Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 79, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1929 Page: 4 of 12
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Baylor Contest
the New .Year’s game.
. I
Let Us Fill Your Radial
With
Eveready Prestone
The Perfect Anti-Free:
urday afternoon will be free.,
O1T
Bean—the team that ruined the
Football
Game
MEXICO CITV. Nov.
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DENTON BRONCS
Telephone 2.
vs.
Phone 170
SHERMAN
BEARCATS
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of the best home
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Admission 35c and 50c
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part, entirely overlooked the "tip-
off'’ in the record of scores for the
past few years. They tell an unques-
tioned tale of improvement under
The strange part of this sudden
return to the spotlight of Califor-
tories the largest porce-
lain marveling plant in
games of the season. Sher-
defeated Paris last
-to
r
and
up
Coes
Storage
Batteries
Recharged
i
HTH
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greei
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teadi.lv n*vw
hi
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be one of the largest ever to watch
a high school grid contest here.
While announcement of Denton’s
starting Cne-up has not been made
it probably will be: W. Martin and
Skaggs. ends; Howard and Hund-
10. tackles; Reeves and Copeland,
guards; Moore, center; Payne, quar-
Phone 157. SS
X
Conch Ray
Methodist
IQs
r his
ir. in
r the
KO |
J
Watching the Play
Here and There
By J. ft A
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Hi-
U*
Mrs. Rush testified she lost her
, i a small re-
volver he had given het.
I:
1J-
•' . ft
f*
’ Seek
b M
k idlaire simple
1 and dependable.
. Come in and see
Frigidaire today.
FRIGfBAIRE
YUAN ABtlLLIOfr lit VIK
cold weather.
Mrwieo your car with
Whia Gold Band.
Huffin*. Service
Corn Hunkers
“World
T oday
PLATTE CITY. Mo.i Nov. 14
—Down In the fertile Missouri
River bottoms of Platte Coun-
ty approximately 30.000 persons
will gather tomorrow to watch
a sporting event. There will te
no stadium, no cheer leaders,
no pennants or colors, but ex-
citement Will be at fever heat
along the sidelines and 23 ra-
ItVthe sixth annual "vrortd
series of the com fields"—The
National Corn Husking Con-
test.
Most of the twelve contest-
ants have a liberal sprinkling
of gray hairs, for the art of
of bouncing ’em off the hard-
board at record speeds comes
only with arduous years in the
field. All are state champions
or runners-up in Slate con-
tests. They are the very cream
of the “tail-corn" states.
Represented in the field and
in the thousands of spectators
will be Indiana. Minnesota,
Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska. Missou-
rie and Kansas.
raj
<of
WNTOM1UST
^HWold
%
Greater power . . . Greater
beauty . • . rhe famous
Frigftdaire **Cold Control”
and all for leas money I
Powell the star Pony pivot man I
who received a knee injury in the ,
Texas game. Marion Hammon. S.
M. U.’s great tackle who looks like
an all-American material this year
from the broken
Federation o f
Women’s Clubs
Talk Education
WBFQ agii
fractured
How can Frigidaire afford
to offer such Hiir[MtsHing
value at such low price? the world.
Because Frigidaire on- Becpuse Frigidaire bene-
joya a world-wide public fits by the cooperative
preference —a preference buying power of General
that has caused move Motors. Because Frigid-
Frigidairca to Im* airc and General
bought than nil Motors engineers
other electric re- hrtve made Frig-
frigerators com-
bined.
■ I. Self Motor Co.
215 W. Hickory.
forger 5eeks
to Name New
" City Officers
BORDER Wy^lT-A P. Borrer omOU Is Bdng
Tried on Murder
Charge in Mexico
MEXICO CITY. Nov. 14—The
trial of Bernice Rush of Louisville.
tion director of the Teachers Col-
lege. As an example of his "boost-
ing” attitude one can point to 1
exnouncement that the Eattet-Ju- dently was well pleased at the came
.a_ a__a _ «_a.a__»» - - — - O- - A OlvA TIxxvxvt
ed against the Aggie*; Mason, the
it
CLICKS
Tomorrow (Friday, Nov. 15th).
