The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 167, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1981 Page: 2 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Brand (Hereford, TX) and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Deaf Smith County Library.
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Reagan Faces Selling Job
Pay* 2-Th* Hereford Brand-Thursday, February 19, 1991
c
Ex-Hona^e Donate*
F
Momenta* to Library
Kill* Rancher
So-Called Hughe*
Will i* Denied
Et\
Interest Rate*
Fo
Fo
Grass Fire
Pau! Harvey News
Ha
Pr<
Miss
List
Requests for Federal
Hon
querque, N.M.; a sister, Mrs.
Teachers’
Salaries
continue to teach
CM
t
*avrrtW* Mfr .
CfehtottoaMfr J
—from Page 1
broken windows and visible
entries, but some are missed.
the tax proposal. Though
Republicans control the
answered five non-offense
calls, and wrote one traffic
citation Wednesday.
and a like amount to be spent
from local coffers. The pro-
arts.
He said the tax cuts must
be approved “with great-,
urgency.”
Mrs. Brown's grandsons
will serve as pall bearers.
CHE HEREFORD BRAND (USES
MMM) to pabllitod fcl, nra*
4«n. Satontoyi uto Ckrtotouw D«r ky
Tto Rentord Bru*, tot.. U» W. «* St
Henin*. Tl. Tto« Seeeed rtart
pMtMt Rid ■« tto Rel «OlN I"
Render* n. POSTMASTER: "-e* a*-
drew tkaafto to Tto Hentor* *raad
Mary 1
analyst, wl
the monti
Epsilon 1
Beta Sigi
Tuesday ri
Natural g|
Mrs. Wj
handwrit
seven yd
Laura Jd
the Dvan’d
fall semes)
University
behind closed doors.
But it is difficult to imagine
tion of rent subsidy housing in
Amarillo.
of Directors of the PRPC.
They are scheduled to hold
their regular monthly
Herefi
forensic I
several <1
lions at tl
La Plata!
Sherri!
hurnoro]
“Willy al
and Suzl
Debbie V]
duo act, I
Women,!
Children!
Gilliland
first placl
shift," the officer said.
"They also need to think
about the two to three hours
before stores upen," he con-
tinued
The Associated Press er-
roneously reported in a
February 12 story that Texas
teachers are ranked third in
the nation in salary levels
Texas teachers actually
rank thirty-third. Gene
Brock, National Education
Association director and ex-
ecutive board member for
NEA and the Texas State
Teachers Association, said
Brock said Doris Scott was
misquoted in the story about
teachers and group insurance
that ran in the Thursday.
February 12 issue of The
Brand.
«•
Mem]
I'Studbl
day in ■
to disci
club lul
the Pr!
Book. I
Co-hl
Johnsol
busineJ
the clul
Opal El
Mem!
plans I
cheon I
the eld
celebral
A prJ
Pet Ott
Guest
gram i|
spoke o
update
thursday
Bubonic Plague
zz~~23 of a generation
swept aside in a few short
weeke**
In his speech, Reagan said
he was proposing no cuts in
Tough Issue
AUSTIN, Texas (API - The big
test of the 67th legislature will come
when it considers the legislative pro-
posal for floating interest rate ceil-
ings. according to opponents.
"The legislators can vote to put
more money in the pockets of the
banks or they can vote to make each
one come in and prove they need an
increase in interest rates,” said
Rebecca Lightsey, legislative direc-
Miss Rol
jor, is list
honor rd
daughter
Jack Rogi
Drive.
"If we get the exemption,
we will build in Hereford. If
not. we will build in Texico,
N.M., where there is a
64-cent exemption," he said.
Kenneth Johnson, head of
Central Texas Grain Pro-
ducers Cooperative, which is
contemplating an alcohol
plant in Hutto, echoed Hom-
ing’s view.
Volunteer
answered one call at 1:21
a.m. Wednesday to ex-
tinguish a grass fire on the
Santa Fe railroad right-of-
way about six miles east of
Hereford on Highway 60.
Kappa
Sigma 9
to Aman
to attenl
ed by p|
Allens. I
Ethanl
decoratil
use of ad
women.
