednesday,
■ dropping the mercury to 50 de-
Mrs. Z. L. Cotten. 81 years old.
of the Boles Home community,
near Greenville, passed away Fri-
day at the home of a daughter.
Mrs. Sam Kelly. Funeral service
was held there Saturday and in-
terment was in the Quinlan ceme-
tery.
Deceased and her late busband.
Zack Cotten, were formei resid-
ents of the Rugby community,
moving to Hunt County early in
their married life. She had been
a member of the Methodist
church since young womanhood.
Surviving besides Mrs. Kelly
are five other children, Mrs.
Clyde Chilcote of Dallas, Esker
Cotten of Houston, Jeff Cotten of
Caddo Mills, Ira and Hubert Cot- |
ten of the Boles Home corrmun- !
itv; a brother, Jeff Green of Bo- it comes to buying. . .but the like
gata. to buy from an optimist.
gin the job this week.
Other projects approved
Red River in the Federal-State
program for the fiscal year mid-
mg Jun--
Madn
3.1 mile.
Lydia v> inc Bowie County line,
seven-tenths of a mile.
Avery southwest toward
vannah Springs, 2.5 miles.
Detroit south toward connec-
tion with Fulbright-Rugby road,
5 miles.
Gravel work has been finished I
on the Cuthand road Surface
treatment will complete this job, |
giving the people of one of Red j
River County's oldest communi- |
ties all weather connection with
hard-surfaced roads.
population of 6,414.824.
The figures showed that 62.7 ■
per cent of the population lived
. ,, . , in urban centers—places of 2.500 ,, , , r .. ,
their signatures He said ' r m(,re T(.xas. urban Ja I 1i s time for the people to be
Friday that he probably will lie- ; n 4.838.060 and its rural1 *"‘7 ‘,‘”7 ?“°" V" f‘ve
i mends to the State Constitution
which are up for the decision of
Miss Carolyn Owen, student of
ETSTC. Commerce, daughti r of
Mr. and Mrs Dick Owen, attend
ed the State Baptist Student Un-
ion Convention at Waco Oct
through 28 She was a
guot of her cousin, Mrs
Johnson, the former Miss Joanne
Dickson, and Mr. Johnson.
lived
Mrs. C<Hiper was hoi n
port, daughti r of the late Mr
Mi s Guy Ti ague, but vv
op eight grandsons
great grandsons.
Deport Lodge was
Hah •:shorn Lodge in
moved to Deport in 1886
Sunday
III . w here
Texas’ urban popula-
tion was 4.838.060 and its rural
population 2.783,134.
The largest numerical increase the electorate Nov. 13.';is\submit-
, ■. j ( lamped on Wood Countv
H( had *'** n ' (|< tailed survey to determine if,
a num : pos>ible, exactly where the worm
originated.
J. W. Baughn
Dies Friday
Proposed Changes
In Constitution
Time and sml moisture condi-
tions arc right for seeding win-
ter legumes that have not yet
been planted. <avs Red River
Countv Agent Herman R. Lynch.
Bill Coke. Ext' gsion agronomist
of A. A- M College says they
should be planted before or soon
after Nov. 1 fur best results. Late
harvest of cotton has delayed
many farmers so the county PMA
committee has extended the
planting date on cover crop seed
to Nov. 15.
There are several good reasons . the soil pariticles together in a
why farmers should plant w inter crumbly or granular fashion. This
legume crops. The big reason is condition is needed to conserve
tO increase the yields Of Crops ' run- cnilc imnmiro llinir tilth ln_
that follow the legumes. Corn
yields following a fertilized and
inoculated legume crop have been
doubled and cotton yields have
also been greatly increased.
These increases mean more in-
come from the same acreage of
crops with a decrease in the cost
of production.
Legumes are the only plants
that have the power to take nitro-
gen from the air and put it into
the soil where it can be used by
the succeeding crop. The nitro-
gen-fixing bacteria store the ni-
trogen in tHe nodules that are
found on the roots of legumes.
Inoculating the seed before they
are planted gets these bacteria in
contact with the seed and when
growth begins, the bacteria go to
work.
When legumes are used as a
green manure crop they improve
the soil by adding organic mat-
ter. This improves the soil struc-
> The soil becomes more
granular and crumbly. Thia im-
proyee the air circulation within
Fall term of 102nd District
Court of Red River County con-
vened at Clarksville Monday of
last week. The grand jury, em-
paneled for this term, held its
first meeting.
Members of the jury are: P. D.
Marable, Clarksville, foreman; W.
A. Bumgarner, Clarksville Rl, A.
R Lyons, Annona; Herbert Med-
ford. Avery; John T. Stanphill,
Clarksville R3; Dick Scott, De-
troit Rl; Barney Alsobrook, Bo-
W«ta R2; Howard Bills (colored),
Annona; Clem Wood, Manchester;
Floyd Bishop, Annona Rl; W. H. ture.
Right-of-way deeds for the first
of five Red River County farm-
market highway projects under
the 1951-52 Federal-State con-
struction program were received
last week. First project to be
undertaken will he the 3.5-mile
road from English north to the
Martin-Shiloh community. Mur-
rv Giles, commissioner in Pre-
cinct 3, will contact property
owners along this route and se-
cure their signatures. He said
our soils, improve their tilth, in-
crease their water holding capa-
city, build up their reserves of
plant food and to hold the rain
that falls on them.
