The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 169, Ed. 1 Friday, January 17, 1936 Page: 1 of 14
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THE WEATHER ^ ^B O. Circuia- "'"'"'"'""H1" j
(By U. S. Weather Bureau) tlOO U Audited
_ ___ B j ;
Brownsville and the Valley: Partly ClrculattPB -d- j
cloudy and colder Friday night and fered In the Valley
Saturday; lowest temperatures Fri- Only by The Her*
may ngiht probably In the upper (or- ^ |
.... »■■■!■ ‘ l’»
t-1~~ i ii~i-- ----- — — ^ ^ ^ ~ ~ ~~
__________—
FORTY-FOURTH YEAR—No. 169 t* nm-rim ta u>» v«uey BROWNSVILLE TEXAS FRIDAY JANUARY 17 1936 FOURTEEN PAGES TODAY • • *« A COPY
-----------*
II
By RALPH L. BUELL
HOP. SKIP AND A JUMP UP
Valley Thursday disclosed one
Everybody and his brother us con-
vinced that if the weather man will
Just hold frost and cold in check fcr
a month or so—
The Valley is going to cash in as
It has not cashed in in years.
• • •
EDDIE MARBURGER. HEAD Or
the Mission Chamber of Commerce
puts it this way:
“They can talk about their de-
pression all they want to. but if it
bad not been for that 1933 hurri-
cane and 1934 freezes—
"Mission territory and I presume
the rest of the Valley would have
been in fine shape.’’
a a a
GOOD VEGETABLE PRICES
and encouraging citrus prices are
the advance agents of prosperity
they all tell us.
And men like Marvin Goodwin
grove owners and grove caretakers
whose groves were hit by freezes to
the extent that little or no crop is
being harvested this season—
Take delight in driving you
through their orchards and calling
attention to the wonderful come-
back the trees have made.
One thing has been demonstrated
above all else saya Mr. Goodwin—
JBfficient intelligent and pains-
Um..g care of citrus orchards will
pay dollars and cents dividends.
And he can prove it!
• • •
GLENN WHITE AT WESLACO IS
all caught up over the progress being
made by the Rio Grande Valley Cit-
rus exchange in its juice plant rec-
ord.
The canning plant recently in-
stalled by the exchange ranks rignt
up at the tep the package it is put-
ting out takes back seat to no prod-
uct for attractiveness—
And what is inside of the can is
good as good can be.
The plant will soon be running to
capacity says Mr. White and sales
prospects are good.
• • •
GENERAL MANAGER JACK
Hager has this thought:
A much more friendly attitude to-
ward cooperative marketing organi-
Eations of the Valley is in evidence.
Their aims and objectives seem to
have finally gone ever with the
growers.
Member* are more thoroughly sold
on their own organizations and
growers not members are sympathet-
ic. have lost the feeling oi hostility
that sometimes prevailed in certain
spots.
• • •
ENCOURAGING SIGN OF THE
times is brought out w conversation
with Bob Bnggs of Pharr head of
B^W. Briggs and company one cl
Valley s top construction out-
fits.
Heavy construction contracts have
come to the firm from the Valley in
recent months.
The type of work on which the
Briggs company bids has been lack-
ing in these parts of recent years
the company has gone far afield into
all Texas Louisiana Arkansas.
But now the type of job which
Briggs and company is so eminent-
ly fitted to do is again raising its
head in the Valley.
• * •
MORRIS EDELSTE1N OF
Brownsville comes back from a Chi-
cago buying trip and reports that
business is good and get t mg better!
in the Middle West.
And that means something to the;
Valley.
For those folks up there around j
Chicago eat what we grow.
When they are doing business
th . have the money to buy and to
buy at prices that mean profits to
Valley vegetable and citrua grow-
ers.
A loosening of credits and a gen-
eral feeling that we are on the up-
grade is reported by Mr. Edelstein
alSftypica] of Middle Western atti-1
tUCH'
• • •
ARE YOU GOING TO BE A
peace time slacker this year?
If not you have just 12 more days
to which to hie yourself to the tax
•oQector of your county—
AND PAY YOUR POLL TAX!
