Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 248, Ed. 1 Friday, May 18, 1956 Page: 2 of 16
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4
Friday, May 18, IM
THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE
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MISS ESTHER REYNA, LAREDO
MISS JUDY ALLEN, EL PASO
MISS CLARE LEISTER, ORANGE
MISS ANNA LEE SKAGGS, SHERMAN
HR
TSCW YEARBOOK BEAUTIES ARE SELECTED
Town Topics
Group Due Today
Briefs - Personals • Births - Hospital Notes
5 j
1
..3
from the United States
next mat..
. W. H. PIERCE
ihdrfuaffus’cii Arms Cutback
i
ment. is the author of an article.
welcome address will be
Houston’s Mayor, Oscar
by Mrs. Adolf Stieler of Comfort.
contest. Fred Slack is director of
on corner lot, double gar-
fenced yard. C-*eo7.
?
w ANT LADY for bookkeeping and
Dr. Ernest O. Lawrence,
nu-
MARKEIS
FOR
:3oh Deer Combine. 4
Department of Public Safety, tes-
{
tionists, col
ta, county agents and school
industrial leaders from the
ice.
Trumans,
weeks in Italy, started out with
She
9
Fot
have not scared me. They
blinded me but it will not keep me
vigorously as he talked with some
cuts of beef.
T
_1
J
4
tl
7
- ■ ..e
■
15
Continued Fight Pledged By
Columnist Blinded By Acid
Harry, Bess.
Visit Rome
Guides Selected
For Field Day
RENNER — Six soil conserva-
Lawyer’s Prints
Claimed On Glass
At Murder Scene
Two entertainment numbers are
on the program. Two Houston Re-
publican women will present a skit
at the morning session, and the
Republican Women’s Quartette of
i May 24 from 6 p.m. to 8
:ach family is to bring a
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas Republicans will find a
lot more elbow room at their state
convention in Houston Tuesday
than will the Democrats at their
Dallas meeting the same day.
Because President Eisenhower
umn as before."
Riesel said he was not indicting
i been des-
during the
th Founda-
barley and grain sorghums, which
are used as livestock feed. Such
provisions were approved by the
House and the Senate Agriculture
Committee.
party
This
"E. ' ’
2 . ,.
M .6 V
"Current Status of Segregation in
Public Schools,” in the current
issue of the Texas Journal of Sec-
ondary Education.
NTSC students will present the
tenth annual Water Carnival to-
night at 8 at the North Texas
swimming pool. The carnival will
feature synchronised swimming
numbers, clown diving, fancy div-
ing acts, bathing beauty contests.
12at4
“age.
fee
PUANis
I
5
A
S' g
tives and professional people. They are Judy Allen,
El Paso, freshman; Clare Leister. Orange, sophomore;
Anna Lee Skaggs, Sherman, junior; and Esther Reyna,
Laredo, senior.
given by
Holcomb.
M 18
from a distance of at least 5%
feet He said no powder marks
1
s.
SO newsmen.
"I’m not sensitive about the fact
that I’m blind,’’ he said. “I can’t
see but I can hear and I can
feel.”
He said he expected to leave the
hospital early next Week.
"The day after I leave I will
return to my office and my type-
writer and will bang out my col-
clear, Gen. James H. Doolittle
air, Gen. Waller Bedell Smith.
Army; Adm. Oswald S. Colclough,
Navy; Benjamin Fairless, steel;
Wa)ker L. CUler, power an! in-
dustry; Dr. Harold' Moulton, mili-
tary budgets, and Dr. James B.
Fisk, communications.
were on the victim’s body.
He identified a bullet as having
been fired from a gun found at
the scene. Ranger George Roach
testified the bullet had been taken
from Bethke's body.
A fingerprint expert of DPS.
Worth Seaman, testified he picked
up prints in the death room. He
said he did not obtain prints from
the gun but did obtain two prints
from drinking glasses.
One print, hs said, was Hamil-
ton's. He was unable to identify
the other
"I should be by friends of
labor, like Senators Paul Douglas
(D-I, Irving Ives (R-NY) or
Styles Bridges (R-NH), or their
counterparts in Congress.