Soil tests from Red River Coun-
ty crop land show a deficiency of
both organic matter and nitrogen.
Almost without exception the soil
chemist has recommended an in-
creased use of cover crops and
nitrogen for most economical pro-
duction of cash crops. Using le-
gumes in a rotation is the best |
known method of doing this job. )
According to A. H. Murray, I
county PMA administrative of-1
ficer, enough seed for 3500 acres
of Austrian winter peas and 3090
acres of vetch bad been issued on J
purchase orders up to Oct 26.
This is far short of the goal set
up by the county agricultural mo-
bilization committee, and the
acreage needed to keep Red River
County cropland in top condition.
With increased production costs
farrtors must increase their per |
acres yields to keep down unit.
coets of production. I
power in Washington is still in-
creasing. The President is coo-'jH
national, crisis, perhaps of stantly asking for more and more rjj
power to be taken from the states^
fro,T1 the localities and from thv
General Eisenhower estimat- source of all power—the people.
wounded in his neck and leg, in
action in Korea on Oct. 16. He i
is now in a Tokyo hospital.
Dece.iMd. ’he s in of G C. and
Susan Bautihn. was born in Cru-
cifer. Henderson County, Tenn.,
on March 6. 1861 He came with
j his parents to Texas in 1881, set-
I tlmg at Deport. He was a Mason
for over 65 years and was a re-
| tired merchant He was assistant
I postmaster at Deport before mov-
ing to Mineral Wells in 1897.
Survivors are his wife, the for-
mer Miss Sally Ann Reed of
Clarksville, two sons and a daugh-
ter, C. C. Baughn of Sherman,
Chester B. Baughn and Mrs. Lu-
cille B. Clark of Mineral Wells,
one granddaughter, and one
great-granddaughter. Mrs. Rus-
sell Lawler of Deport, is a niece.
She and Mr. Lawler went to Min-
eral Wells Saturday for the fu-
neral.
xvi. sec 'Tuesday’s 90 Sets
New Record Hig^h
For Oct. 30
Still another proposed amend-j
ment provides for the investment
of the permanent fend of the Uni-
versity of Texas in securities
other than those now permitted
under constitutional provision.
A maximum tax of 50c on the
$1111) of assessed v hiation v.oul I
he permitted for 1 ur il fire-pre-
ven'ion districts tr h r a proposal
to amend Art. III. Sec. 48-d.
which limit-, the I x to 3c This
section, added bv imendment in
l!'4f‘. provides a tax rate that is
said to be entirely inadequate for
the purpose.
the soil and permits deeper root
penetration and increases lhe
water holding capacity of the soil.
The iru reused water holding ca-
pacity in the soil became a mighty
important factor in crop produc-
tion during the dry period exper-
ienced last summer.
The improved soil structure al-
. so increases the growth of desir-
able soil organisms. It is the act-
ion of the soil life plus the decay-
I ing plant residues in the soil that
| have the big function of holding
®tje Report Kimes “
-- ■ ■ i“tho
tome, Los Angeles, Calif., Mrs. j > ‘Kld economy in its nondefense
B. B Pope. Lawton. Ok., and Mrs. | activities.” Yet a week later he
J. D. Starks. El Centro, Calif |
Among out of town relatives vl
highest level. Surprising as it
may seem in view of the interna-
. Congress was
asked to approve adoption of vast
subsidy schemes for federalizing |
health, farming, food, housing,
etc.
Shortcutting the Constitution
Our great freedom heritage is ,
the Constitution of the United
States. And we have every rea-
son to consider the American
system of free enterprise as-the
world’s greatest deterrent to
world conflict. Our productive
system is a more dependable
guardian of peace than the Unit-
ed Nations ever will be. It is the
only force in the world that Rus-
sia recognizes and fears. It is a
creature of democracy.* Neither
democracy nor our free enter-
prise system can survive in in-
solvency.
In recent years there have been
give-away programs on top of
give-away programs, by which
the government has been taking
money from people, giving them
back less than it took, and in the!
process making them-think they
I are getting something for noth-
A total of 1 41 | ing. Through these programs we
inches fell during the week end. have gradually centralized power
This is of great benefit to cover | in a gigantic sprawling bureau-
which is just too big to
This centralization of
John Wesley Baughn. 90.
Mineral Wells, passed away
tlie familv home Fridav evening
He bad been in ill health for sev-
eral years. Funeral service was
condiK teil there Saturday after-
noon at 4 o'clock and interment
was m tee Woodland Park ceme-
Mrs. Clifton Millsap of
sellville. Ark . the former
Sara Tucker of Fulbright, ill fori
some time, is reported unimprov-
ed and is in a Little Rock. Ark.,
hospital. She is the daughter "f
Will Tucker of Rosalie and niece
of Mrs Nora Law ler of Deport
Mr. and Mrs. Ed J. Pettit of
409 W. Randall Ave., Rialto, Cal., I
former residents of this commun- I
ity, have received two telegrams ■
that their son, Pfc. Luther M.