6**999*99 9 9999999999VV
McAllen Ranch Oil Leasing Contract Is Closed
36000-ACRE
TRACTOPENS
MILLING
Two Major Companies
Get Lease On Big
Ranch In Hidalgo
County
Announcement was made here
Friday of closing of one of the
largest oil and gas leases ever made
in the Valley involving the 36000- j
acre McAllen ranch in northern Hi- !
dalgo county.
The ranch is owned by Mrs. Mar- I
garet McAllen Fairbanks of this city. !
Leased by Majors
It has been leased by the Sun Oil
company and the California Com-
pany Jointly. The latter company
is a subsidiary of the Standard Oil
company.
Option of the lease was signed
more than a month ago but the
final conveyances have just been
made here and the deed is to be
filed for record in Hidalgo county in
a day or two. according to Rufus
(See OIL on Page Ten)
LOST FLIERS
FOUND AIM
_
Ellsworth and Companion
Forced Down Near
Little America
i Copyright 1936 by the AP>
LONDON Jan. 17.—A British t€*
lief expedition flashed back from
the Antarctic Friday word of the
dramatic rescue of ^Lincoln Ells-
worth and Herbert Hollick-Kenyon.
long-106t explorers found alive and
well in the frozen wastes of Little
America.
After piercing the ice locking the
Bay of Whales a British Royal re-
search ship located the American
Ellsworth and the Canadian Hollick-
Kenyon safely landed there having
exhausted their fuel on a bold pro-
jected flight across the south polar
regions.
Radio H as Damaged
The explorers’ long silence was due
to a damaged radio transmitter the
British governments colonial office
announced.
A landing party from the Discov-
ery II finally found them comfort-
ably encamped on the face of the
great ice barrier.
Not since they took off November
23 from Dundee Island far south of
Cape Horn across the south polar
regions for the Reas Sea south of
New Zealand had any word been re-
ceived from the daring fliers. Hope
for their safety was fading—even
abandoned by some.
A terse seven-word message from
the master of the Discovery II end-
ed Friday morning the seven weeks
of anxiety.
“Ellsworth and Kenyon are both
alive and well” said this message to
the colonial office headquarters of
(See ELLSWORTH on Page Tenj
Tourist Camp In
Mexico Planned
(Special to The Herald)
MISSION Jan. 17—Jose Barrera
business man of Mission is leaving
this week to establish a large tour-
ist camp on the new highway at
Tomazunchale. Mexico.
On the heels of the official an-
nouncement of the Mexican gov-
ernment that the International
highway will be opened for daily
traffic in May the brothers. Jose
and Dr. C. E. Barreda. have formed
an association of capital to develop
40 acres of land on either side of
the highway and build a modem
tourist home at this place. Totnaz-
unchale is at the point on the
Moctezuma river where the last lap
of the drive to Mexico City begins
climbing into the Sierras and
where travelers may rest from a
two-day trip from the border.
The Barreras are going into
Mexico with all equipment and
fixtures necessary to establish a
modem and up-to-date camp which
will be provided with a first-class
restaurant.
_
The Hopper Photographed at Last
■ Ill——— ■ III .■ ■ .■■■ ' ' ~1
Here’s the “congressional hopper” you’ve beard so much about—
the mahogany box on the clerk’s desk in the House of Represent-
atives in which Representative William T. Schulte (Dem.. Ind *
is depositing his bill to tax labor-saving machinery. Though the
current session is only a few days old. a flood of bills already baa
been ted Into the hopper They next are examined by the House
pefliMSftgUrian. who examines them for proper form and to see to
which committee they should be sent The bills tnen are marked
and sent to the bill clerk. who numbers them and sends them to
the government printing office for printing Copies then are sent
to appropriate committees for their consideration and for pos-
sible consideration on the floor
‘OUR FRONTIERS
ARE ECONOMIC’
Economist Says Court Still
Clings to Theory Boundary
Lines Are Geographic
By ARTHUR DUNN
MONTERREY. Mexico. Jan. 17.—
Mr. Roosevelt has coined word com-
binations which will live after him.
New Deal forgotten man. horse and
buggy age are already by-words. In
Ills Jackson dinner speech he .said
in six words what few understand
and all ought to know—“Our fron-
tiers are economic not geographic.”
The supreme court decisions as to
the New Deal are based on the geog-
raphy of the horse and buggy age
and make it well nigh Impossible
for the federal government to help
the forgotten man.
