Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 176, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1960 Page: 2 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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Thursday, February 25, IN*
PAGE rWo
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
m
TRINITY COFFEE PARTY?
Dallas White,
Town Topics
Cool For Weather
PHONE DU2-2551
*:
Briefs-Births-Hospital Notes
WALLACE SHEPPARD
Third Candidate Announces
I
#
For School Board Position
THE MORAL OF THIS STORY:
Don’t Unstop Drain With
I
iV
Poison
In Icy Weather
I
th* two
BERSERK GUNMAN DIES
AFTER KILLING FOUR
MARKETS
UNIONTOWN, Pa. (AP) — A Before police shut off the road
L Of
59208270
21
a
0
FIRE HOSE
Never Before Has
V
So Revealingly!
8
A-Sub Heads
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veame-venan
MF
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• • • • •
I
TODAY'S CITIZEN
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
BARROW INSURANCE SALUTES
19
Wt RENT
4
•«» • WdD
• Walken
BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY 1I
General Admission 90c, All Student* 65c
Feature at 1:00 - 3:07 - 5:14 - 7:21 - 9:21
"YOUR HARTFORD AGENT"
Dial DU2 9621
317 South Hat
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PIEGt
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INE ARTS
Top Teamster
Aide Indicted
11
Mrs. Hussey, 69,
Dies In Denton
Wallace Sheppard of 622 Fort
Worth Dr. announced today that
lie will be a candidate for one of
Performance* At
5:00; 7:00; & 9:00
1
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"ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY KATHARINE
TAYLOR CLIFT HEPBURN
1
1
I
Because of the very
Intimate theme only
adult tickets soldi
ALL
SEATS
80c
weed
for
•Wheel-
chain
[ !
FRESH CUT
FLOUERS
-A MAJOR WORK OP
ART-FROM INDIA-
-DIRECTED BY
SATYAJIT RAY-
A TEN FILMS
PRESENTATION
J
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The
Ewers
saningkameMORENg-kan-MacBORI
Cathy
hmes
she
svos
One of the Past Year's 10 Best . . .
Says the National Board of Re-
views.
Relatives have requested the As-
bury Methodist Church Memorial
Fund be considered if tribute* are
made.
d
STUDENT ART
THEATRE
LAST DAY
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IF
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count000 fine, or both, on each The Camera Dared To
Indicted with Gibbons were Sid- Focus So Intimately,
"RATHER
PANCHALI"
=INEMASEODE• COLOR by DE LUXE
STEREOPMONIC $OUND
ntnit h CRARLES BRACKEII - Direeted by Min ini
kiituii) b WALTER REISCR and CHAR K BRACKEII
DR. J. C. MATTHEWS
. . . president of NTSC. Dr. Matthews, who for eight
years has headed the Texas Council of College
Presidents, has stepped down. He'll be succeeded by
a former Dentonite, Dr. F. L McDonald, president of
Lamar Tech College at Beaumont.
s,27
ek »
DALLAS (AP) —’ The Dallas
School District will launch its first
detailed study in five years of the
geographical distribution of white
and Negro students within school
areas.
School Supt. W. T. White said
Wednesday the report will be com-
pleted in two or three weeks.
A school source said the study
was routine but necessary in the
event such data are asked for in
the Dallas integration case.
The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals in New Orleans has taken
under advisement a plea by Dallas
Negroes to order the Dallas Board
of Education to come up with a
plan for integration in September.
Th* distribution report would
show street-by-street location of
Negro and white school-age chil-
dren in each school area.
SPECIAL NEWS FLASH . . . Miss Taylor and Miss Hepburn were nominated for best
actress** of th* year for their performance in Suddenly In.t Symmtr. __________
---suddemlg
) Last
TENNESSEE
WILLIAMS
go it headed for a sunny home-
coming in Hawaii after being
under the polar ice pack for al-
most a month during a trip to
the North Pole.
“ THE •
ROOKiE
USE OUR THEATRE BONUS
COUPONS — it's a discount
for everyone . . . not just a
favored group.
