The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 224, Ed. 2 Tuesday, January 30, 1951 Page: 2 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Abilene Reporter and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Abilene Public Library.
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FIGHT POLIO
WITH DOLLARS!
2
VOL. LXX, NO. 224
Associated Prut (AP)
"WITHOUT OR WITH OFFENSE TO FRIENDS OR FOES WE SKETCH YOUR WORLD EXACTLY AS IT GOES”—Byron
105
EVENING
ABILENE, TEXAS, TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 20, 1951—FOURTEEN PAGES
PRICE DAILY 5c, SUNDAY 10c
eason’s Worst E
zarc
Holds; End
COLD GRIPS TEXAS
Jot
in
_ „ Mercury Hits |
Freeze Hurts 53 Below Zero
ght
Valley Citrus
By the Associated Press
Bitter cold dealt a heavy blow
today to the Lower Rio Grande
Valley citrus industry_while retain-
ing its grip on the rest of Texas.
Temperatures dipped below
freezing in the valley early this
morning and held on stubbornly.
More sub-freezing readings were
predicted for the area tonight.
Freezing drizzle was reported
this morning in the valley, along
the coast, and as far north as Luf-
kin. Light show was falling at
many East and Central Texas
points, including Texarkana, Aus-
tin and Waco.
The extent of damage to citrus
and vegetable fields in the Valley
probably will not be known for at
least a day. But the Brownsville
Herald said "There's no doubt
we’ve been hurt.”
The forecast was for more winter
weather throughout the state
through tomorrow. Temperatures
which were below freezing through-
out the state this morning, will con-
tinue low. Freezing rain is pre-
dicted for the south part of East
Texas and mixed with snow in the
north Occasional light freezing
rain or snow is predicted for West
Texas through tomorrow.
In only a few places was the
precipitation enough to help break
the extended drouth. One of these
was Tyler in East Texas, where ice
toppled telephone and power poles
knocked over trees and gathered
one inch thick on exposed sur-
faces
"This is fine, fine,” said Tyler
County Agricultural Agent Ben
Bornwing. He said precipitation for
the 48 hours ending at 4 30 a m.
this morning totaled more than two
inches. "Our area needs the mois-
ture and this is about the best thing
that could happen."
In Wisconsin
By the Associated Press
Waning January dealt out numb-
ing cold today that produced sto-
ries usually heard only in "Bars'
club " contests.
And there wasn't much relief in
sight.
The U. S. Weather Bureau in
Milwaukee said Lone Rock, Wis.,
in the south central part of the
state had a temperature estimated
at 53 degrees below zero. The of-
ficial thermometer there goes only
to 45 below
Mercury Dips to 11;
Gas Use Curtailed
Abilene and vicinity experienced
its most severe, extended cold
weather of the season yesterday
and today The mercury Jell to a
11-degree low here this morning
But it was no different than the
remainder of the nation, accord-
ing to the U. S. Weather Bureau
at the Municipal Airport
The entire United States was
held Tuesday in the grip of old
man winter..
What adds to the gloominess of
the weather outlook locally is the
fact that there is little promise of
the cold breaking up within the
week, and still less prospect of
badly needed moisture.
The Abilene Weather Bureau
forecast that there would be a
in the maximum tem-
At Cadillac, on the southern
peninsula of Michigan, a reading ......
of 40 below was taken Weather gradual rise____
Observer John Budewitz said it peratures recorded for the next
sand - Fine knieei Sha noW work probably was colder than that but three or four days, but it would
more than any damage they might
cause.”’
the thermometer has no
readings
lower
THE WEATHER
U. a. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
WEATHER BUREAU
ABILENE AND VICINITY - Mostly
cloudy, continued very cold this after-
noon, tonight and Wednesday Probably
an occasional freezing drizzle this aft-
ernoon and tonight Highest temperature
this afternoon about 20 lew tonight 12-
15. high Wednesday 25-30. High Monday
was 18 low this morning 11. •
, WESTTEXAS—Cloudy with occasional
light freezing rain or snow this after-
noon tonight, and Wednesday. Continued
fold. Lowest temperatures 5-15 Panhan-
die and South Plains and 10-25 elsewhere
tonight.
EAST TEXAS Cloudy with occasional
freezing rain in south and some light
freemig. rain or snow in north portion
this afternoon, tonight and Wednesday,
Continued cold Lowest temperature 10-
20 in north and interior or central por-
tion and 20-30 in extreme south portion
■nd along the coast tonight
nortn tmpitature the last 24
Minimum temperature the last 24 hours
to 6:30 a.m.: 11.