Division of the British dominions
in America was geopraphic. pure and
simple. The colonies were not set off
by any racial or economic differences.
A king 3000 miles away divided up
a land of which he had little knowl-
edge. Luckily it was in the horse and
buggy age. so the boundary lines
had no effect on the economic life
of the inhabitants.
Most of them were farmers and
hunters There was little trading be-
tween the colonies. Animal transpor-
tation and lack of roads necessarily
confined the exchanges of products
to a small area. The colonists were
so isolated that nothing short of
common grievance and danger cculd
have brought them together.
After gaining independence their
idea of further co-operation was a
See DUNN on P3ge Six)
Catholics Advise Fight On
Mexico’s Educational Plan
MEXICO CITY. Jan. 17. i^>—
Catholic church authorities said
Friday Instructions to Mexican
Catholics to reiuse to comply with
the federal socialistic education
laws would be read Sunday in all
churches throughout the country.
The Instructions were contained
in a collective pastoral letter pre-
pared by the nine archbishops and
30 bishops in which the church
set forth more vigorously and
more outspokenly than heretofore
its objections to the government s
socialistic education program.
In defiance of Article Three of
the national constitution reformed
in December. 1934. to make social-
istic education compulsory the
pastoral letter said "no Catholic
can be socialist"
It defined as socialism any
system which "does not recognize
the rights of God and the church.”
Although issued in printed form
prior to being read the pastoral
letter was not immediately cir-
culated widely. No government of-
ficial would comment on it before
it was read.
Informed sources said they ex-
pected government officials would
not allow the statement to pass
unnoticed.
A campaign against the social-
istic education program has been
blamed by the government for the
killing or mutilation of more than
twenty rural school teachers since
the project became law.
As a result of these attacks the
government has authorized rural
teachers to carry arms to defend
themselves.
SALARIES ARE
DELAYED AGAIN
Increased Pay Proposals
Cause Heated Parley
By Commissioners
The Cameron county commission-
ers’ court got down to its big head-
ache-setting of salaries for court-
house employees—Thursday after-
noon and after a heated discussion
of proposed increases totaling about
$8000 yearly decided to meet again
Saturday.
It was strongly indicated that no
increases would be granted Satur-
day and that salaries would remain
at their present levels for the time
being until the court could further
consider the inatter of equalizing
the rate of pay in the various court-
house offices
County Judge O. C. Dancy. Com-
missioner A. J. Baughn of Harlin-
gen and Commissioner Grover
Weikel of Los Fresnos announced
opposition to any increases al-
though they expressed the belief
that there should be a “levelling
off" or equalization of salaries as
betw-een the various courthouse of-
fices.
The officers affected by the new
law ’abolishing the fee system"
have filed applications for the
amount of office help they want Rnd
the rate of pay they wish to estab-
lish. The auditor's office estimated
that these increases would total ap-
proximately $8000 per annum.
“All this new law has done" A. L.
Bauer of the auditor’s office told the
(See SALARIES on Page Six)
BONUS GROUP
CONFIDENT OF
SENATE OKEH
Demo Leaders Press
For Action Before
Week-End; New Tax
Threat Repeated
WASHINGTON. Jan. 17. (fPh-
Jubilantly declaring that they had
the votes of four out of every five
senators backers of the bill to pay
the soldiers’ bonus immediately in
cashable baby bonds drove it into
senate debate Friday with the idea
of passing it Friday afternoon or
Saturday.
Administration leaders were press-
ing for passage before the week-end
adjournment contending that the !
giant issue—agitated for 16 years—
should be disposed of quickly.
Despite implied warnings of new
taxes to come and Secretary Mor-
genthau’s statement that enactment
would increase the treasury's bor-
rowing and refunding operations to
$11300000.000 in the next 17H
(See BONUS on Page Ten)
BUI CABLER
IS IMPROVING
Officer Suffering Ptomaine
Returned From Mexico
On Special Plane
County Traffic Officer Bill Cabler
was recovering rapidly from an at-
tack of ptomaine poisoning and coli-
tis here Friday after being returned
from the Chamal ranch about 175
miles south of Brownsville. Thurs-
day afterncon in a plane piloted by
A. H. Bilstrem Tampico flier.
The attack occurred Tuesday
night after he had gone into Mex-
ico on a lion hunt with Sheriff J.