Includ
owner s
ranging J
use of
"A tax exemption would be
the greatest single en-
couragement we could get. It
helps where we need it most,
in the marketplace, by mak-
ing gasohol more attractive
to consumers, who already
local funds. Follett needs to
make *50,000 in sewer im-
way to 4.200 feet, overlaying provements
an apron and taxiway, install- ,
how jurists - aware of the
evidence - are willing to
release potential repeaters day at 7:45 a.m. in Deaf
unpunished. Smith General Hospital after
a sudden illness.
Bom Sept. 10,1914 in Buck';
Creek, the former Goldie
Boydston married A.H.
Brown Oct. 10, 1931 in
Clayton. She came to
Hereford in 1943 from Albu-
querque, N.M.
Mrs. Brown, a member of
Wesley United Methodist
Church, was Worthy Matron
of the Order of Eastern Star. •
Survivors include the
widower; two daughters, .
Mrs. Betty Singer of*
Amarillo, Mrs. Virginia
Dickson of Hereford; five
sons, Glenn of Tucson,
Franklin of El Paso, Charlie
When will some citizen
lodge a substantial damage
suit against some judge? If he
releases a dangerous
criminal is that judge not an
accessory to any subsequent
crime committed by that of-
fender? We don’t excuse doc-
tors who administer the
wrong treatment.
Kubiak said there would be
no revenue loss to Texas for
"AU of the blame is placed two years because it will take
on t
or not .
have happened on the day
ing made to the Federal Avia-
tion Administration.
Three area towns will be
asking for assistance with meeting Thursday. February
upgrading their water and 26
the unemployed to cutting
■„ back on price supports for the
~ Sen." Jesse Helms, R-N.C., dairy industry to reducing the
one of the most conservative f„2 ' . . J
Robert of Dimmitt; two
brothers, John Boyston and
Extinguished
firemen American people.”
House Budget Committee
Chairman James Jones,
D-Okla., said he thought
Reagan would achieve bet-
ween half and three-quarters
of the budget cute he’s after.
next year.” The president is
proposing a f.— .
come tax cut of nearly 30 per-
cent as well as faster tax
write-offs on business equip-
ment and plants to spur in-
vestment.
Senate Minority Leader
Robert C. Byrd predicted the
Democrats would not go
along with the tax cut pro-
posal as submitted.
“Democrats in the Senate
will support a tax cut,” he
said. “We will not support
(Reagan’s proposed) 10 per-
cent, across-the-board tax
cut. This is an inflationary
tax cut.”
“It is a well thought out
plan calling for a return to
greater state and local
EL PASO, Texas (AP) - A rare
case of bubonic plague has killed a
young West Texas rancher who was
apparently bitten by diseased fleas as
he skinned a fox, Texas health of-
ficials announced Wednesday.
A stale and federal investigation in-
to the death was launched, and people
who came in contact with the man
were given precautionary medicine.
It was the first UK report of plague
in a human this year There were 16
cases of plague in the nation last year,
13 of them in New Mexico. Doctors
from the Texas Health Department
did not know how many deaths were
caused by plague last year, but they
said generally *0 to 60 percent of peo-
ple infected survive.
Bubonic plague, known as the Black
Death that swept Europe during the
14th century, is transmitted by fleas
that bite infected rodents and then
bite man.
But Dr. Barry Hafkin, an
epidemiologist with the state health
department, said in modern times it
is a rural rather than an urban pro-
blem, especially in the Southwest,
where prairie dogs, pack rats, rab-
bits, coyotes and foxes can carry the
bacteria.
Rep. Phil Gramm, a Col-
lege Station Democrat, said
he was enthusiastic.
“I’ve been waiting for 10
years for a president to level
with the American people
about how severe our pro-
HOUSTON (AP) - The last of the
so-called wills of recluse
multimillionare Howard Hughes has
been denied by a Houston probate
judge, leaving ahead a long summer
as hundreds of persons attempt to
prove their claim as relatives and get
shares of the vast estate.