"If it is carried on by men of
good will it will command the
respect of both sides, and the
mobs can’t say they're being per-
secuted by the government."
to get it
reunited.
and
Denton trade
a trip to Italy's White House, the
Quirinele Palace, to sign the
guest book. They didn’t meet
President Giovanni Gronchi, but
will be his luncheon guests Mon-
day.
Truman’s arrival coincides with
screening of a new mystery movie
at Rome's English-language thea-
ter: "The Trouble With Harry.”
soil bank urged by Eisenhower as
a means of cutting surpluses by
paying farmers to divert some
land to grass, trees and similar
uses. The bill does not contain
the authority Eisenhower sought
to make advance payments this
year to farmers who agree to put
land in the soil bank in 1957.
The main Senate dispute centers
DOCUMENT
Continued From Page 1
Hindman. 39. both of East Orange
—own the Distinctive Emblem and
Uniform Corp. there.
They were arraigned before Kis-
caras and released in >5.000 ball
each on charges of conspiracy to
steal government property.
Byrnat Ernest Schriber, 43, own-
er of Schreiber’s Sapshot Serv-
ice, Linden, N.J., was picked up
at his home at Milburn, N.J.
He waived a hearing when he
appeared before Commission Clo-
hosey at Millbum police head-
quarters and also was released in
$5,000 bail on a conspiracy charge.
The charges were brought
against all four under the theft
which provides penalties ranging
and fines from 82.000 to 810,000.
the event.
Decoration will be held at the
Old Trinity Cemetery, east of the
city, Sunday. An all-day program
will be presented.
A picnic supper for the pereats
and children of Jefferson Davis
School will be held on the school
sbeggermrem
,2 .4,
Linwoou Roverson
FLORIST
501W. Hickory c-2561
They’ll bo repaying a call. Bap-
tist leaders from the United States
were guests in Russia last August.
The Baptist delegation is the
curtain raiser for,a more widely
representative Russian religious
Farm Leader
Seeking First
Public Office
nuue
ignated special guides
annual Texas ReooarcI
9 gbsin *
V"Wc-*
unn as I always have," lie said.
For the past 10 years Risel has
NEW YORK U-Religious traf-
fic between Russia and the United
States becomes a two-way street,
starting today.
Five Russian Baptist leaders are
scheduled to arrive here, in the
first such mission to this country
since 1906.
, They're coming at the invitation
of this country's major Baptist
bodies. Including the Southern and
American (Northern) Baptist con-
ventions.
construction trades, and the gar
menai nAptsamptnauntonaa just Planning 16 spend the next two
MICK BEDROOM. outside entrant
ndjotntng bath, phone C 8563,
408 Pearl St. -
About 10 per cent of V. S. gain-
ful workers produce raw farm pro-
ducts.
ROME (—Tourist Harry 8. Tru-
man got cheers and Bess Truman
got left behind on their arrival in
Rome today.
"Long live Truman!” shouted
other traveling Americano at the
railway station. "Truman for pres-
ident!"
- Former Democratic President
Truman, who has vowed "never
again," leaned out the window of
his compartment, smiled happily
and waved.
Italian police then took him in
tow, formed a flying wedge and
forced a path through the crowd
to a waiting room for VIPs—very
important persons.
In their haste Mrs. Truman was
left behind, a bit surprised. By the
time she got to the waiting room,
the door was locked. It took some
Gooch, Fort Worth attorney and
former football and track star at
Texas University, will keynote the
Republican state convention here
next Tuesday, H. J. "Jack” Por-
ter. Republican National Commit-
teeman, announced today.
The convention will be called to
order at 10 a.m. Tuesday morning
by John Q. Adams of Harlingen,
chairman of the Republican state
executive committee. The conven-
tion is entitled to 8,887 delegates
and as many alternates, based nn
the 1962 Republican votes cut for
President in the general election.
The executive committee will
meet Monday afetrnoon in advance
of the convention as will the Tex-
as Federation of Republican Wom-
en’s Clubs, which is headed by
Mrs. Robert O'Callaghan of San
Antonio.
Convention sessions will be held
in the Sam Houston Coliseum. The
York Daily Mirror and about 180
other newspapers throughout the
nation. • .....
"I will write- my column as long
as people will read it,” he said.
invitation of the National Council
of Churches, which includes 30
church denominations with 35%
■ million member*.
The larger Russian deputation
also will be returning a visit made
— to their eountry by National Coun-
Sharpening _C-2031. ____
FOR BALE: By Owner. 3-bedroom
Brick,---* ---
age and
led’byMetropotanNmcbfrfue
Russian Orthodox Church, wfll in-
I
m ,4
WASHINGTON W—Sen. H. Alex-
anderson Smith (R-NJ) Mid he
will ask the Senate today to re-
vise three sections of its new
farm bill “to improve our rela-
tions with other countries.”
Smith, a member of the For-
eign Relations Committee, said he
had offered three amendments at
the suggestion of • Secretary of
State Dulles and State Department
advisers.
Debate began Thursday on the
measure, a substitute for a catch-
all farm bill which President
Eisenhower vetoed April 16 with
the contention that it would do
more harm than good.
CONTAINS SOIL BANK
The current bill, somewhat sim-
-
FORT WORTH, (A/P) — cattle
compared to last Week All dasae
steady; good and choice beet steers
18 00-20 50; commercial 15 00-17.00;
commereiai and good heifer 15.002
18.50; utility sows 11.50-12.25; oom- ’
merctal to 13.00; good stock steers
15.50-8.00; medium 13.00-14.60:
good stock heifer* 16.00-16.00; me-
dium and good stock cowa 19.00-
12 00. Calves steady; choice 21.00- .
31.60; good 18.00-26.00; ommer-
elal 18.00-17.00; good *lock ter
calves 17.00-20.50; medium 14.00-
1600: stock heifer caves 17.11
down.
emerged from a Broadway rest-
aurant accompanied by Miss Bet-
ty Nevins, an assistant, when an
unidentified assailant threw acid
in his face.
The columnist said he felt
certain the attack on him was in-
stigated by labor.racketeers, “a
warning to witnesses and ethers
who might send them to jail ... .
They wanted to make me a walk-
ing and living symbol, obviously
we 0
6m» a
ne
(4 sgds%
* 530060.20
liar to one already passed by the of the NTSC government depart-
House. contains authority for them-" ' “ - * “ --
NEW YORK •-Victor Riesel,
crusading labor columnist blinded
by an acid attack, urges a con-
gressional probe of “the under-
world of the labor movement”
At a hospital news conferencee
Thursday, six weeks to the day
after an unidentified assailant
threw sulphuric acid ipto his eyes,
the 41-year-old syndicate news-
plates and eating utensils.
Denton , Unitarian Fellowship
will hold their annual business
meeting Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in
the home of David Morris, 1005
Ave. C.
Mrs. James L. Helm, Route 1,
MERIDIAN •—Attorneys for
Norman Hamilton, Dallas lawyer
charged with murder in the death
of his ranch foreman, continued
their efforts today to establish that
some other person might have
been responsible for the slaying.
Clarence Bethke was shot to
death Dec. 11 In the kitchen of
the plush Hamilton ranch home
near here. ।
During Thursday’s session. Fred
Rymer, a ballistics expert with the
cU leaders early this year.
‘ The visits are the first direct
contact between organized Chris-
tianity In this country and Russia
since before the Communist Revo-
lution in 1817.
Both Russian deleg: tions will
visit churches, seminaries, schools
and other religious centers across
the country.
The Baptist group will sit in on
the Southern Baptist Convention in
Kansas City May 30 to June 2 and
of the American Baptist Conven-
tion in Seattle, Wash., June 15 to
17.
“These visits," said an Ameri-
can Baptist Convention announce-
ment. "are intended to 'develop
mutual understanding and to
create fellowship among Christians
of different political background.”
5 JI
If I
M~ a
as a warning to other to stay There are 37 standard retail
away.” 'cuts of beef.
lz.77Bradahaw.c-2945... titled the ranch foreman was shot
BY OWNER, large 2-bedroom house; ‘ * - -J- —■
1284 Avenue A. Knotty pins den.
walk-In losets, oak trees. Inqutre
1320 Drive, 8-7205.
tion's field day here Wednesday.
Included in the list are George
Wood of Deaton, N. A. Bryson of
Grapevine, and J. M. Norton of
McKinney, who will assist direc-
tion of soil conservation service
personnel; V. L Dahlberg of Me-
Kinney, county agent's group; and
Malcom Wilson of the Southern
Fertiliser and Chemical Company
and E. A. Randles of the McKin-
ney High School, both of McKin
ney who will assist industrial visi-
tors.
Wearing white surgical pads from writing the same type of col-
over his eyes, Riesel gestured — * “
Production Cut
AUSTIN —The Railroad Com-
mission ordered today the fourth
straight monthly slash in produc-
tion of crude oil ih Texas, setting
permissive flow for June at 3,261,-
799 barrels a day. This is a cut
of 74,456 barrels daily.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
Fdi Satt; into vtoe coup* with
1042 Motor, 1117 W. Prairle, C-
MM.
YaJU) WORK * Lawn Mower
nounced military manpower cut-
back.
Harold Stassen, the President's
special assistant on disarmament,
told a news conference today that
the group will assemble in
Washington May 29.
Stassen Mid the group, including
military, nuclear and economic
experts, would also review Stas-
sen's seven weeks of disarmameut
negotiations with Russia and other
countries at London recently, “in-
cluding my talks with Bulganin
and Khrushchev.”
Presumably, the group would al-
so plan any move the United
States might make in response to
the Soviet announcement that, by
next May 1, the Soviet military
forces will be reduced by 1,300,000
men.
The eight task force members,
who will have aides working with
them, and the special subjects of
over provisions to boost govern- _ . .__
ment price supports on oats. rye, and an interfraternity swimming
. - . - - . a -----4 ClanL A:-antn- M
_ ------■ Holcomb, received 1.102,878 votes in carry-
The national anthem will be sung ing Texas, the Republican conven-
office work. 40 hour week,
it. Write Bos "L Record- eacn are:
all unions, and he praised George
Meany, president of the AFLCIO.
Riesel's column has been contin-
ued by his staff while he was in
the hospital.
"The ,Waterfront is not the only
place you have a tough mob,” he
said.
He specifically mentioned the
union of operating engineers, the
■L
"921
, , ""9
-vr. '• %
lIdk
This Ad Entitles
RUTH TUCKER
123 S. Wood
to a Regular 25c
-MALT ar SHAK
FREE
when presented at the
SUPER DOG
North Elm • Highway 24
ISSS. The owher reserves the right
MAy 18, 25. 1956.
Names of the Daedalian Annual, college yearbook,
beauties were revealed at Texas State College for
Women this week. The four students were selected by
a jury of radio, television and newspaper representa-
HOUSTON - J. A. 'Tiny"
ft., P-Td, with pick-up attach-
ment, 6300. Jack Terry, Krum. Tex:
M. ________.’
WANTED experienced asaistant
cook. Apply Wimpy's cafe.
SCRIPTURE Street: 2-bedrooms,
screened porch, garage, deep hit.
Oma Roark. C-2297.
STORKLINE Baby Bed, excellent
condition. 996. 1819 N. Locust,
C-6062.
AVAILABLE June 1, brick duplex
apartment, tilt bath and kitchen,
furninhed exceptionally nice, gar-
age. Apply Til Woodland. -9706.
MAPLFSWAaterla, Pick-up S
delivery on Fluff Dry and Wet
Wash. Phone 0-8377.
TWO Room turnishee npostments.
Close In. bilis paid. Adniu. C-
2945.___ _________
nOR, i-bedroom houne, corner lo€,
cyclone fence, 1205 Johnson, 815
weekly: no down payment. C-294j>.
, TWO SMALL-nimuhed'houecj, all
conventences, 825-and MO month-
paper writer said:
“There has got to be a federal _________________
investigation of labor, racketeering been labor columnist for the New
which infests unions. “ * — - -
COMBINATION home ad revenue
property, desirable location, will
trade Write owner. Bos "J" tiec-
ord-Ch ronlcla.
BA RO AIN, M ft. Aluminum Well-
er house. fully equipped, excell-
mt condition. C:5067.
NICE, 3-bedroom home. near
achoole. cyclone fence C-5967.
2-bedroom hmiee,l itsll bmeeway,
corner tot. G. I Call 0-6967.
'The same underworld crowd
that hit me will be the same
underworld crowd I will continue
to fight.
CROPS
Continued From Page 1
fields which were “too far gone"
for the rains to be of much bene-
fit, grain men reported. Yields from
the early harvests are not expect-
ed to reach average production for
the year.
At Lewisville, Carl Dogan. re-
ported some “good" fields, but
maintained the overall county re-
port of 50 per cent of normal.
Most farmers ia this area exhibit
surprise at the growth made by
wheat and oats during: the past
two weeks.
Fred Johnson of Sanger report-
ed that a good number of farmers
are* beginning to bale oats for hay.
the same as in other parts of the
county. Wheat in the area is much
better, and the high winds have
hurt some. Wheat and oats are just
beginning to turn good in that
area.
In Denton, Druce said cool weath-
er and cool nights have delayed
the harvest somewhat, and will
continue to do so unless a change
is made. Oats are expected to be
lighter in test-weights than last
year.
grounds
Pm Ei -
basket supper, and the Jefferson
Davis P-TA will furnish drinks.
Fort Worth Lawyer Debate Begins
Is GOP Keynoter On Changes In
ron wo wu enteramn n e New Farm Bill
afternoon.
Gooch who was an all Confer-
ence tackle at Texas University and
sian Baptist
dh
d l
mh Hd
Ep
Nez
2m"Ws
gTxu.31
0 . . 9 , "
AMbkALBi Baton* Onv»r«ton for
, a teat bargain, C-SS71
F1OAL NOTICE —
■ale: One 20’ x 40 trame
ling, suttahle to be moved or
town, 9e be sold to the high-
Adder at 10:00 AM.. June !
Study Slated
WASHINGTON ePresident Ei-
senhower has appointed an eight-
member task force to study the
Implications of Russia’s an-
baseball sutt and kha-
kl shtrta, Roger Frame. 1sCw
Laundry. C-7622.
““nEO&frBGBgnriariie-”*
Pixie Cafe. Pt. Worth Dr.
#64* fifiBB. nice buotnoM bung-
^teg. on Bo. Elin Oma Roark, C-
tion will be entitled to a stagger-
ing 3,687 delegates and 3,687 al-
ternates.
There is little likelihood that
many will attend. In view of the
harmony expected on practically
all questions, many delegates des-
ignated in county conventions
probably won't attend.
Democrats have a different
problem. More delegates will be
turning up Monday in Dallas when
the credentials subcommit-
tee starts its hearings than will
be seated when the convention-
opens Tuesday.
A number of contests between
rival county delegations favoring
Sen. Lyndon Johnson and Gov.
Shivers will be heard Monday.
The State Executive Committee
then will act on which delegations
should be seated. The final deci-
sion will be up to the convention.
A total of 1,900 votes are rep-
resented in the Democratic con-
vention.
Resolutions favoring the reelec-
tion of President Eisenhower and
Vice President Richard Nixon are
expected to be adopted. Several
resolutions on federal legislation
may produce debate.
For the first time since he be-
came governor, Shivers—who was
trounced by Johnson for the state
Democratic leadership in precinct
and county conventions—won't at-
tend the state convention Tues-
day.
A discussion of the organism*
believed to cause tastes and ordors
in city water supplies has been
published by Dr. J. K. G. Silvey,
director. and Dr. A. W. Roach of
the NTSC biology department.
Their article appears in the May
issue of Public Works Magazine,
and is one of the few scientific
articles ever to be published in
color In the nationally-distributed
publication.
Officer* elected Kor next year
by members of Sigma Xi. honor-
ary scientific research club at
NTSC, are Dr. Walter Hansen,
president, and Dr. L. F. Connell,
vice president.
Betty Ledbetter of Lewisville
has been elected vice president
of Senior Mary Arden literary club
at NTSC. Miss Ledbetter, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. D.
Ledbetter, Route 2. Lewisville, is a
member of Sibma Tau Delta Eng-
lish society and Alpha Chi and
Alpha Lambda Delta honor socie-
ties.