A. Goolsby and others by beef he
ate.
A telegram was received here Wed-
nesday from Jimenez urging that a
plane be rushed to return the ill
officer to Brownsvilie. The telegram
was written in Spanish and evident-
ly was garbled in transmission. The
message as received here said for
the plane to pick up the group on
the coastline bet as originally writ-
ten it told the plane to go to the
Chamal ranch where a landing field
is available.
Les Mauldin Brownsville pilot
searched the coastline Wednesday
and found no traces of the party.
Meanwhile a Markham Thompson
ambulance made the trip overland
taking Dr. George R. Dashiell Jr.
of Brownsville to the stricken man's
assistance. This group located the
hunters at the Chamal and learned
that an herb doctor had been able
to relieve Cabler’s condition to some
extent.
The southbound Pan-American
plane Thursday sighted the party at
the Chamal and radioed its location
here. BUstrem who had flown up
from Tampico in the morning took
off immediately and picked up Cab-
ler and Dr. Dashiell and returned
them here.
Mexico City Actress
Is Visitor to City
Nancy Torres petite Mexico City
motion picture artist and sister of
Raquel Torres well known Holly-
wood actress and artists’ model
paused here overnight Thursday
while en route by plane to Chicago
and Hollywood.
She must return to Mexico City
within two weeks in order to begin
a new film for the Clasa Motion
Picture company. The actress is
making the trip to replenish her
wardrobe in Chicago and if sufficient
time remains she will go to Holly-
wood to visit her sister and other
friends.
Miss Torres was In Hollywood
three years ago playing bit parts and
she returned to Mexico when offered
better contracts by film concerns
there. She has been working steadily
in stellar roles in Mexico City's
growing film industry.
Mexico City Tour
Set For January 30
A nine-day all-expense trip to
Mexico City with side trips over
the adjacent territory will leave
the Valley on January 30. according
to plans announced Friday morn-
ing.
Chambers of commerce of all
Valley cities have agreed to furnish
complete information on the tour i
and to accept reservations. It was
stated. The tour Is open especially
to tourists.
Those making the trip may leave
on the morning of January 30
either at Reynosa or Mata more*
and the two groups will join that
afternoon at Monterrey where a
side trip will be made.
-— I
Soil Erosion Plan
Will Replace AAA
Roosevelt Believes
WASHINGTON Jan. 17. (AP)—Confidence that the
new farm plan proposed under soil erosion and conserva-
tion laws would carry out the purposes of the dead AAA
and bring about what he considers a well rounded agricul-
tural development of the nation was expressed Friday by
* «Ss» iBjSjHKH I
RUDYARD KIPLING
* * * * *
KIPLING IS
NEAR DEATH
_/ . - *
Noted Author Bel ieved
Dying At London
Hospital
LONDON Jan. 17. uP—Rudyard
Kipling's gallant will kept the spark
; of life still flickering Friday but
attaches at the hospital where he
lay in a coma said the end ap-
parently was a matter of hours.
A hospital bulletin at 1:00 p. m.
said the 70-year old bard s condi-
tion was “unchanged and still very
critical.”
It was disclosed a blood trans-
fusion had been given Kipling dur-
j mg Thursday night and that
oxygen also had been used.
Kipling lapsed into a coma Fri-
lay while his American-born wife
daughter and surgeon kept watch
at his bedside.
The noted novelist became un-
conscious at 4:30 a. m . and sev-
eral hours later he remained in
the comatose state.
The Middlesex hospital in the
private Woolavington wing of
i which he underwent the operation
last Monday for a perforated
stomach ulcer followed a series ol
i dramatic bulletuis throughout the
night indicating the author was
failing gradually with an announce-
ment at 7:00 a. m. (2:00 a. m.
E. S. T.):
"Mr. Kipling’s condition is still
j very critical.”
Poll Tax Payments
Cameron County
Thursday . 164
Total through Wednesday.1310
Total 1474
Hidalgo County
Thursday . 354
Total through Wednesday.1944
Total 2298
Only 12 more days remain in
which poll taxes can be purchased.
—
Centennial Expected To Bring
Hundreds Of Valley Visitors
Compiled by Valley .