Judge Pat Gregory, in the latest ac-
tion during the five-year legal squab-
ble, has ruled against a claim by the
Miami-based Howard Hughes
Medical Institute that it was entitled
to the estate estimated at between
$200 and *500 million
The medical institute, formed by
Hughes in 1953, claimed the
millionaire wrote a will leaving his
fortume to medical research at the
facility. The claim was known as the
“lost will" because no written docu-
ment was ever produced.
Several other wills have turned up
after the recluse died of kidney
failure April 5, 1976, while aboard a
private jet airplane enroute from
Acapulco, Mexico, to Houston.
people are watching and
waiting. They don't demand
miracles, but they do expect
us to act.”
He proposed turning the na-
tion away from policies of
spending and regulatory con-
trol that have held sway since
the New Deal and practically
dared his doubters in Con-
gress to support him.
“Have they an alternative
which offers a greater
chance?” he asked.
“And if they haven’t, are
they suggesting we can con-
tinue on the present course?”
But even Reagan's staun-
chest supporters conceded
the president wouldn’t get
everything he wanted from
Congress, where Democrats
already were raising objec-
tions about the size of the
■jl viivruMiv-w O** * ” »-**•-** — —
“somewhat out of con- budget cuts and the shape of
GOLDA (GOLDIE)
MAE BROWN
Services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday in Wesley United
Methodist Church for Golda
(Goldie) Mae Brown, 66, of
424 Ave. G. The Rev. Jesse
Hodge, pastor of Wesley
United Methodist Church will
officiate, assisted by the Rev.
R.L. Shannon of Amarillo.
Burial will be in West Park
Cemetery under the direction
of Gililland-Watson Funeral
Home.
Mrs. Brown died Wednes-
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - While
William Royer was looking for
somewhere to store the greetings sent
to his Houston home while he was a
hostage in Iran, a college fnend
already had an idea in mind.
Royer and Mary Pound got together
on the idea after Royer came home.
On Wednesday the ex-hostage pulled
up to a University of Texas library
with a Cadillac loaded with the
souvenirs. Mrs. Pound works at the
library.
• There'll have to be some sorting
out,” Royer warned Don Carleton of
the Barker Texas History Center as
they unloaded the car.
The trunk contained the good
wishes — mostly home-made — of a
nation.
"I’m very happy to find a home for
many of the inspired and creative
items citizens all around the United
States, primarily Houston," sent to
his Houston home, Royer said.
The collection, which will be put on
public display, includes hand-lettered
cards from elementary school
students, huge banners signed by en-
tire high school student bodies, a
Christmas card from the city of Birm-
ingham, Ala., and a flag that had
flown over a Houston home during the
444-day ordeal.
Mrs. Pound said she met Royer
when he worked at a university
bookstore when they both were
students. Royer got his degree from
UT in 1961,
Carleton said the library’s collec-
tion of hostage mementos is the first
such effort in the nation. He said he
hoped the items given by Royer would
spark donations from other former
hostages.
The International Communications
Agency employee said the collection
is for “some enterprising history ma-
jor” in the future to look through. He
said the items mailed to him show the
"revival of patriotism and all that ."
The trunkload he unloaded Wednes-
day was only part of the collection, he
said.
tor for the Texas Consumer Associa-
tion
•They are just ganging up on us.”
Earlier, Sen. Grant Jones,
D-Abilene, and Rep. Bill Messer,
D-Be It on. introduced the measure
that could raise the ceilings as high as
30 percent.
Jone* said * floating ceiling would
be created equal to double the interest
on six-month treasury bills, with an
outside limit of 30 percent.
“As the T-bill rate stands today that
would be a ceiling of about 27
percent,” Jones said, "but that does
not mean that much would be charg-
ed, There would be competition.”
Jones and Messer said the bill was
their answer to wildly fluctuating in-
terest rates, tight money and selec-
tive federal policies.
House mortgage loans would not be
affected since Texas’ 12 percent ceil-
ing has been preempted by federal
law. Jones said home loans in Texas
now carry about 13.25 percent in-
terest.
one of the most conservative food stamp program and
members of the Senate, said government support for the
he thought Reagan should
have recommended deeper
cute than he did.
Rep. Bob Michel of Illinois,
House GOP leader, said the
president “has taken the first
giant step toward fulfilling
his mandate from the
yard.