3:00 P. M. Sharp
2G4
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■ ' 1 "T" IJI ' “ 11 ■ ■ • ■
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DALLAS, NOV. 14.—Twelve men
were arrested and 300 gallons of
liquor were confiscated by officers
here yesterday in a raid of a plant
housed in a downtown garage. Of-
ficers were tipped off after a pack-
age containing whtekey [became
broken while being sent through
the mails.
7 H
r 1
1
I
1^1
Devine’s Opinion
i~|NCE during the battle with the
Jackets, Jack Elder took the
ball and broke through the Use ot
scrimmage. Devine sat back and
said:
”1 won’t have to diagram that
--tf I
BTr.- . ■
8gw;:CTu^i-’’.
CLEM LUMBER
COMPANY
Z3EJ
111 «. f I U T H / • H
<J» MI UN TINA’.
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fed
Uriw II—Ijiliilil ,M>,'
DALLAS, Nov. 14.—Inspired by
1 the arrival of the cold north wind,
Merrieon's Southern
University Mustangs
. lairly flew through their practice
Wednesday afternoon in prepara-
tion for their important game with
the Golden Baylor Bears in the
Ownby Stadium Saturday. The
practice was not a light dummy
affair for the Pony mentor pitted
Theron J. Pouts, physical e^uca- his men against Jimmie Stewart’s
Al
I ■
tv
■
?r-r ■ /
powerful freshman squad.
„ Gilbert was barking the signals
his in the first string. Morrison evl-
W«. J ■ ^41— A K.»11 aS OVxa -TA —
n’.Or Aggie football game here 8*^ ■ that the young Pony quarter call-
.—_<n k. j ed against the Aggie* Mason, the
----- jr " ■ I Mustang backfield ace, looked good
— ■* ----~----'3,red jer-____ __r_________
jtoy df omeuiEsIMR on beating the
Let’s have the biggest crowd of the
season out to help them win. ,
-I
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11
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It '
fe:* • ...
“Washed Up’\
. W HULU
LEAD IN RACE
£1KX)RD HIGH SCHOOL
r G A M E CROWD EX-
PECTED TO TURN OUT
f FOR CONTEST.
[* ! Realization that a loss or
tie game probably will cost
hem the District No. 5 title,
the Denton High School
Builders who know the reliability
of our materials say that from the
basement to the roof of a structure
of which they are building they
^vu.u um* secure any better ce-
ment, bricks, laths, lime, concrete
olocks, or roofing than we sell.
They deal here and so should you.
Pouts explained that the real pur-1 man on the squad would be
pose of the game Saturday afternoon shape to play Saturday Including
was to furnish experience to mem-
bers of the Eaglet squad. Indica-
tions, however, are that the contest
will be well worth seeing.
KT fill l
in-
Save Money on Your Fire
Insurance
by insuring win th* old rsilabl*
Texas Hardware Mutual k
r. b HVMg v. i U
Dm ton Co. Bank Md»
against Carnegie Tech with—the
longest run of tbe day tor either
team”
Devine was asked of Southern
Csllfornla'e chances ot beating
Notre Dame.
’’Their' reserve power will be
hard for any outfit to down,” he
replied. “They look like the
champions or near-thampions to
ma” •
It baa begun to look that way
U> lots ot other people, too.
VBA Mteico City Btm
Riyal candidates tor president
Mexico’s natlonsi elections, sebs
uled tor Nov. 17. are Joss Vi
concelos, above,.choice of the M
tional Revolutionist party, ai
Pascual Ortiz Rubio, candidate
party. They seek the poet, nc
held by President Emilio Ports
GIL
-----------
scouted Notre Dame tor Southern
California daring the Irish battle
with Georgia Tech. Mr. Devine
unloaded bis chest of the opinion
during the game that “Notre
Dame hae one ot tbe greatest
teams 1 ever have seen.”
FIGHTS
By ASSOCIATE!? PRESS
OAKLAND. Calif.—Mandel Kl
nedy, Fresno, outpolned Wllwf Yl
bo. Cleveland. GO).
8I0UX CITY. la —George Schi
ter, Chicago, outpointed Ray H11
Omaha (6).
;ll
L,l
il conference was
4rs. M H. Hstsmsn
•v -*Wb eoaM awte w
far .the wne^MJ fifteen
Hr
i '
♦ llUAiUei TliuiedEy. i
'♦ said also that a large number ♦
♦ of automobile* would be need- ♦
♦ ed at the High School here at ♦
♦ 2.30 Friday afternoon to take ♦
Students to the game. ♦
Because Frigid-
sure lias in its fa< -
• week, 59 to 0. The Brones
must win tomorrow if they
expect to stay in the cham-
pionship race.
.. ....
.... , '
■ ______________.
•-*- -7
r 1
S t a ge
Series”
Jx. * ££* jltS
■■ ■ , ,f!
His Nlbt Price ten Orin Now »
rpHE experts have been taking it
1 on the chin regularly during
this ear football season, but that
victory ot California ovor South-
ern California knocked moat of
them tatter than Joe Beckett, the
weU-kMVB prone Brlilsh, heavy-
'WOMM?' 3
When Nibs Pride brought his
Golden Bears east to play Penn-
sylvania, the eastern division ot
experts were quits rude with His
Nibs and his boya . To 'be sure
the Bears beat Pennsylvania, but
by only on* touchdown. The team
that could beat Penp by only one
touchdown, tbe point was ad-
vanced, must expect to lose de-
cisively to Soutbera California
and Stanford. .
e » ■ 4
Interpreting Not So Hot
/OBSERVERS generally have
" held the Jones elan fa higher
esteem than California. Even
last year, after Georgia Tech had
beaten California, tbe . cry was
heard in some spots on the Pa-
cific elope that Tech had not met
tbe best team in California by a
long wayv. To be sure California
had tied U. §. C. in 19114 but that
didn’t seem to mean anything.
Tbe interpreting after the game,
it appears, is halt the battle. This
year tbe interpreting doesn’t
eeem to be quite so good.
At any rate Nibs Price must be
having a qulel little laugh at the
expense of those lads who wrots
that his team wasn’t going any-
where in particular this seaton.
The Stanford-California game 're-
mains in the way of fir. Price’s
complete relaxation,,. After Stan-
ford has won that one, which it
prpbably will, you will have the
the San Francisco
EVERS HARDWARE CO.
DENTOWil^XAS.
ri,TOmfli o
■MwwawwwB^wswswwMuaas^wmB—~
,--- .... —-----—
DID YOU KNOW THAT—
AT one stage of tbe 6hicag>
** Princeton game, Chicago
had four backs who never bad
played high school football
surpassing Princeton’s array
, of players developed by prep
cchools. ... The four were
Paul Stagg, Errett Van Nice,
Harold Bluhm and Ben Wet-
tenberg. . . . The chief rei-
son why Art- Fletcher didn't
become manager of the
Yankees, 'tis said, is that
Mrs. Fletcher didn’t want—
him to. . “ Because he al-
most lost his health manag-
ing those Phils. . , . Mem-
bers of the Ohio State teams
are given complimentary
tickets for their fsmilles
. . —and Sam §elby, tbe
Buckeyes* nifty guard, has
eight sisters. . . . Sam’s
work against Pitt alone earns
for him Xll-American con-.
- staoratlon . . . and we
haven't met any of Sam's
sisters, sither. . . . Stuart
Holcomb. Ohio's fullback,
weighs 145 pounds.
•5
... — .
jnmii.ill ■ ................
r v. 9s* oar nnv
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Here is Al Marsters, “all washed
up.” The Dartmouth qusrter-
back star was injured in the Yale
game and will be out for the rest
of the season.
T • ♦*
i ri’t
- - :.
$
te.
i” >
spectacle of three' besten coast
^%«\Tr’n."«m°.tre W held
. .
Five years ago, at tbe close of
1924, the University of California
won the football championship of
the Pacific Coast Conference for the
fifth successive time. A year later
Andy Smith, the head coach, died
and his youthful successor, Clar-
ence (Nibs) Price began rebuilding
the machine that bogged down
somewhat in the last season
Smith's regime.
’ Meanwhile the stars of Southern
California and Stanford, for a time
; of Washington, Were in the ascent.
Price faced disappointments and
I rapidly Improving competition for
the crown that California’s Golden
Bears had worn so tong without
The T I. A. A. championship may has recovered
be decided here Monday This hat
been pointed out before in this col-
umn but the game is ao important
that repetition is Justified. Should
Huntsville win from the Eagles tht
Bam Houston club will win the uo«-
ference flag as the only team they
meet after Denton Is the weak Nac-
ogdoches eleven. r ■-*-
BOROKR, N*v. 14.—A. P. Boreer.
miMivMer of thto nil boom town wm . -
mat^MlWng eltinen* of Borrer behind >
him today for a fresh attack upon
the ettv «ovemm«nt inatalied by
Governor Dan Moodv'a agent* follow-
ing Bon-er’s recent clean-up bv mill- /
tar» force* '
Becaueo everv one else neemrd
.either afraid or at a toes m to how
to nroceed Borver aaeumed leader-
ship ot < cittsetui aeekln" an election
to replace the annotated official* laat
'nig^it I,..-— —
an election had been-denied In coun-
■tv court.
I The vet
about the
to obtain an election, indicatli....
ceen of hi* plans depended
eeereey. His ettomeva
auewestod font or five courses The
battle to obtain elected official*, how. !
ever, will be ’fowl.- — _ 2..'—'... .
Iv attorney* for the un- 1
surceasful petitioner* had «aid they
would start mandamus proceedtaae if _ _...
tbelr Mrs Rush said Bcnavente had bor-
tion Tor an rlection.
”■ Soldier on Trial
in Federal Court,
LAREDO, Nov. 14.—Tim first mur-'
der 1....... ‘ “
IRAK’'PREMIER SUICIDES
BAGDAD. Irak. Nov 14—Sir
Perrin of the same outfit last May 1 Ab<lul Muhsln, Premier and For- j
on Che military rt's^rvation near dlx Minister of Irak, was found |
Ijiredo. dead last evening from sclf-lnflict-
■ Main entered a plea ot not guilty ed bullet wounds,
through his attorney M J Ray- ---------------
mond The prosecution is being con- >1
tiucted by Assistant United S&tes
" Attorney D. W. McGregor of Hous-
ton.
. Th* defense after entering a plea
Of self-defense In the death of Per-
rin. who. it alleged, attacked Main
and in a fight that ensued fell back- |
ward against an iron railing and i
.his skull, introduced no*
* witnesses.
-----—
■■■I ■■■■ I
J
q w nizi
GOLD BAND
b ANTI-FREEZE
□ One Fming Lasts'
rL;~ All Winter .
| ■ Gives automobiles con-
* pleto .protection against
* eeld weather. Let us
L w W NEA|
SEA Lot Angeles Bsreeti
Even lion cubs are contesting in
baby shows now. and above is pic-
tured the winner of the unique
I “baby lion show” held at Loa An-
geles. Spitfire la only one month
. ®ld and weighs three pounds, but
♦ notified by gherman achool au- ♦ he was the "most perfect” of nine
Calftoun ♦“"baby HbtimiaT cdmpeled: JrfiT ‘
* Roy Paimateer. one of the Judges,
Price and reveal a
Ing gap between . .
either Stanford or Soin
Last year the gap was sM
ly when the Bean tied east
big rivals, tot rnnaetMt,,.:
ference championship -1
Jans, who had beaten fipufl
The last time CnlifonUd I
other members of the'WW
"Big Three” was 1923 wng
ern California was
to 7 and Stanford by g 4|
Bears repeated against tlM
7 to 0 In 1934 and won tfij
though held to a sensatioi
tie by Stanford. In SmtthXJ
1925. Stanford beat Callft
to 14. and there was no H
Southern California.
Here is the convincing !
progress under Price: 'kata
192»- -Lost to U. S. O; fi-W?
Stanford 6-41.
1927— Lost to U. S. C.“
Stanford 6-13.
1928— Tied U. 8. C. 0-0 1
ford 13-13.
1929— Beat U. S. C.
> * *z .'it •’ < “ '
DENTC1N, T1
r
■ t.
One ot the strongest high; school
football supporters in Denton is
i'-'.-L
—
L -
- ■
fc . MIOC
W.
Hrs ....
• 4JB rone os will show their best
T wares here Friday afternoon
Mooting Notre Dame
TT had been taken pretty much
* for granted, before the Cali- <
fornia victory over U- 8. C., that ]
the Trojans would play the Notre '
Dame game with their street .1
cloths oa and a satchel in either i
hand. Now that assumption will <
haye to be rewritten. ;
Aubrey Devine, fonder All-
America quarterback at Iowa,
fantac.es faces slander
SVIT FOR HALF MILLION
LOS ANGELES. Nov. 14.—Alexan-
der Pantages, wealthy 54-year-old
showman sentenced to a one to fifty
years prison term for criminally at-
tacking Eui/Ce PringTd, young
dancer, today was sued for 4500.000
damages by Nicholas Duneav. Rus-
sian playwright, and a principal In
Pantages’ recent trial. Duneav
charges slander.
noee received in the " Mississippi
game will continue to wear his spe-
cially made nose xuerd to prevent
a possible second iSjiiry of his al-
ready flattened beeaer
If the Ponies are thinking of the
conference champtonahlp they are
thinking it to themselves for out-
wardly they are puHfog every ounce
w
-
I W. i
.in an effort to beat the Sher-
r man High School Bearcats
and keep perfect the Denton
!* record in district competi-
L.tion The game will be call-
ed at 3:00 o’clock and will
be played at Eagle Park.
b;Coach Stanton’s team is in good
snape for the contest and the cool
; weathec Is expected to pep up the
” jday ot every man on the club.
Sherman is expected to be rep-
resented by a big delegation at the
game and the crowd probably will
| M» • • ♦♦♦♦■»♦♦ • 4 • ♦ ♦♦♦»»♦+
.< A special train bearing about ♦
v ♦ 500 Sherman fans will teach ♦
♦ Denton at 2 o’clock Friday af- ♦1
— ♦ ternoon to boost the Bearcats ♦ [
' ♦ in the Denton-Sherman game, ♦
♦ A. O. Calhoun said he had been ♦
!
M
Er-d
' I ■
L > J
E.,.-
championship hopes of one of the
best teams that ever represented
the Red and Blue. To even this
score with the Waco aggr.|;ation
is one of the main things that they
are so keyed up over. "Even that
score with the Bears" is the battle
cry of the Mustangs.
r
■ . -
*1 ifiiirf Twi iir.m
■w
ST'
-----
i
' much opposition. But any man who
’ sinks long putts the way Nibs Price
j does, under pressure, cannot be kept
off the top.
I California, for the first time In
, five years, has beaten one of Its two
rivals, Southern California. It will
1 be another golden year for the Ool-
j den Bears if they can whip Stanford
j on Nov. 23 and i«gain the ccnfer-
’ ence championship; especially so In
! a year -when they were conceded lit-
■ tie chance at the outset to displace
‘ either of their foes. It is doubtful if
any triumph In the long stretch of
California football iigs been any
sweeter to the campus at Berkeley
than the conquest of Howard Jones’
Trojans by the cast led by Benny
Lorn, Leland Eisan, Roy Riegels and
Bert Schwartz, the last named as
fine a guard as the East or West
has seen this season.
®^11 and
X) aAdStan-
4'-,
While Albte Booth of YfUb was
galloping off with somethiM M an
advantage over Al MkfatoW to Dart-
mouth in the duel of A11A4 '
backfield contenders at NM
Joe Donchess of Plttsburgflh
ed something of a decision 1
Ohio State rival. Wesley, n
the tussle of all-star enag
muddy going of Pitt Steditto*
Donchess is not spectacular but
as a consistent workman, especially ft < - ' . T\ *
Mustangs Dnve
also has Improved over a fine soph-
omore year and he still has another
season to go.
Lies’ ■PlJTJLIlLTICl Illi H IMlm JMJIV —— - —- — ———-------—
after the oetitten nsk'nv for Ky.. said to be the first American i
1- „u~- woman to fat* trial for murder in I
a realtor wm secretive Mexico, was resumed today with ex-1
xt step in the campaign amination of witnesses. Mrs Rush
admitted yesterday she killed her
, fo»d common-law husband. Jenaro Bcn-
avente after a quarrel over money
tht"to "a Vftatsh’ ’he i she had loaned him.
j The shooting occurred last Christ-
mas eve in front of the Belen Jail,
where the trial is now going on. I
Mrs. Rush said Bcnavente had bor-
( rowed all of ber money and had!
i refused to repay It. though she was
i penniless. When she asked for it1
Benavente and a woman companion
attacked her.
MUKDQ. Nov. iv.—Tteturji mur-1 I“‘*- “
trial in federal court here in 29 head and shot him with
years opened today with the case (
Private Lee Main of the eighth I
1 engineers. Fort McIntosh, char'jedi
r With slaying Sergeant William H |
B... j
J ““ errr. will ■
•j suceewrful
••• - ■
<KS Battle Sherman Bearcats If re Friday
: tian phases
[cf trJ ™:_____ ________________
w---—-----------—— led the fourth dav session of the
ter; Grsndftaff and Scott, half- ' Twas Federation of Women * Club*
backs; Jones, fullback ' hTmong resolutions offered
Starters with- numbers for Sher- adopted today was one asking legis-
■y.-ww."* “ <“>
*. Mitchell (15), ends; Owens (17) and in San Antonio. Another urged the
f-asteel (26) tackles* Harrison (14) purchase and maintenance of ttst: ,
*. n-s n narks in the mountains, the'
and Pierce (8) guards; Grinnell Palo Duro can von and nt Lake Cad- |
>4). quarterback; Sollis (19>, Ook- do
’ n (U). Boos (2), backs. Subrti-
tute tacks are Myers (231 and 3
JMatta (41. ■ _ • . ;g*
, th* intersat of education civic or-
ganisations should function as open
forum*, and that rural school* should
func'lon M community centers In
the same Interest
Ibwz -----g n
.tax.-..-.„'?■ ii-—x. " 'jL'aj
MINERAL WELLS. Nov H—Dis-
cussions of educational and conserva-
8?“the' resolut lon5,Xcon^?tteee fraKr^
ed the fourth day nemlon of the
I^teratinn rtf Wrtmon'a I
and :
tori*-
pur- ,
'-—l I
. —J'
state .
• 1
— —d at Lake
» Mrs. Frank A. Thompkins
>rpus Christi was chairman of. the
resolutions' committee
The educational conference was
resided aver
red jer-
cents, and would get Just a»ftlg a warned to have completely ncov-
crowd as a* sill have by maktrig bo ered from the injury that he receiv-
charge.” he said. “If we cut- the ed in the closing minutes of the
price of admission to our Eaglet. Longhorn game two weeks ago. Da-
games, however, I am afraid it vidson. Hopper. Kattman. and John-
would hurt high school games here son were alternating tn the remain-
in the future and so I decided to Ting positions in the backfield.
throw open the gates without fee.”| Another thin!: that, the Tuesday
----- * - I grind brought out was that every
Pouts explained that the real pur- man on the squad u*ould be in
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 79, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1929, newspaper, November 14, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348333/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.