Centennial Corporation
All who attended the Century |
of Progress in Chicago remember I
the Florida exhibit and many
who were there subsequently vis-
ited Florida.
Last year the season of 1934-
1935. in Florida was reported to
have been the largest tourist sea-
son Florida has enjoyed in many
years. Some reported that it was
the biggest season Florida had
ever had.
Those in charge of tourist traf-
fic and tourist bureaus connected
with the various commercial or- j
ganizations in Florida credited
this great winter tourist influx
mainly to the Florida exhibit in
Chicago for Florida not only
had a good exhibit they also !
maintained a registration bureau 1
and this list of thousands of
names was later circularized by
the various Florida organizations.
It is reasonable to presume
that a tropical exhibit at the
Texas Centennial In Dallas dis-
playing citrus fruits and tropical
foliage peculiar to the Rio Grande
Valley fruits palms flowers and
shrubbery which are not seen in
other sections of the United States
will certainly attract the atten-
tion of many Centennial visitors
who will eventually vial the Val-
ley. When you take into consid-
eration that it has been con-
servatively estimated by world
fair experts that at least twelve
million people will visit the Tex-
as Centennial this year the ben-
efits to be derived by a Lower
Rio Grande Valley Exhibit in
Dallas reach enormous propor-
tions.
' President Roosevelt.
The chief executive discussed the
agricultural problem at his press con-
ference after stipulating that he was
not replying to the farm address
Thursday night by former President
Herbert Hoover. He explained be had
not had an opportunity yet to read
the Hoover speech.
There was an intimation that new
taxes might be necessary to meet
the program as a substitute for the
old processing levies killed by the su-
preme court. The president said
however he was not ready to discuss
that phase.
Mr. Roosevelt said slight amend-
ments to the existing soil erosion
and conservation acts will be neces-
sary. He reserved any estimate on
the amount of money which would be
required by the government to lease
land from farmers under the pro-
posed plan.
Some congressional leaders who at-
tended Thursday's White House farm
! conference had mentioned $300000-
| 000 to $400000000 as necessary for
1 carrying out the program in 1936.
Mr. Roosevelt emphasized that soil
erosion constitutes not only the ac-
tual washing away of soil into river
beds but also loss of chemicals in
the soil resulting from continued use
for the same crop.
Asked If this interpretation did
not bring every farm of the country
under the scope of the erosion law
the president said he thought it did.
He explained the exulting ma-
chinery including county agents
probably would be employed in
carrying out the purpose of the new
| program.
Saying the undertaking under
soil erosion constituted no change in
the administration’s farm relief ef-
fort the president recalled a state-
ment he made last October 25-m
it he read a reference to “a long time
mere permanent plan for American
agriculture.”
• Such a long time program is de-
veloping naturally out of the pres-
(See AAA on Page Six)
FOUR HURT IN
ELSA WRECK
Mr*. A. A. Jones Mercedes
In Critical Condition At
Edinburg Hospital
(Special to The Hertid>
EDINBURG Jan. 17.—Four per-
sons were injured one seriously in
I an automobile accident shortly be-
fore noon Friday at Elsa.
Injured were: Mr. and Mrs. A. A.
Jones Sr.. A. A. Jones. Jr. and Miss
Laveme Jones daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jones Sr. The elder Mrs. Jones
was unconscious when she was
brought to the hospital here and
physicians described her condition as
critical.
According to traffic officers Earl
Hersh and H. Q. Hollan. who were
investigating the accident at noon
the Jones automobile was in collision
with another machine at Elsa.
The Jones famih. of Mercedes
was en-route to Edinburg at the
time of the accident according to
reports.
The driver of the other machine
was uninjured although both cars
were badly damaged the officers
i said.
NIGHT VISITS
IN DEATH CELL
MAYBE AIRED
‘Jafiie’ Declares Is
Ready to Return To
Face Governor In
Quizzing
TRENTON. N. J. Jan. 17. (AT)
—Governor Harold G. Hoffman
In a formal statement said Fri-
day: “If Impeachment Is a price
that most be paid for daring to
follow the dictates of my own
conscience I am ready to pay A*
The governor said he did
“question the trunhfnlness and
mental competency of some Of
the chief witnesses for the staid"
(against Hauptmann.)