66,,
to traffic Haymond fired for nine
hours at almost everything that
moved—cars and trucks. Only once
did he fail to fire at a moving
vehicle. This was a school bus car-
rying about 50 youngsters.
Veteran state troopers hugged
the tank as it opened fire. They,
Weather Postpones
Father-Son Banquet
LEWISVILLE (Special) - An-
nual father - son banquet of the
Lewisville Future Farmers of Am-
erica scheduled for Friday night
has been postponed due to incle-
ment weather, chapter adviser
Chester Boyd said today.
New date for the banquet will
be announced later. It is held each
year to honor fathers of vocational
agriculture students and business
and professional men who aid FFA
activities.
I d
Corsages • Pot Plants
COMPLETE SELECTION
Linwood Roberson
FLORIST
DU2-2561 Denton
2 • Hospital
h Beds
J
d
TONIGHT IS THE NIGHT -
of the
cation. Th* election will be April
1
A resident of Denton 13 years,
Sheppard, 32, is married and has
four children. He is a veteran of
World War II, and a member of
the First Methodist Church. He is
employed at a printing firm in
Fort Worth and operates his own
insurance agency on Fort Worth
Drive.
He has been active in school af-
fairs and is now serving his sec-
Contact UNITED FINANCE CO.
for a loan to refinance your car or
tconsohdate your-present biis."
(Adv.)
II
— 1
8. —A Hurry and Get Yours.
J Minstrel Starts 8 P.M.
— 9^-^ Denton High School
Auditorium
TOP PROFESSIONAL & LOCAL ACTS
Benefits to Kiwanis Children's Clinic
Beats’ Rally Too Negro Pupils’
Survey Sought
JUST THE THING FOR THOSE
SNEAKY POLICE SQUAD CARS
If you think radar speed detection is sneaky take a look at a
new police car lighting gadget being marketed by a Florida firm.
It’s called a "ghost beacon" and stays hidden in the fender of
an unmarked police car until a lever is pushed from within the car.
When that lever is pushed a red light mounted atop a folding
support rises out of the car's fender.
“Puts law enforcement on an equal footing with premeditated law
breaking public” reads a company brochure. "For the first time,”
the brochure reads, "an answer to the problem of conversion of un-
marked patrol vehicles to immediately recognizable law enforce-
ment vehicles.”
"When is your vehicle light actually needed?” the brochure asks
lawmen.
"Only when it is lit and can be easily observed for 360 degrees,”
the booklet answers.
The beacons sell for *197 each plus freight from Miami and any
applicable taxes, the brochure says.
$18,
4
1
places open on the Denton
Independent School Board of Edu-
Mrs. Charlie Hussey of 1815 N.
Elm died in Flow Memorial Hos-
pital at 10:50 a.m. today. She was
69.
Mrs. Hussey, a lifetime resident
of Denton County, was a member
of Denton's First Baptist Church.
Funeral plans were incomplete
this morning at Goen Funeral
Home. Burial will be in Denton's
IOOF Cemetery. -
Survivors include her husbanki
a stepson, John Bennett • Hu^y
of Fort Worth; two stepdaughtr.
Mrs. Carl AtchesOn of Slidell and
Mrs. Howard Simpson of Hous-
ton; five sisters, Mrs. J. H. Gol-
laday, Mrs. Fred Rufner. both of
Fort Worth. Mrs. O. H. McDon-
ald and Mrs. J. O. MeDenald,
both of Dallas, and Mrs. A. C.
Bennett of Gunter; and two broth-
ers, T. B. Fouts of Fort Worth and
Cecil Fouts of Dallas.
V^’^wtoh'* - edM-AFTg)
By CHUCK GREEN
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Glenn H. Galbraith of »08
Austin had trouble with things
other than the weather Wed-
nesday night.
Galbraitn, an NTSC fresh-
man student from Dallas, had
a stopped-up sink.
He used a commercial sewer
cleaning chemical in an effort
DRIVE-IN,
(UMV4 THEATRE
•«n®"”ewonwweww2
FEAlUKL> /:i- 9:10
4 FABULOUS WORLD
3ELOW THE WORLD!
20- JULES VERNE’S
JURNIY ,
A
eKMTMA
yMMEP-
20 I
• • *
Recommended for adults and
mature young people
STARTS TODAY AT THE
WASHINGTON CAP)_The Sar- dren.
ney Zagri, legislative counsel for
the union; John Naber, secretary
of Local 688 in St. Louis: William
Latal, president of Local 688;
Philip C. Reichardt, acting secre-
tary of taxicab driver’s Local 405
in St. Louis, and Joseph Bommar-
Ito, business agent for Local 405.
The indictments also named Lo-
cals 688 and 405 as defendants.
The 22-count indictment followed
a five-month investigation by U.S.
Atty. Wayne H. Bigler, the FBI
and the Internal Revenue Service.
Husbands! Wives!
Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger
Thousanda o couple* aje wh, wos-out,
exhausted because body lacks iron and Vita-
min »!. For a younger feeling after 40, try
new, improved Oatrag Tonic Tablet!. Contain
iron and high-potency dose Vitamin Bi for
quick, new younger pen. vim. 3-day "ge-
acquainted" sun only 6W«. Or met Economy
Me. raw $1.67. All druggisti.
(Continued From Page 1
Municipal Judge Jack Bryson said.
No trial date* have been set for
the others. .. ,
Bovis and Lackey were still in
the Denton city jail this morping.
50 OTHERS
"We only got a few of the ring-
leaders.” Anderson said. “There
were about 50 egging th* others
°Anderson sald the snowtaU* and
rocks aren't the thing* that Bother
the police department most about
the fracas.
"We had every man on duty
out there,” the chief said. “If
someone had caught a burglar or
prowler in their house we couldn’t
have done a thing about it. Luck-
ily nothing like that happened.
But someone could have been kill-
ed trying to hold a prowler until
we arrived,” he said.
The police dispatcher delayed
several minor accident calls until
the police units cleared the scene.
Thorp Services
Held in Chapel
Funeral services for Robert
Henry Thorp, 72, of Route 2, Den-
ton. were to be held at 10 this
morning in the Schmitz - Floyd-
Hamlett Funeral Chapel.
Dr. Earl Patton, pastor of the
Asbury Methodist Church, was to
officiate. Burial was to be in Rose-
lawn Memorial Park.
Mr. Thorp died at 9:45 p.m.
Tuesday in Flow Memorial Hos-
pital. He has been a resident of
Denton for 13 years and was a
member of the Asbury Methodist
Church.
Born in New York City, Sept. 12.
1887, Mr. Thorp was the commer-
cial relations manager for the Edi-
son Electric Utilities Co. of New
York.
Survivor* Include hla wife; two
daughters, Mrs. D. W. Fowler of
Denton and Mrs. E. D. Oliver of
Dallas; three sisters. Mrs. Eliza-
FORT WORTH (AP)—Local beatniks, warmed by their little cup*
of coffee, climbed from their cellars Wednesday night to hold an
outdoor political rally on the coldest, most miserable night of the
year.
About 150 beats gathered at Burk Burnett Park to push the cam-
paigns of Pete “The Hero” Gill and “Big” Mike Callaway, running
for Democratic precinct chairmanships.
Signs of “We Like Mike” were held aloft by some who have heard
Mike read poetry.
The star of th* show was an eagle held aloft by artist Don
Pottratz who pronounced: "Let there be weirdness.”
Mike warned “if they slap a city tax on expresso, we’ll stage
such a coffee party on the banks of the Trinity River that it will
make the Boston Tea Party look like an outing of Sunday afternoon
Girl Scouts."
Three young anti-beat* showed up with signs reading:
"Beatniks go home if you have a home.”
"Down with the unwashed masses.”
"Ridiculous."
The rally lasted 45 minutes and then the beats headed for the
coffee house* when the cover charge was lifted for the night.
FORT WORTH (AP) - Hogs none. Cattle 1
200; calves 300; few cows yearlings and
calves were steady; 670 Ib. baby beeves 1
$25, butcher cows $17-17.50; canners and
cutters $13-17. More than 1,100 cattle and
calves were on .hand for the weekly auc-
tion. Early trading in the sale was slow and
weak with the off-market buyers very
scarce.
Optimistic Club
Members Plan
7 a.m. Meetings
Only someone who is really an
optimist could make the meetings
of Denton’s newly organized
Breakfast Optimist Club.
The group will meet at 7 a.m.
each Tuesday.
Earl Chandler, the City of Den-
ton's new finance director, was
elected president of the new club,
which was organized Wednesday
night. Dan Guest and John R.
Mase were chosen vice presidents
and Willis Mitchell Jr. was named
secretary.
The new breakfast club is spon-
sored by the already established
Denton Optimist Club.
Directors for the new club will
be Clovis George, Claude Simg,
Albert Harpool, Jack Legett, D. L.
Brittian and Kenneth Borah.
The Breakfast Optimist Club will
meet each week at the Pat Boone
Country Inn.
He got rid of some of the
poison there.
The ambulance took him to
Flow Memoril Hospital, where
a doctor hooked up a stomach
pump and cleaned Galbraith's
stomach.
Galbraith was then admitted
to the hospital for observation
and was released in good
shape this morning.
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
- Starts 7:00 & 10:10-
— DANIEL M ANGEL
presents
KENNETH
MORE
Jayne
MANSFIELD
to unstop the sink drain. The
chemical is poison.
That didn't work and the
sink filled with water. He
wanted the water out of the
sink and decided to siphon it
out.
Galbraith, 18, put a rubber
hose in the sink and sucked on
the other end of the hose to
get the siphoning process start-
ed.
But he filled his stomach
with the poisonous cleaner.
He knew it could be fatal, so
he got in his car about 7:30
p.m. to drive himself to Flow
Memorial Hospital.
He barely got started when
he lost control of his car on
the icy street and hit a brick
wall, wrecking his auto.
He somehow walked to 512
Austin and asked Dale Gun-
noe, another NTSC student, to
help him. Gunnoe took him to
the Denton police station. Po-
lice called an ambulance.
Meanwhile they took Galbraith
to the Denton fire station for
emergency treatment.
sharpshooting mountaineer who
picked out moving targets like
ducks in a shooting gallery shot
four persons to death and wounded
five others Wednesday. He died
under a hail of machine gun bul-
lets.
State police, protected by an
Army tank, cut down Daniel Ray-
mond, 42, as he fled his burning
home at Chalkhill. The home had
been set afire by incendiary and
tear gas bambs lobbed from the
tank.
The mountaineer saw a doctor
only Feb. 16 because he was ner-
vous. his wife said.
Raymond, a pipeline walker for
a natural gas company, had a
reputation among the mountain
folk in this southwestern Pennsyl-
vania area for being a crack shot.
He did his lethal shooting from the
second story of his home, located
about 50 feet from a rural road.
GASSAWAY PHARMACY
__We Giye S&HOreen Stamps
'526 N. Locust DU2-9730
TENNE
WILLIA
1.n222gb»® Releosed by AZI
Et0M” 20m Cenury-Vos &N4d
- ALSO Start* 8:45 -
evil
h ‘
Jackie Bridges, 15, of 2631 Scrip-
ture, is recovering after surgery
performed Monday at Flow Me-
morial Hospital.
Mrs. J. E. Harris, sister of Den-
tonite A. F. Yeager of 226 North-
wood Terrace, died in her home in
Nevada, Collin County, Wednesday.
She was *2.
Denton Amateur Radio Opera-
tors Club members will meet at
7 p.m. Friday at Hoop’s Cafeteria
for chili supper, president Bob
French announces.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Flow Memorial Hospital
Admitted: T. M. Calk, Tioga,
medical; Mrs. C. H. Raila Jr.,
206 W. Collins, medical; Mrs. L.
D. Sampler, Decatur, medical;
Mrs. J. S. Wilson, Pilot Point,
medical; Baby Carlos Lyenette
Peace, 719 Wainwright, medical;
Baby Johnny G. Hutson Jr., 1100
Ector, medical; Mrs. Eula Garri-
son, 401 S. Elm, medical; Mrs.
S. N. Lovette, Lewisville, medical;
Mrs. G. W. Locke, 421 Bolivar,
medical.
Dismissed: Mrs. Richard Swer-
zbin, 1209 Broadway; Mrs. J. H.
Peace, 719 Dainwright; W. B.
Clark, 1619 McCormick; Mrs. B.
D. Corley and baby, 709 W. Chest-
nut; Miss Margaret Truellen Beau-
champ, 1000 Laguna; Miss Penny
Mays, 808 Avenue C; Miss Kathy
Lynn Kimbrell, 1513 Boyd; Baby
Weldon Macey Aired, 1503 Mich-
ial; Mrs. Cecil Wortman, Ponder;
W. H. Holbrook, 410 N. Bradshaw;
Mrs. R. E. Sutton, 1330 Panhan-
dle; C. P. Rowe, Heflin, Ala.
bert Jones and Miss Lillian
Thorp, both of New York City,
Home To Hawaii end Sir.Edyn “J ogranaba
Office Meip wanted. Tvping not necessary.
Apply between 12 and 1 o’clock. 221 N.
Ucwt It. __ ____
WATER pumo, % h.p .motor, 140. pipes,
rods. 30 gellon pressure tank. Leonard
Serend, 2 miles M, Pilot Point.
floiiNS (M, IsSlM' Brown Work Oxfords,
MH value, M-00 Jones'es, 1012 Ft.
Worth Driwe..___________»
TA and short sideboerds, fits smaIl Chev-
rolef Wlekup bed. ideai for cemping.
DU24441.
KRaih, ElestrleCiothes Dryer, Bendix,
220 vofts, ineludes vent. Cesh, $50, at
n»4e. Call Om-IAM___
MiMoom agamrat, watat
ill* SWCaraHtii. » o^-MQ*.
50100 unfurnished house, washer con-
neetiem, *M North eart. Cell DU2-8273.
FOR SALE, bedroom hous, lof 75x100.
By owher, Emme Deniel, Mi Walch, DU2-
2664
ifif LY/'kiaK ikisilMb 04 uKr
air conditioned, fenced vurd Owner, Illi
Alleen, DU2-4927.
Robinson Rites
Planned Today
Final rite* for Olney Robinson,
52. of 1004 Johnson were to be
held today at 2 p m in the Sch-
mitt-Floyd-Hamlett Funeral Cha-
pel.
Dr. W. B. Slack, pastor of the
First Methodist Church, was to
officiate. Burial was to b* in
Resthaven Cemetery in Lubbock.
Mr. Robinson died Tuesday In
Flow Memorial Hospital. He had
moved to Denton from Lubbock
three months ago. He was a car-
penter,
Ml
IBB
4 I
i2 ‘48
Wmd
ST. LOUIS, Mo. TAP)—Harold
J. Gibbons, a vice president of
the Teamsters Union and top aide
to Teamsters President James
Hoffa, was Indicted by a federal
grand jury Wednesdav on a
charge of making Illegal political
contributions. Five other teamster
officials also were indicted.
All were accused of violating or
conspiring to violate the Taft-
Hartley Act, which forbids unions
and corporations from contribut-
ine funds to candidates for federal
office.
The alleged offenses are mis-
demeanors, carrying maximum
penalties of one year in jail and
WEATHER
(Continued From Page 1)
1 ever, will come after the tem-
peratures warm up enough to
allow natural thawing. That's
when the burst pipes will be re-
vealed.
At least two Texans died be-
cause of slick roads, and traffic
pileups occurred almost every-
where in the snow-ice zone.
Today’s bright sun shone on
drivers inching their way along
hazardous streets and roads, and
on electric power linemen
struggling without sleep to restore
service in East Texas.
Reese Strong, assistant man-
ager of the Rusk County Electric
Co-Op called it the worst ice
storm in the co-op history because
it was so widespread.
Strong said it may be two or
three weeks before power can be
restored to all the 75 per cent
of the agency’* customer* whose
line* went down.
Damage stretched from north-
east Texas, where forests suffered
from the weight to ice, to the
lower Rio Grande Valley, where
the Brownsville Weather Bureau
said the tomato crop probably
was a total loss. Other Valley ob-
servers, however, said it is too
early to tell the amount of dam-
age, but feared more freezing
weather tonight.
The Weather Bureau said more
snow may move into the state
Friday.
Elm Street Hospital A Clinic
Dismissed: Mr*. Dan Talley,
Lewisville.
BIRTHS
A boy to Mr. and Mn. L. D.
Sampler, Decatur, Feb. 24 at 5:45
p.m. at Flow Memorial Hospital.
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
Raila Jr., 206 W. Collins, Feb. 24
at 6:30 p.m. at Flow Memorial
Hospital.
A boy to Mr. and Mn. G. W.
Locke, 421 Bolivar, Feb. 24 at
8:26 p.m. at Flow Memorial Hos-
pital.
ond term as president of the Cen-
ter Point Parent-Teacher Assn. He
is a former NTSC education stu-
dent.
In his bid for membership on the
board, Wallace said he is for the
education that can be afforded for i
all the youth of the community, a
teacher pay raise to attract and
keep qualified personnel in the
profession, taxation based upon
the ability-to-pay principle long
range planning and a re-evalua-
tion and examination of some of
the administration'* present poli-
cies. He did not elaborate.
Sheppard is the third man to an-
nounce for the two positions to be
filled in April. The others are
Grover Stuart, seeking re-election,
and Marvin Ramey, a Denton in-
surance agent. W. T. (Tip) Hall
Sr., who holds the other expiring
position, is not seeking re-election.
Hall, however, is seeking a spot
on the Denton County Commis-
sioners Court.
Owens Funeral
Set At Aubrey
AUBREY (Staff) — Funeral ser-
▼ices for John Ralph Owen*. 64,
a lifetime resident of Aubrey, were
to be held this afternoon at 3 in
the Aubrey Baptist Church.
The Rev. M. D. Bishop was to
officiate, assisted by the Rev. H. H.
Hudson. Burial was to be in
Belew Cemetery In Aubrey under
direction of Schmitz - Floyd • Ham-
lett Funeral Home of Denton.
Mr. Owens died Wednsday In
Denton's Elm Street Hospital 6
Clinic He was a farmer.
%.
. Rfl
too, peppered the house with vol-
ley after volley. Finally, the ber-
serk Raymond tried to make a
run for it. He ran a few feet,
then dropped as the machine gun
bullets cut through his body.
Those killed by Raymond:
Mary Frances Sissler, 61, and
Edna Macs, 53, both of Ohiopyle,
Pa.; William Burd, 49-year-old
highway department worker from
Farmington, Pa.; and May Maust
of Farmington, Pa.
Wounded were Harry Crom-
well, 31, of Ohiopyle: Lawrece
Swenglish, 18, of Haddonville, Pa.; [
Carlus Maust, 22, husband of Mrs.
Maust, and two Maust children,
Mary, 3, and Eddie, 18 months.
Raymond was armed with two
rifles, one with a telescopic sight.
Police said they probably never
will know just what triggered the
tragedy although Raymond had'
been "acting nervous.” His wife j
said he set fire to their living
room about 12 hours before the
shooting began. She said he doused
the fire but she was frightened and
took her three children to stay
overnight with neighbors.
((2
34th KIWANIS
MINSTREL
TICKETS
$ 1 EACH
i CAMPUS
■ 1 .
f
I
4 l
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 176, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 25, 1960, newspaper, February 25, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468269/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.