Dr. S. B.. McAlister, director
wm named assistant literary ed-
itor of the Daedalian Quarterly:
TSCW publication which publishes
writings and works of students.
Mrs. Helm, an English major, wm
named to the Special Honor Roll
last year.
Mrs. J. Edwin Taylor, 219
Jagoe, will go to Houston Satur-
day to attend two Republican
meetings. Mrs. Taylor, a director
of the hate Republican Women’s
Clubs, will attend the women's
meeting Monday at the Rice Hotei
end will also be a delegate to the
state Republican convention Tues-
day.
F. B. Hoey Jr., 2115 Northwood
Tr.. received the Stella P. Ross
Memorial Award in Evangelism
for 1956 at commencement exer-
cises held at Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Fort
Worth last week. The award, based
on scholastic record and general
conduct, is given to no individual
selected by a committee of facul-
ty members. Huey, pastor of the »
Bolivar Baptist Church, has com-
pleted his first year of studies at
the seminary.
The Krum Progressive Club win
sponsor a community picnic at 7:30
p.m. Saturday at the Krum Young
Citizens Club;
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flaw Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Miss Patricia Manry,
314 Hettie, surgical; Mrs. R. B.
Brown, 821 N. Elm, medical; Mrs. '
Stuman A. Raney, 321 Withers,
medical; George Inman, 1501 *
Meadow, medical: Oliver Sim-
mons, Lewisville, medical; Mrs.
L. W. Walls, Lewisville, medical;
Mrs. Eva Huckaby, Slidell, medi-
cal.
Dismissed: Miss Beverly Taylor,
1314 E. McKinney; W. B. Stevens,
913 Kendolph, Mrs. V. Frank
Stinchcomb, 2303 Denison; Hugh
Brandon, 909 McCormick.
Elm Street Hospital and Clinle
Admitted: Mrs. J. W. Marple.
Route 1. Tioga.
Dismissed: Mrs. Donna Carente
and baby, Arlington; Mrs. A. B.
Baker. Route 2. Denton.
- BIRTHS
A giri, Deborah Kay. was born
to Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Marple of
Tioga at 1:15 a.m. Friday in Elm
Street Hospital.
P-“A
"215
}1§.
“I don't know all the duties of
a county precinct commissioner
but feel that I’m capable of learn-
ing them in order to fullfill them
to the best of my ability," W. M.
Marshall Pierce said following his
announcement as a candidate for
commissioner of Precinct I in Den-
ton County.
It is the first time for Pierce
to seek a public office although
he is now a county director of the
Denton County Electric Coopera-
tive, Inc. end secretary-treasurer,
chairman of the Mustang block of
the county Agriculture Stabiliza-
tion and Conservation Committee
and president of the board of di-
rectors of the Little Elm Water-
shed Association.
The candidate for county com-
missioner is a resident of the Mus-
tang community where he was
reared.
At the present time Pierce owns
and operates a 279-acre farm which
he bought in 1942 after retiring
from the teaching profession.
Prior to returning to farming.
Pierce was graduated from NTSC
with a bachelor of science degree
and from the University of Texas
with a masters degree in school
administration. He then taught and
chiefly in Grayson County-
superintended several srhools.
During the 13 years the candidate
has been back farming he has
managed to keep out of the red.
“It is my intention, If elected,
to give the entire precinct at-
tention. not just those sections
where the most people Av,"
Pierce said, “and I am making
every effort to see everybody and
answer their questions if I’m ca-
pable of answering them light
now,"
Pierce is a member of the Ma-
sonic Lodge. His wife Bertha teach-
es the second and third grades in
Pilot Point. They have two sons;
Hugh, a civil engineer with the
Magnolia Petroleum Co. in Mid-
lend. and Jon, n senior In Pilot
Point High School. (Paid Political
Ad.>
n
′ -
' 1:
a weight man on the track team
in 1925, 1926 and 1927. will address
the morning session. National
Committeeman Porter will addres*
the afternoon session with an out-
line of plans for the party to carry
the state in the general election.
GOP Parley
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 248, Ed. 1 Friday, May 18, 1956, newspaper, May 18, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453133/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.