..... , Police officers made one
day at Hereford Butane, Inc., arrest for public intoxication,
Veterans Park Road.
Nothing appeared to be
missing in the burglary as far
as officers could tell.
Henry Bryan, 127 Ave. B,
told police that someone
broke a window in his 1975
Oldsmobile while it was park-
,d in front of his home.
Officers also investigated a
report of two persons seen in
the pole yard of the Rural
Electric Co-Op on East
Highway 60 at about 11:30
p.m.
Officers could not find
anything out of order at the
ITV
’ A- fit
»
In Marion County, Florida children to the mercy of peo-
sheriff’s deputies said they pie who are without merey.^ .
had never seen more vicious * ’
abuse of a child. Brian Bro-
zyan, age 5, lived with his
22-year-old waitress mother
Police
come* up and says. Hey, I
saw such and such," Aguilar
continued.
The month’s caseload for
the detectives is about 60, ac-
cording to Vernon Hope,
police detective sergeant
Hope declined to comment to-
day on how many of these
cases were burglary in-
vestigations.
Another officer requesting
not to be identified said, “On
the burglaries. I realize that
officers should catch a lot of
Reagan’s Proposed Food Stamp
Cut Called ‘War on the Poor’
When Judges ‘Malpractice’
~ - que, N.M.; 22 grandchildren
million" during their monthly They intend to use *2,000 in and 13 great-grandchildren.
meeting scheduled for Thurs- local funds in the project.
day, February 19th. L.------L _.™ :
parallel taxiway.
The Oldham County re-
quest is for *492,600 in federal developments and construc-
Some judges recognize the funds, *27,370 in state money
unpopularity of their leniency
but justify it on grounds of ex-
tenuating circumstances or .
because of what the effect of and take about six month* to the A-96 board members will
incarceration might be on the complete The request is be- be passed on tojhe full Board
children.
However they rationalize,
the refusal to order “prompt
and proper punishment” in
effect sentences innocent
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Reagan and his top
economic strategists began
today the tough job of selling
a multi-billion-dollar mix of
tax and spending cute to Con-
gress, where enthusiastic
Republicans already were
hearing from prominent
Democratic critics.
Treasury Secretary Donald
Regan and Budget Director
David A Stockman both ar-
ranged to appear before con-
gressional committees today,
barely 12 hours after the
president recommended
spending cute of *41 billion for
1982 and tax cute that would
be worth *1,500 over three
years to a middle-income
family of four.
Reagan, in office only 29
days, pronounced the govern-
ment ‘-------.
trol.” He said his “program
for economic recovery” ----
would balance the budget. Senate, the Democrats retain
halve inflation and create 3
million new jobs by 1984.
“There is nothing wrong
with America that we can’t
fix,” he said in a nationally
and acquiring land for future mittee include several re-
sent of probation authorities crosswind runway and
school.
Judge Thomas B. Stewart.
Rep. Jim Collins, a Dallas
— from Page 1
are buying all the gasohol on
the market," Johnson said.
Gov. Bill Clemente has
designated gasohol tax ex-
emption legislation as an
emergency, entitling it to ex- __
pedited floor action if it gets j.m g0ing to'try to be helpful
to the president," Bentsen
said.
AP Miscues
On Spending, Tax Cutbacks
But he said he doubted :
Democrats would support a
tax cut as large as Reagan
wants.
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen,
D-Tex., also pledged to sup-
port some of the spending
but expressed a
■eference for a one-year cut
in income taxes instead of the
the president
Archer, a Houston
Republican, said at a
hometown news conference.
He called Reagan’s pro-
gram comprehensive and
Stenholm said his main pro- courageous,
blem would be going along
with a tax cut if it means a
budget deficit will continue.
"Obviously, I strongly government control — a plan
agree with the general direc- which challenges the private
tion that the president's pro- sector to bring this nation out
gram has taken even though of its economic dilemma.
I ve got some unanswered Archer, a member of the tax-
questions," he said, "On writing House Ways and
balance, there’s not a great Means Committee, said^
deal of it that I’m going to r ;
Funding Examined
AMARILLO -- The sewer systems. Bovina in- and Gerald, both of Hereford,
members of the Panhandle tends to apply for *183,000 to
Regional Planning Commis- drill new waterwell, con-
sion A-95 Review and Com- struct supply lines, a ground D.D. Boydston, both of Albu-
ment Committee will be ex- storage tank, pumphouse,
amining requests for federal booster pumps, chlorination Johnnie Franks of Albuquer-
funding that total over *1.6 and other support equipment.
‘ — ‘ . Darrouzett will also be
The largest request for seeking federal money to
federal assistance comes finance the drilling of a
from Oldham County. Over waterwell to replace existing
*540,000 is being requested to wells. Their request will ab-
make major improvements sorb *100,000 in federal and
to the county's airport, in-
cluding extension of the run-
Republican, said he was
prepared to go much farther
with tax and spending cuts
than the president proposed.
“I’d go way beyond it,” he
said. “But as a practical
political matter, most people
are not as conservative as
they are in Dallas, Texas.”
Collins said he thought
Reagan suggested about as
much in the way of cuts as the
American people are
prepared to swallow.
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen,
D-Texas, said he had
"serious concern” about
Reagan's call for a 10 percent
tax cut in each of the next
three years.
“I can well understand the
political popularity of
massive personal income tax
cute, but locking this country
into a 30 percent tax cut over
a three-year period will ob-
viously stimulate consump-
tion dramatically That will
spur inflation and that, in
tum, leads to bigger deficits
and even higher interest
rates,” Bentsen said. "He has
a better chance to get a one-
year, 10 percent cut than
what he is proposing. "
In a statement that follow-
ed a White House briefing,
the senator said he agreed
with the need to cut federal
spending. <
"I’ve supported that and
' . . ’ ’ Administrative procedures
ing medium intensity lighting to be considered by the com- r.o *•> m. Hentor*. n mms.
-- - ■ • ... « —b SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By carrier to
HereHrC H4I «Mth er |M per year:
by mao to Deaf Smttb aad
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Many Texas congressmen
are calling President
Reagan's plan to slash
federal spending workable
and desirable, but there is at
least one exception.
“I must reiterate that I’m
really sorry that the presi-
dent has declared war on the
poor, particularly the work-
ing poor," Rep. Mickey
Iceland, a Houston Democrat,
said Wednesday after
Reagan addressed Congress.
Leland, the only black
member of the state’s con-
gressional delegation, said
such cute as the ones Reagan
proposed for food stamp and
school lunch programs would
have a devastating effect.
“I’m optimistic that we’re
going to get a significant
coalition going to block some
of the president's proposals,"
leland said. "But I think
we're going to lose in some
significant areas.”
Other Texas congressmen
jumped in with praise for the
president's program.
Gasohol-----
■ If we are going to get into
alcohol production, we have
got to pass this measure this
session. If we don't, Texas
might as well forget about it.
... Unless we pass this thing
this time, we are going to kill
it (the potential Texas
gasohol industry) because
these people are going to go
somewhere else,” Kubiak
said.
Rommg said a fanners'
group called Hereford
Agrifuels is waiting for
legislative action to deter-
mine where it will build a 35
million-gallons-a-year
alc< *ho> plant.
quests from area realtors
who apply for environmental tu .4.. by
reviews of proposed land «■*, Mt >er y«r
THE BRAND to a member at Tbe
Aaaaetotoi Ptui, wMcb to exrtoatvety
etoMM to m tor rtyitotteattoa af all
arm Mri itoftorbuto *M* ai wpaprr
The positive or negative m* imi am ptouaM torew.
ject should begin late this 1*11 recommendations made by u . ' f ,w wt"
tecaiue'of wh*t the effect of and take about six month* to the A-96 board members will ZyUZm,*!, ,
w«tty to Mraary, MSI, <—urto* to
a aatoHMaMy to IS* to fhv itoaae a
waakaaMrt, W*
OXLNtoaa*
itoiMHart
&asiiiketo
Ctarfevltomto*
have problems with."
Texas Republicans greeted
the president ’s program with
extravagent praise.
“I’m very excited, tremen-
dously excited. In fact, I think
you can say I’m bordering on
blem is,” he said. "I think the ecstasy," Rep. Jack Fields, a
president has done that and freshman Republican from
I’m going to support him." Humble, said. "I feel were
Rep. Charles Stenholm of truly at the proverbial fork in
Stamford, who has emerged the road."
as the spokesman for a group “I feel like the spirit of
of almost 40 conservative Thomas Jefferson is smiling
Democrats, said the mood on down on us tonight," Rep. Bill
Capitol Hill generally is one Archer, a I--------
of support for the president
“The quicker we get on
with the program, the better
off we ll be," he said.
the GOP-controlled Senate.
Republicans hope to use
their majority strength to
pass the cute as a package.
“If we have to break it out
into component parts then it’s
in big trouble,’’ Baker con-
ceded. cuts
But breaking the spending pri
cute into small parte was ex- “
actly what House Speaker three years
Thomas P. O’Neill, a liberal
Democrat, proposed to do.
Saying the Reagan plan
was slapped together in 30
days, the top Democrat in the
House said: “Does it contain
inequities? You bet it does.”
a majority in the House of
Representatives.
Senate Republican Leader
Howard Baker, R-Tenn., said
he expects the budget cute
"televised speech to a joint proposed in 83 separate pro-
session of Congress. “The grams will move quickly in
Police Investigate
Burglary Report
Police officers were in-
vestigating a burglary Thurs-
I am hearing of blacklash.
Ixiwe Cauble writes from
Ocala, Florida: “Child
abusers are unafraid of
in a mobile home north of gutless judges."
Ocala Cruelty directed at the
Also living there at the time helpless - children and
of the crime was Glenn An- animals - is a crime no ra-
thony Cerny, 20, jinemployed. tional person wants to think
It was the mother who about. Conveniently, for us,
finally brought the child to the anguished ^ries are
the hospital emergency room ■ * ■ * -■
- bruised from his ears to his
feet, burned - apparently
with cigarettes - one arm
broken in two places.
Deputies say the child’s sex
organ had been “injured.”
And the child was so ter-
rified, so hysterical, that he
would not allow male hospital
personnel to approach until
he had been sedated
The state prosecutor says
the youngster’s mental
trauma may be permanent.
The accused child abuser -
Glenn Cerny - could have
gone to prison for 15 years.
Instead, he has been releas-
ed. “Three years probation."
Judge William T. Swigert.
In Sitka. Alaska, a
schoolteacher has committed
sex crimes against her own
natural children ... repeated-
ly ... for years.
The mother will not be sent
to jail.
Indeed, the court decrees
that the mother -- a
schoolteacher - with the con-
wants.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
D-Mass., one of the Senate’s
most liberal members said he
would support Reagan when
he could, then added, “I am
not prepared to see the social
Bake? conceded that Pro^ess u - „ - * -
debate on tax cute, which
Reagan said were needed
urgently, may “extend into
neediest, including Social
Security retirement benefits,
Medicare, veterans' pen- .
sions, school meals for low in- ”
come families. Head Start
and summer youth jobs.
And citing his “duty as
president,” Reagan said he
would recommend increases
in defense spending over
what former President
Carter proposed.
The reductions he proposed
would affect virtually every
American: from phasing out
the huge program that pro-
Reaction to the program of vides public service jobs for
cute varied predictably in
both houses of Congress.
out of committee.
Congress has suspended
the four cents per gallon
federal motor fuels tax on
gasohol.
Com and grain sorghum
are the primary feed stock
for alcohol plants, but other
plants also could be used,
said Ray Prewett. assistant
state agriculture commis-
sioner.
He said 100 pounds of com
will yield 33 pounds of protein
and 3.8 gallons of alcohol.
"The national security is »t
stake, and money is at
The chief comes down on the stake." Prewett said
officers for missing these
things."
the midnight shift whether that long to put the first
the burglary could gasohol plant into production.
- ... Lj His bill would suspend the
shift, shift change or evening tex only for gasohol contain-
ing Texas-made alcohol or
alcohol made in states such
as Arkansas that grant a
reciprocal exemption to
Texas alcohol
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Steiert, Jim. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 167, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1981, newspaper, February 19, 1981; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348309/m1/2/?q=a+message+about+food+from+the+president: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.