Pettit^ has been been seriously tbc residence. The Rev. Joe Ever-
heart, Presbyterian pastor, as-
' sisted by the Rev. Walter Sullens,
i Methodist pastor, officiated. In-
I terment was in Evergreen ceme-
' tery at Paris.
Mrs. Antoine died Wednesday
of last week at a Paris hospital
after two weeks critical illness.
I She is survived by her husband,
, daughter, Mrs. Virginia Antoine,
' granddaughter, Belinda Antoine;
three sisters, Mrs. Pauline An- I
1 he
former Miss Mlttle Lee Teague of |
Pans, and her husband, an evan-
gelist. were killed in an autemo- |
bile accident Sunday morning1
’*'* ' | A bale-by-bale survey of
I cotton finned in Winnsboro
being conducted by the Bureau
of Entomology and Plant Quar-
i r.in’.ne. in an < ffort to define the
! are.i around Wood Countv mfest-
I ed b\ the pink bollworm.
• Rov Strong, an inspector of the
of the United
States Department of A 'ricultiire.
h.,- set up his trash inspection
1 equipment there Winnsboro, situ- I
I ated at the extreme north end of
Wood Countv. and 1} ing partlv
in 1
First National Bank
atiE' ■ ' DEPOBT. TKXAS____________
- ,
rv ice will be held at
I Pai is and burial will be in Ever-
green (( m< ti i v Sunday at 4 p
Mr and Mrs Cooper wa re kill '
cd when he lo-t Control of his < ar ,
(after side-wiping with another |
car, and crashed into a tree They I
wi ie returning fiom a commum-i
tv near Quincy, where Mr Coop !
er. fornu i ly a Baptist evangelist,
had gone to pleach. I.. ..
a traveling salesman for a num
her of years, and at the time of
his death, represented an insul-
1 ation company.
Rites Friday for IMMORALITY HAS A SOURCE, ' «
Mrs. Jno. Antoine SAYS SENATOR HARRY BYRD 1
With a Highway Patrolmen's
degree team of fifteen members
conferring a Master's degree and
the presentation of a 50 yc?i ser-
vice button to Secretary A. L.
Stalls by District Deputy Rosser
Mason, Deport Lodge A. F & A.
M held the largest meeting with,
in its history on October 25.
The meeting was in the Deport
High School gym. the local lodge
room not being large enough to
accommodate the great gathering
of Masons. There were visitors
from twenty-three Texas lodges
and one from Oklahoma. About
150 were present. The Grand
Lodge of Texas granted a special
dispensation to permit the meet-
ing to be held in the school gym
Hugh Jeffus. Master of Deport
Lodge, introduced District Deputy
Grand Master Mason, who in a
speech commended the fifty years
of service of Secretary A L.
Stalls and presented the fifty-
year Masonic button.
A L. Stalls was made a Master
He was
i in
and
named Master in 1907 and again
in 1909 and 1910 Mr. Stalls has
missed only six meetings during
that fifty years, attending all the
regular and called meetings dur-
ing that period He was elected
secretary in 1914 and has served
in that capacity since that time.
After the lodge was closed, re-
freshments of pie and coffee wa le
served to those present. Previous
to the meeting a 'hicken dinner'
had been served to the v isiting I
Highwav Patroln en at the school (
cafeteria A committee composed i
of W B Fuller. J'.e M' ole an<l I'i' Quincy.
George Cheatham had chafr'e of
arrangements for the refresh-j
merits, which Weie served
Mmes. G< oi Lie Chc.it ham.
Mooie. Thi ron .bines and
Shipn.
Asked what wa re the mo<t out
standing events of his career as
a M ison. Mr Stalls said that be
conferted the M isfer S decree lip- (
on Jim Jeffus, son of A M Jef
fus. founder of tin lodge and up-
and three
County | ted by the Fifty-second Legisla- i / ____ ___
All of them are of major ! and friends attending the funer-
- j al were: Mr. and Mrs. B. B. ,
One of them provides for is- Pope, Imogene and Orville of1 ‘lonal situation,
suance of $75,000,0(10 of bonds to Law ton. Ok.; Ralph Pope, Sny-
be used by the state in purchase der, Ok.; Mr. and Mrs. John An-
It j toine. Petty; Mrs. George An-
ns an amendment to Art. Ill, Sec. j toine, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde An-
49-b, adopted in 1945, which pro- t.
Har-| vided for issuance of $25,000,000 j E.
This fund has Hugh Hammett, Longview; Mal-
By SEN. HARRY S. BYRD
No one will deny that we are
in a i
magnitude and duration such as
we have never before experienc-
ed. C 1 2.
ed the present emergency may go
on for 20 to 30 years. We are
faced, therefore, with the neces-
sity for unprecedented long range
defense expenditures.
In one breath the President
seemed to realize this, when, on
January 15, he told Congress that
government must practice
I J VVOI H
i activities.”
[submitted his budget increasing
domestic-civilian spending to its
highest level.
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1951, newspaper, November 1, 1951; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1303167/m1/1/?q=central+place+railroads: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.