*1 do doubt that this crime
could have been committed by
any one man** he added ‘'and I
am worried about the eagoraem
of some of our law enforcement
agencies to bring about the deeth
of this one man.**
Copyright 1936 by the UP)
TRENTON N. J.. Jan. 17.—Bruno
Hauptmann's 30-day reprieve spur-
red a defense search Friday for
new evidence and raised the pos-
sibility Gov. Harold O. Hoffman
might question Dr. John F. Condon
about his oft-told story of the Und-
bergh ransom negotiations.
The governor who dramatically
stayed Hauptmann’s electrocution
29 hours before the scheduled time
i has expressed a desire to inter-
rogate “Jafsie’* on purported dis-
crepancies between his court testi-
mony and a series of articles on
the crime.
Jafaie Ready for Quiz
Dr. Condon and his daughter.
Mrs. Myra Hacker arrived Friday
at Cristobal. Canal Zone their first
See BRUNO on Page Ten)
GAMING BOARDS
ARE OUTLAWED
Machines Disappear From
Harlingen Following
Brief Flare-Up
(Special to The Herald *
HARLINGEN. Jan. 17.—Following
a brief flare-up Wednesday night
Harlingen has taken its place with
other cities in the district and race
horse machines slot machines and
i dice games have gone by the way-
; side on orders from District At-
torney R B Rentfro Jr.
The district attorney's office
ordered machines In the city re-
moved earlier in the week follow-
ing a ruling by the attorney gen-
eral's department and machines in
Harlingen as well as other citiea
of the district were removed from
stores cafes and beer parlors. As
the result of a misunderstanding
on the part of machine operators
the gambling devices re-appeared
here about 11 o'clock Wednesday
night. G. Lorimer Irown. assistant
district attorney went Into im-
mediate action however and be-
fore sun-up Thursday the ma-
chines were again gathering cob-
webs in storage houses.
The attorney general’s ruling did
not include marble machines and
as the result orders have not gone
<See GAMBLING on Page Ten)
TONIGHT’S MOVIES
OVER THE VALLEY
Brownsville: The Capitol—Claudette
Colbert and Fred MacMurrsy In "The
Bride Comes Home ” The Queen—Wil-
liam Boyd in "Bar 20 Rides Again.”
The Dlttmann—James Cagney and Mae
Clarke in “Lady Killer”
San Benito The Rlvoll—Irene Dunn
and Robert Taylor In "The Magnificent
Obsession.”
Harlingen: The Arcadia—Lily Pone
and Henry Fonda in “I Dream Too
Much ” The Rialto—Hoot Gibson and
Jane Barnes In ‘ Frontier Justice.”
La Ferla: The Bijou—Ian Hunter and
Lupe Velez in “Morals of Marcua.”
Raymondvtlle: The Ramon—Edmund
Lowe in "The Orest Impersonation.”
Donna: The Plaza—Walter Connolly
and Llcyd Nolan in “One Way Ticket.”
San Juan. The San Juan—Warred
William in “The Case at the Lucky
Legs.”
Mercedes The Capltol-Claudette Col-
bert and Fred MacMurrsy in “The
Bride Comes Home “
Weslaco: The Rttz—Warner Baxter and
Alice Faye in King of Burlesque.
Pharr: The Texas—Lee Tracy in Two-
Fisted” __
McAllen: The Palace—Rochelle Hud-
son and Cesar Romero in Show Them
No Mercy.” The Queen—Tom Tyler in
“The Laramie Kid.”
Edinburg: The Valley—Pat O*Brian
and Jane Proman in “Stars Over Broad*
way ” The Artec—Norman Foster and
Charlotte Henry in “The Hooaier School-
Mission: The Mission—Hugh Herbert
snd Helen Broderick in “To Beat the
Band/’_ JiMMi/
Pay Your Poll .Tax/ ✓ ✓ ✓ < Important Elections Xkis Year Face tke Country/ * * * / Be a 1 oter.
V • '• ' - - - \ ... t ■ i J . ■* A '81/
'J4 "... • - *11 J rl ■ -i. fell '' i
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 169, Ed. 1 Friday, January 17, 1936, newspaper, January 17, 1936; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1404116/m1/1/?q=cemetery: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .