Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 294, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1961 Page: 1 of 8
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1
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Sc DAILY
10c SUNDAY
s T
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the Associated Press—World’s Greatest News Agency
8 PAGES
56TH. YEAR, NO. 294
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1961
Republicans Will Take
U.S. Berlin Garrisons
>
Affronted By Red Guard
Democrats will leave their party
r
Turn Back
1
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that all Democrats will be wel- tial elections.
Si
' d
3
1
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Two Buses
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The
BERLIN (AP)
n
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NEW YORK (AP) - Former
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They
Will You Give To United Fund?
El Paso, first vice presi-
vance, $18,933; Employe, $13,320;
Reds Accuse U.S
receive help and may suffer.
and Area, $3,695. No one division
grave doubt as to his suitability
cording secretary; Mrs. Joe John-
Of Warmongering
son,
and
you?
e
Eisenhower said in Newark,
LONDON (AP)—Moscow radio
of American civilian ve-
hicles into East Berlin.
rein-
stating Law “with great regret"
Defense Secretary Roswell L. Gil-
and described him as an "unsuit-
so
able employe.
the United States’ second nuclear
not want “to provide further am-
were about 20 persons in civilian
the back porch. It
Today’s explosion was only
then licity campaign to make a martyr
on
a
was
pay our debts, what’s going to
Rehabilitation Center, $600;
as
said' the attack because “I wouldn’t want
“In a fit of hysterics,
happen?” he asked.
$4,000.
Gilpatric went so far as to
When
firemen
arrived,
ica,
smoking ruins.
in
Tuesday afternoon when Gene
Lewis said the Bob Blackman been responsible for his dismissal.
family had just moved out of the
MIDAS SPY
V
9
DETECTS
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) —
MISSILE
moon, send a Peace Corps mem-
promised is still to come. He told
ber up there. It is an underdevel- the Communist party congress in
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
turion tanks and 'supporting
arms
—The new Midas IV spy satellite
into the Tiergarten,
net be bullied by such warmon-
October with a blast of that size.
flight Tuesday
Kennedy’s
reported.
(See GARRISONS page 5)
School Enrollment
Reflects Increase
:b
22222222222222222
Cooke' led the attendance par- :
ade with 98.4 percent of its stud-
good test.”
a
-
i
Weather
-
J
t
Teachers Will
$
3333
■
Attend Clinic
Wednesday
—
/
.m.....70 12 Noon .
the Texas Classroom Teachers As-
ty of joint managership for the
ROTARY GUEST SPEAKER
sociation and the Texas Educa- three chambers. Population of the
ting 42 teachers to the conference. I in a week.
■
52
Party Line Jam-Up
Costly For Farmer
Gen. Tayor Flies
To Bangkok Area
Cleburne school teachers will
journey to North Texas, State Un-
Sponsors of
by countries
Moscow last week that the cur-
rent Soviet test series would prob-
Brooks, working on the Richard
Lewis farm, two miles north of
Hwy. 67 on Farm Road 1226, tried
clothes, including two women, in
the lead bus. The second bus had
net reached the figures will drop.
' The five divisions of the dri0e
His reference was to the girl
Peace Corps member who set off
an. international incident when a
postcard she wrote describing
primitive conditions in Nigeria
fell into the hands of Nigerians.
The NAACP’s general counsel,
Robert L. Carter, called Day’s
Washington.
He said he is confused at what
the Kennedy administration is
getting at with its fiscal policy.
There has been speculation that in
the event of a decision tc send
U.S. troops into South Viet Nam,
Washington would prefer to send
.. 67
.. 64
.. 69
.. 77
strength and means to rebuff any
threat of aggression.”
not been contacted and given a
chance to give.
Mason asked the workers to
please work all their cards and
ton 97.16, Adams 97.67, Irving 95.-
95, high school 95.1 and Washing-
ton 94.8. This was largest percent
ever for the Negro school.
The total percentage' of atten-
dance for all schools was 96.99
which is very good, Guinn said.
The total percentage of atten-
dance for all schools at this ime
last year was 97.20 for an enroll-
ment of 3,680, Guinn said.
You, the people, are1 the only has been able to reach its indivi-
ones to make the United Fund dual goal.
i
I (
I J
NAACP Unhappy
At Handling Of
Negro Mailman
WASHINGTON (AP) — Post-
master General J. Edward Day
has reinstated a Georgia Negro
leader as a mailman but the way
he announced it has drawn bitter
criticism from the National As-
sociation for the Advancement of
Order of Odd Fellows Monday.
Judge Is Appointed
AUSTIN (AP)—Charles Koehne,
farm.
“As for the U.S.S.R.,
(UPI) United Prese Telepheto Pictures
(CF) Central Prees Features
(KT Eig Featares
Saximum temperature 82 de-
grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 64 de-
gres in past 24 hours.
Maximum temperature 70 de-
grees a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 68 de-
grees a year ago today.
pri-
ith-
the
ers.
lay, •
vith
Soviets Explode
Another Bomb
UPPSALA, Sweden (AP)—The
Soviet Union today exploded an-
other atomic device in the Nova-
ya Zemlya area, the Uppsala Un-
an.
sr.*
3
Mason said the drive is hurting Colored People,
and their individual goals are Ad- now because 300 people still have
Member—Texas Press Ausocatiom
Texas Daily Press League
Bou there Newspaper Publimheza
g.m
ern government’s chances of beat-
ling his former workmates there,
IBLACKIE SHERROD and GARY
.^JJoWcly Jos
By PROC
Their respective vote' totals were
not announced.
Mrs. Man will serve two years,
as will nine other officers elected
by acclamation.
judge of the 54th District Court in
McLennan County. He fills the un-
expired term of Judge D. W. Bart-
lett, who resigned.
roared away from the cape on a
blow in a war would be as good
as the Soviet Union’s first.
an official reported today.
Gen. Lous J. Lefkowitz, Republi-
can candidate for mayor of New
York City. He said Democratic
Mayor Robert F. Wagner, who is
running for re-election, has given
the city a diet of “indecision and
vacillation.”
But he levelled most of his cri-
ticism at Washington Democrats.
an all-day conference.
the ones who have not given.
Corpus Christi, corresponding drive a success. If you had one I"
more chance to contribute, would reported many people doubled and
sin- doesn’t frighten the Soviet Union.
The broadcast replied to Deputy But he added that he had not done
The speaker quoted Skelton as
saying that nowhere among the
ha
# 3s
$‘,9
Similar successful experiments
were conducted with the Midas
III satellite launched earlier this
year.
At 90 seconds, the Titan was
about 40 miles high, heading for
its ninth straight success.
-3
If you have given to the John-
son County United Fund, many
people will receive help.
For every dollar short of the
newsmen at the Saigon airport
that he feels South Viet Nam has
the human and material rescurces
to cope with the serious threat to
its independence.
Taylor plans two days of talks
here with officials of the Southeast
Asia Treaty Organization, with
Thailand’s strong man premier,
Marshal Sarit Thanarat, and with
Cleburne Public Schools had a
total enrollment of 3,696 students
for the first six weeks of school,
according to Supt. Ernest Guinn.
Tuesday he is “still as bullish” as
he was before the report.
He stuck to his prediction that
gross national product, which rep-
resents all goods and services,
will be at the rate of $540 billion
a year in the October-December
quarter. The third quarter, end-
ing Sept. 30, was going at an an-
nual rate of $526 billion.
The Commerce Department re-
area opposite the sector border
near the Brandenburg Gate. The
British normally maintain a com-
pany of troops in the area and an
• CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Partly cloudy and cooler today
an/ tonight. Fair Thursday. Low
tonight 40 in northwest to 55 in
southeast. High Thursday in 70s.
TEMPERATURES
.......mqe
Betty Blodgett of Corpus Christi.
Mrs. Man, wife of an oil drill-
ing contractor, was elected in a
--"
I
I ■
give.
The United Fund drive closes
tomorrow, so give today.
The amount collected in the
drive will be prorated to nine ag-
encies. They are Boy Scouts, $7,-
246; Camp Fire Girls, $7,425;
Johnson County Council on Alco-
holism, $300; Johnson County Re-
life Fund, $4,250; Red Cross, $7,-
C of C Managership
EASTLAND (AP)—A joint meet-
OOF Installation
SAN ANTONIO (AP)-John Da-
vis of Fort Worth was installed,
as grand patriarch of the grand
A
~d
Day announced he was
family were exposed during an
suggested U.S. currency mi
come to be known as "dollarettes.
LAFF-A-DAY
fp
sAk
armed escort in assertion of al-
lied rights to free movement in
Berlin.
Then, in a gesture of concilia-
tion, the U.S. commander said it
was temporarily restricting the
Staff Photo by JIM WEST
pany here yesterday. Left to right, R.P.
Akey, ass't general manager at Hobbs;
Macaya; W. E. Grace, president of Frue-
hauf companies in the United States and
Homer Poole, plant manager at Hobbs.
three towns is 12,750. Eastland
banker Tom Wilson asked the 60
a wooded
Today’s explosion was regis-
tered at Uppsala Seismological
Institute, a spokesman said.
The blast tended to support a
Sarit’s government is deeply
concerned over the situation in
Viet Nam, feeling it. threatens the
security of Thailand and other
non-Communist countries of South-
east Asia.
Taylor declined to tell reporters
in Saigon whether he would rec-
ommend sending U.S. troops to
bolster the South Vietnamese ar-
my.
In answer to a question, Taylor
said SEATO has a role to play in
the Vietnamese crisis because,
call because three different con-
versationalists refused to yield the
line. By the time' Brooks finally
got through to the fire department
it was too late.
Fire completely destroyed a
four-room frame' house on the
farm, causing $7,000 damage.
Lewis, who lives at 1109 Chester
street, said he and Brooks were
out in the field 'when they saw
second vice president; Mrs. F. T.
Kayser, Midland, third vice presi-
dent; Mrs. Irene Cox, San Anto-
nio, fourth vice president; Mrs.
'Frank Kramer, Lufkin, fifth vice
president; Mrs. George' B. Pear-
son, Tyler, sixth vice president;
Mrs. Robert Snider, Austin, re-
is “confusing me and all my
friends."
Joe Bailey Cole, 18, Cleburne CARTWRIGHT...BUD SHRAKE.
3 a.m.
6 a.m.
9 a.m.
The barbed words Tuesday con-
cerned the controversial case of
Wt W. Law, head of the Georgia
ft .% i
> 88H.
<. Ve odasa.
Mrs. Frankie
was the 23rd night,
r ।
L .
h.
fl
ported that September was the
third straight month in which
business activity increased at a
I,,
■sa
_ . them as part of a SEATO force
,3 encampment of the International rather than alone.
statement “vicious, insulting and
misleading.” He said “it raises
Force uniforms.
Both the United States and Brit-
ain moved tanks up to the border
in a show of force during the day.
Ten U.S. Patton tanks and an-
other armored personnel carrier
rolled up to stations at the Fried-
richstrasse crossing point, the
.Tuesday
3 p.m..... 82
6 p.m..... 76
9 p.m..... 73
ents present, Long had 98 percent, ;
Coleman 97.8 Santa Fe 97.3. Ful- '
Democrats could be
The launching was timed when
Midas IV whirled 2,100 miles
overhead to determine if infrared
sensing devices in the satellite
could pick up the exhaust trail
of the Titan and relay the infor-
mation to a ground station.
“The Midas spotted the Titan
about 90 seconds after it lifted
off,”' the official said. “Water va-
por and other elements in the at-
mosphere probably prevented it
from locking on the exhaust trail
sooner. On the basis of prelimi-
U.S.A.’s nuclear supremacy.
“Who can be frigntened by all
this? Perhaps former President
Eisenhower, who recently ex-
pressed the desire to have an at-
om bomb shelter built on his
The announced American re-
striction on movements to East
U. N. Diplomats
Assail Red Test
I UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)
—U.N. diplomats today assailed
the latest gigantic nuclear bomb
explosion by the Soviet Union as
senseless, but hope' for any urgent
U.N. appeal to Moscow appeared
to have vanished.
: slower rate than earlier this year, like the United States, the alliance
_________________ is “a friend” of South Viet Nam.
6,100-mile test
MRS. TEXAS — At ceremonies in Dallas, Tex., Mrs.
G. V. Mayfield, a 32-year-old mother of four children,
is crowned "Mrs. Texas of 1962," by the 1961 Mrs.
Texas, Mrs. Seale Cutbrith. Mrs. Mayfield will repre-
sent Texas at the Mrs. America contest to be held
in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in November. (NEA Telephoto)
special military adviser,
oped country."
Eisenhower said there was
sufficient ing back Communist guerrilla as-
are: Mrs. Donald A.
secret ballot over her only oppo- DRIVE CLOSES TOMORROW
nent, Mrs. Ralph Currie of Dallas.-------------------------------———
Waco lawyer, has been appointed High School senior, will be the the piquant writer, who went to
guest speaker at the regular mee- the HERALD several years ago
ting of the Rotary Club Thurs-from the PRESS, will join the
to call the Cleburne' Fire Depart-
mett, he was unable to make the Parn8
Hurricane Carla,
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be left in that kind of a world. .
‘I would just walk out,” he about six passengers in U.S. Air
President Dwight D. Eisenhower publican Women elected Mrs. J.
says the Kennedy administration C. Man Jr. of Wichita Falls as its
new president, succeeding Miss
Gridiron tip: Watch for the KIL-
LEEN KANGAROOS to pass and
pass well when they clash with
the CLEBURNE YELLOW JA-
CKETS here Friday night and
watch their speed in all depart-
ments...They’re coming in dead
set on gaining the first win over
the JACKETS in the short history
of the two team’s gridiron rival-
ry...EARL ROGERS, the friendly
welder, is recovering from a ser-
ious illness siege at Memorial Hos-
pital...Amiable and capable BILL
HUDGINS, administrator at the
hospital, chatting with a friend in
the foyer of the new hospital wing.
The largest electric sign ever
erected in JOHNSON COUNTY
will soon be put up by a CLE-
BURNE restaurant owner....DAN
JENKINS, sports editor of the
FORT WORTH PRESS, who has
many friends in CLEBURNE, will
soon join the sports staff of the
DALLAS TIMES-HERALD, join-
come—with the exception of Gov.
Price Daniel.
‘Vie can stay in the Democratic
Party,” Smith told the convention
of f the Texas Federation of Re-
publican Women.
Smith said Daniel and other
Democratic leaders stood idly by
and watched the Democratic Par-
ty abandon the principles Texas
voters always have believed in.
Smith also said hat the Demo-
crhtic national _mmitteeman. By-
ror Skelton qf Temple, tried to be-
J Ike Sys Kennedy
Administration
is ’Confusing'
to join the GOP.
€ad Smith, El Paso, chairman defecting
F0 the Texas Republican Execu- found a person who voted Demo-
tive Committee, added Tuesday cratic in the last three presiden-
Predicts Steady
Hike In Economy
WASHINGTON (AP)—Secretary
of Commerce Luther H. Hodges is
still predicting a steady advance
in the economy despite his depart-
ment’s reports of a slowdown in
If You Have One More Chance,
iversity at Denton Saturday for ing of the chamber of commerce
and city commissions of Eastland,
tion Agency.
Buses will leave from the north i .
ipersons at the meeting to study
side of the high school, transpor- the idea and give their answers
tld army spokesman called the rein-
forcements precautionary.
)
/
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B"A
0
because he thought this would Berlin apparently applied only to
civilian vehicles. The buses were
counterblow is warmongering that his Gettysburg, Pa. farm as an
example for the rest of the nation.
—subscribers on the line they need when Brooks made his try to call of Law.”
lexas United Fund, $1,200 and to make an emergency call, just the fire department.
The to get the person off the line so
tenth as strong as Monday’s su-
The former Republican presi- RrID-
dent appeared at a campaign den t;Mrs..H.K. Herbert, Dallas,
rally in support of State Atty.
turn them in at the last report for the Cabinet post he holds. ’
Drive Chairman Charley Mason meeting tomorrow.
Labels Might
Be Deceiving
What would you do if some-
body presented you with a
bottle of whisky in a public
office in front of witnesses?
Mrs. Wynnelle Blair, secre-
tary to the county judge, re-
ceived such a gift, or so it
appeared, from John Sivadon,
foreman of the crew which is
working on the courthouse,
this morning.
Mrs. Blair took one look at
the bottle and exclaimed, “I
do not want that!”
She said she wondered how
to turn the present down po-
litely, but then read the fine
print on the bottle and discov-
ered the contents to be pure
honey.
“postcard evidence” that Peace ably be concluded at the end of detected
prps members “did not even
, mow what an underdeveloped The current series started Sept. 1
country was, so you can see why and today’s explosion
Im confused.”
a proposed appeal .. - .
close to the Soviet nary examination, we consider it
— . . , Ranger and Cisco was held Mon-
e conference is sponsored by day night to explore the pcssibili-
The total collected is $31,393.72,
tripled their gifts of last year, but which is still 24 percent shy of
There is one mere chance to this still dees not make up for the goal.
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889 388 ss 333938885agg888
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............. 1. .. .
above figures^ were based on the they can make a personal call, house was i
' 82808888
the rate of business expansion.
Hodges told a news conference U. S. officials.
006; Salvation Army, $4,250; Tex- lin“tlephors Vhon hay Darty the fire, which apparently started munition for the determined pub-
The' confusion among New York secretary;
democrats is a spring zephyr, Frensley, Dallas, treasurer.
Eisenhower said, when compared
wih the tornado of confusion in
FOREIGN INSPECTOR — Juan Antonio
Macaya, president of the Fruehauf Trailer
Co. in Spain, second from left, is in this
country to inspect production facilities
and techniques of Fruehauf companies.
Macaya visited the Hobbs Trailer Com-
e 4
w
’ Citing the experience of other perbomb blast which was estimat-
nations with inflation, Eisenhower ed in the West at about 30 mega-
light tons—equivalent to 30 million tons
of TNT.
“I believe this nation is in a,
time of prosperity — if we can’t iversity observatory reported.
He said he “would not want a
house. He said Brooks, who is his person with Law’s record of con-
son-in-law and his wife, were pre- duct delivering mail to my fam-
------to move' into the house, ily’s home.
•.w
K
If the test for being a genuine
Democrat is to have voted for
Kennedy once and Stevenson
twice, Smith said, Gov. Daniel
does not qualify, noting that Dan-
iel supported Eisenhower against
Stevenson in 1952.
O. W. (Bill) Hays of Temple,
GOP candidate for lieutenant gov-
ernor, told the convention that he
is “horrified" that the U.S. gov-
ernment is training Yugoslavian
pilots.
Hayes said his own ancestry
was half Yugoslavian and said:
“There are no grades of Com-
munism. The Yugoslavian Com-
munists are just as socialistic,
atheistic and ruthless as the Rus-
sian and Chinese Communists."
He called for a thorough bi-
partisan investigation of the pilot
training program.
In its closing convention ses-
sion, the Texas Federation of Re-
gering.
“The U.S.S.R. has
ema "One day the nation is told the
€2 1 iBleral budget is balanced, and
We next that it will produce a
$6.7-billion deficit,” he said.
Bank President Named
CORSICANA (AP)—W. D. Wy-
att, 47, of Paris will become the
fourth president in the history of
ther 90-year-old First National
ARank of Corsicana next month.
689 has been executive vice presi-
""Kent of the Paris First National
Bank and will succeed B. L.
Sanders, who died July 29.
day. Cole will speak on “Ameri-! sports .staff of the DALLAS NEWS
canism.” this week.
All Demos But Daniel
FORT WORTH (AP)—A Texas little those who are switching to
Republican leader predicts that the GOP by branding them
an ever-increasing number of “phony Democrats.”
. n T
33333
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L- * -g--4, —
vAsas
branch of the NAACP. He was
dismissed from his postal job in ________ ,
Savannah on charges including said today America’s claim to beN.J., last week that he had been
extended absences from his mail able to strike a crushing nuclear urged to build a fallout shelter on P:SSc5
rohite.
Day added he did patric, who said last week that alarm people. Tt c a . ..
y- onndm"8 , -- He also said that he would leave U.S. Army vehicles carrying mil-
a fallout shelter if the rest of his itary personnel, although . there
saults.
Taylor, President
the former president said: “If belief that the 50-megaton blast
you want to send a man to the which Premier Khrushchev has
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1
there'd be so many more of
thqm."
Turning to the Peace Corps—a
Kennedy administration project—
Day took note of charges by broadcast beamed to North Amer- to J
the NAACP officials that Law’s ac- ica, “Gilpatric went so far as to
tivities as a NAACP leader had threaten the whole world with the said.
goal cf $41,500, one person will not Special, $3,775; General, $1,777,
infantry, three Cen-
people do not want war, they will Nam that left him very much
encouraged” about that pro-West-
Gilpatric Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor flew here only one open to allied pesonnel.
r - • ■ • The British moved a second
••
be •
testing grounds were reported to
have given up the idea of seeking
priority for their resolution aimed
directly at a 50-megaton ex-
pl osion.
A concentrated Soviet-bloc drive
—and lack of any general support
—caused the eight-nation group to
withdraw the request for priority.
TALL TARGET — Ed Schmidt shows the form he will
use if he is called on again to light the flare on the
"alky" unit at the DX Sunray refinery in Duncan, Okla.
When the electric igniter failed to work, Schmidt em-
ployed his bowman's skill to light the flare. It's a tall
target for a flaming arrow; the flare is 100 feet above
the ground. (NEA Telephoto)
a Titan missile as it
U.S. Army insisted today
on the right of civilian
entry into East Berlin but
then let the East German
authorities turn back two
U. S. Army sightseeing
buses heading for the
East sector.
East Berlin border guards
stepped aside when armed' U.S.
military police escorted an Amer-
ican civilian car into the Com-
munist sector. »
A few hours later the guards
refused entry to two U.S. Army
sightseeing buses which had no
armed escort.
The buses turned back to West
Berlin near a spot where Ameri-
can tanks and armored personnel
carriers were stationed with guns
pointed at the East German po-
lice.
The East German police held
up the buses carrying U.S. mili-
tary personnel and civilians for
more than an hour demanding
that the officer in charge identify
his passengers to authorities of
the Communist East German re-
gime. The American officer re-
fused.
In an earlier incident the East
Germans refused to allow two
- American civilians in an Army-
licensed private car to pass
through the checkpoint without
identification. But the U.S. com-
1 mand ignored the East Germans
and sent the car through with the
In one of his sharpest attacks
on the Democratic administra-
tich, Eisenhower said Tuesday-
night federal fiscal polisies are
"shrinking dollars."' He called
the Peace Corps a “juvenile ex-
neriment" ano suggested Peace'
996,3 members might be sent to
We moon.
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10-24
“Will you ask the bouncer to
throw me out before the
dessert course?”
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 294, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1961, newspaper, October 25, 1961; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552837/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.