The Weather Bureau gave these
precipitation figures for the 24
hours ending at 6:30 a. m. today:
Austin .11 of an inch. Corpus Chris-
ti .04, Fort Worth .48, Palestine
.08, Laredo .01, Texarkana .40. San
Angelo 01, Lufkin 03. Bryan
trace. Junction trace, Cotulla .02,
Tyler .13, Dallas .37. Falfurrias 20,
McAllen .19, Beaumont 1.80, Gal-
veston 1.17, Houston 1.2 and San
Antonio .04.
At mid-morning points reporting
freezing rain or drizzle included
Beaumont Lufkin, Bryan, Browns-
ville. Corpus Christi, Houston,
Cotulla, Laredo. Longview, Mission
and Harlingen.
It was warmer near the Arctic
Circle in Canada than in many
parts of the mid-continent gripped
by a bitter cold wave
likely be only a lew degrees each
day.
And it was cold and ley and wet
over widespread areas of the east
Colder weather was on the way.
said U. S. forecasters, for much of
the east and parts of the south.
Temperatures were below freez-
ing all the way to the Rio Grande
Valley
There was a mounting death toll
attributed to the cold and icy
weather Hundreds suffered inju-
ries in falls on icy streets.
Schools closed in many areas—in
the east and Texas by ice storms,
in the Midwest and west by cold
weather. Travel on highways was
slowed. Many air flights were can-
celled. Communications were dis-
Light snow was falling at Waco.
Austin, Tyler, and Texarkana.
In West' Texas most points had
high clouds and no precipitation.
This morning's low Texas tem-
perature was 4 at Amarillo and
Dalhart Yesterday's high was 65
at El Paso, which didn't get caught
by the norther until last night. This a —
morning El Paso had 21.--------teK sting
Minimum temperatures pre-
dicted for the Valley tonight in-
clude: Brownsville 28, Mission 24.
Laredo 26. Rio Grande City 23 and
Eagle Pass 22 Most of these read-
rupted in some areas because of
lee-coated power lines.
The cold air missed only two
parts of the country—the extreme
Southeast and the Far West—fore-
casters said. The rest of the na-
of the cold Canadian air
The below-zero line extended as
far south as the southern portions
of Illinois, Indi ina, Missouri and
Kansas.
mgs are even lower than last night
and today including Brownsville
26, McAllen 27, Rio Grande City
27, Raymondville 26, Harlingen 25
and Mission 27.
Wisconsin and Minnesota re-
ported the lowest marks in the
early morning—St. Cloud. Minn,
had 37 It was -23 at Mason City,
la. F19 at Milwaukee -14 at Chi-
cago, -7 at Lansing, Mich.
WEDNESDAY HIS LAST DAY
Hale Leaves Postmastership
To Start New ‘Career’ at 77
---------By BETTY GREENE----
O. A. (Uncle Sam) Hale. 77. wiB
occupy the chair in the Abilene
postmaster's office for the last time
Wednesday.
Clyde Grant, who has been ap-
pointed temporary postmaster,
will take over duties of the office
at 6 p. m. tomorrow.
The mellow, bow-tied gentleman
who ends his 15th year of postal
service here will walk out of his
office, not to retirement, but to a
new job in the food brokerage firm
of his son-in-law, Robert J. Wester-
burg.
“This time.” he chuckles. I’ll
be an office boy’
Thus, one more shade will be
added to the “career of many col-
ors" of the white-haired, jovial
Hale. He began as a farm boy in
Freestone County, where he was
born June 26. 1*73. After the fam-
ily's move to Thornton in Lime-
stone County, young Hale sampled
journalism as a printer's devil on
the Thornton Herald, "a weekly
which put out about 500 copies on a
George Washington stop cylinder
press .hand operated of course.”
The somewhat indifferent for-
tunes of a journeyman printer
turned Hale toward railroad serv-
ice. He began duty with the Santa
A- Fe Railroad at Meridian in 1894
•a a "porter, chambermaid and
wet nurse" to an agent for $28 a
mouth. In 1900, he went to Tucson,
Ariz., where he remained with the
railroad as brakeman and conduc-
tor for seven years.
In 1908, he came back to Texas
and took a fling at the drug busi-
mess in McKinney His young wife,
however, whom he married at Abi-
Jene in 1909, objected to the travel-
ing duties which took him away
from home moat of the time. For
a short time he was cashier of
the Sinton State Bank and then
moved to Corpus and allied him-
self with a wholesale fruit and
vegetable firm in 1914 the fam-
fly came to Abilene where Hale
continued in the wholesale food
business.
roading. I found thal the motto of
most of the railroad employes was
the public be damned ' So I went
into the work here with the idea
that the patrons of the office were
the stockholders of same and
should receive due consideration."
This rather rare attitude has
made "Uncle Sam" Hale one of the
most popular denizens of the Pine
Street building. Poxtoffice visitors
could always count on a cheery
greeting or a helping hand from the
man in the postmaster's office.
Civic projects, too, had his at-
tention and support During his two
terms with the city commission in
the 1920's, the present city hall and
Abilene High School’s present build-
ing were constructed in that dec-
ade he was also president of the
Abilene Chamber of Commerce
twice A charter member of the
Abilene Lions Club, he was club
president and for 25 years served
as buyer for the Christmas provis-
ions distributed by the Goodfellows
Three years later. Hale started
an 18-year stint as manager of the
Kennedy Brokerage Co. So hell not
be a stranger to the food broker-
age business of Westerburg and Co
Hale had definite ideas about how
a postmaster should art when he
was appointed to that post in 1936.
“During the years I spent rail-1 by W. E. Littl)
There was no report of any un-
due suffering from the extreme
cold in the area; but low tempera-
tures were affecting the normal
activities, both, in industry, busi-
ness, and every-day affairs of the
citizenship.
Brown Thompson, an official of
Lone Star Gaa Company's division
office in Abilene, which supervises
the firm’s activities to numerous
West Texas areas, announced thia
morning that his company had
curtailed the use of a number of
large commercial consumers.
The supply of gas was shut off
to West Texas Utilities Company
power plant in Abilene, the Abi-
lene Brick Company, the Onyx Re-
finery of Abilene Gulf Refinery
at Sweetwater, Texas Electric
Service Company’s power plant
at Colorado City and Col-Tex Re-
finery at Colorado City.
"By cutting off the consumption
of gas to these major users we
believe we will be able to take
care of our home consumption
without further curtailment of In-
dustrial users.” Thompson said.
The radio dispatcher of the Abi-
lene District of the State Depart-
ment of Public Safety said all high-
ways within the area were "dry.
open, and safe" and that there had
been no reports of a single traffic
accident within the district. How-
ever, the department warned that
motorists traveling to Fort Worth
and Dallas should wait, unless
their trips were urgent, since aB
highways were glazed with ice and
extremely hazardous.
Schools in the area were af-
fected by the cold In Abilene,
Monday's extreme cold reduced at-
MISTER, IS THIS NECESSARY?—Walter James, 742 North Sixth St., is wrapped up
something like an Arab, but it still didn’t make his work comfortable. He rubs his hands
and meditates that tire that was inconsiderate enough to go flat in a 11-degree blizzard.
(Clint Kapus photo.)
Diehard Reds Slow
Allied Advances
Downtown
Childress
Fire Hailed
CHILDRESS. Jan 30. - Ice-
coated firemen brought a stub-
born pre-dawn fire under control
here today after it had razed six
buildings at an estimated loss of a
million dollars.
Temperatures as low as 5 de-
grees above zero hampered fire-
men from eight Texas Panhandle
cities in fighting the downtown
blaze. They and their equipment
were covered with heavy ice be-
fore the fire was controlled at
about 7 a m
Two firemen were slightly in-
jured when the glass window of a
drug store blew out No other in-
juries were reported
The damage estimate was made
by the Childress Index. Childress
is in the southeast part of the
Panhandle.
Firemen from Quanah, Welling-
ton. Memphis, Crowell, Paducah,
Vernon and Chillicothe helped lo-
cal firemen.
tendance by approximately 20 per
cent Tuesday’s attendance im-
| proved, but was still about 12 per
j cent below normal in Abilene
High, according to Assistant Prin-
cipal J. H. Nail.
Reports from Sweetwater indi-
1 rated that attendance was below
normal
However, Nail reported that all
I buses bringing rural students to
| Abilene High were operating Tues-
day, as they were Monday.
County Superintendent Torn Mc-
Gehee said there were only two
schools in the county which he
knew for sure were closed. They
were 'Elmdale and Tye. However,
reliable reports were that the But-
terfield Elementary School was
closed.
In Fisher County, all schools
were closed all or part of Monday.
Some of the school officials had
planned Monday to keep fires go-
ing all night Monday, with the
hope that classrooms would be
warm enough Tuesday to resume
regular schedules.
At Colorado City, Tuesday morn-
ing's minimum was nine degrees,
■ two higher than the low of Monday.
i All schools in Colorado City were
operating on regular schedules.
A check of the service depart-
I ments of a number of Abilene mo-
tor concerns revealed that little
Fire Chief John Ballew said the
fire appeared to have broken out
in the Prather-Williams Drug Store
about 4 a.m.
Shortly after firemen arrived, a
big explosion blew the front win-
dow from that store. Bert MeDear-
man and Bill Sims, local tiremen.
were burned and cut but released
from a hospital after emergency
treatment.
BURNED BUILDINGS
The buildings burned were the
Though he has been forced by ill
health to slow down somewhat dur-
ing past years. Hale says he’s got
lots of years yet. He reminds that
his mother Mrs. William Dixon
Hale, of Meridian, is now in her
99th year.
Mr. and Mrs. Hale, who live at
1725 North Second St,, are parents
of two daughters, Mrs. Emmagene_________... .. Juuuesa. au€
Westerburg of Abilene and Mrs. other two buildings were around a
Olive Ann Tipton of Austin They
have five grandchildren, three boy’s
and two girls.
First State Bank of Childress, a
Western Auto -Store, the drug
store, the Gem Theatre, the Hood
News Stand and Fashion Shoppe.
All but the news stand and fash-
ion shop were on Commerce Street
(the main street of Childress). The
corner on the same city block.
The Cline Appliance store also
was damaged.
NSW, HES BIG AS DADDY—The youngster wearing the big grin and the big, white hat
is Stevie Henton. 4. of Winters who is being made an “honorary policeman" by his dad
lessen as the other Henton sons, Larry, 8, center, and Kenneth, S witness the "ceremony 4
Stevie had just returned to his W inters horn e from the polio ward in Hendrick Memorial
Hospital Abilene, where he had been receiving treatment for the dreaded disease. (Photo
damage had been suffered by car
owners.
By a coincidence, a car owner
who had sustained the worst dam-
age to his vehicle to date - was a
deaf and dumb man from Mich-
igan who stopped for an overnight'
stay in one of Abilene's hotels.
He left his car parked on the
curb near the hotel and Monday
morning, the motor refused to func-
tion. An examination at a service
department of an Abilene motor
firm disclosed an 18-inch crack in
the motor block.
One other burst block, due to ex-
treme cold, was reported Tuesday
Several motorists Monday were
having radiator trouble, but noth-
ing serious They had made pro.
visions for cold weather, "but not
as cold as 10 degrees," said one
service station operator. The 10-de-
gree weather iced up the water
enough to prevent circulation.
Ovalo Resident
Found Dead at Home
OVALO, Jan. 30.—Mrs s. p
Ross, long time resident of Ovalo.
was found dead in her bed at her
home this morning: Death was be-
lieved due to a heart attack
Mrs. Ross' step-son. Jack Ross,
found the body
Funeral will be held Wednesday.
Arrangements are incomplete and
will be announced by Fry Funeral
Home of Tuscola.
TOKYO, Jan. 30. W— Doughboys
spearheading the Allies' limited of-
fensive were slowed to a crawl by
diehard Red resistance today. An
officer said they apparently hit the
main enemy force arrayed along
the frozen Western Korean war-
front
On the east coast, UN naval
power hurled hot steel- and bombs
into a North Korean town from
carrier-based planes and big guns
of warships.
Hundredsof enemy supply ve-
hicles were seen it North Korea
noving southward toward the west-
ern battle line.
termined to stay," Lt. Col. Ber-,
nard Peeters of Park Falls, Wis .
executive officer of a spearhead
regiment, told Becker.
Advance Allied units, he added,
were suffering their heaviest cas-
ualties of the offensive, but these
were far below the "terrific losses
being inflicted on the enemy.”
For the second straight day Chi-
nese artillery pounded away at
UN positions nine miles northwest
of Suwon. About 100 rounds were
fired Tuesday. Seven miles north-
west of Suwon American units
were fired on by Reds in well-
hidden caves, and made only a
small advance.
Forward UN units in the western
sector advanced laboriously only a
few hundred yards on the sixth
day of their northward limited of- _________________________
tensive. and dig them out one by one,”’
A regimental officer told Asso- Maj Gen Edward M. Almond,
elated Press Correspondent Jim
Becker:
"Air and artillery ia pouring in
there," said Peeters, "but the
doughboys still have to go in there
One 45-man Allied patrol, en-
tirely surrounded by a Chinese
Communist battalion Monday 18
miles northwest of Wonju, was
rescued Tuesday by another UN
patrol after 15 hours of arduous
fighting.
The battleship Missouri and a
heavy naval attack force teamed
with carrier-based planes to
plaster the Korean east coast town
of Kansong, 25 miles north nf
Parallel 38.
The Navy’s east coast bombard-
ment was called the heaviest of
recent months. A spokesman said
rail and highway bridges were the
principal targets.
"I think we've hit their main
defense line.’’
On the flank, however, gains up
to six miles were recorded.
An enemy division may be man-
ning the-Red defense line on the
western half of the 40-mile front.
"They're well dug in and de-I Corps.
U. S Tenth Corps commander on VW OUG 1 te ■ * L $
the central front, told a news con- ■ 1
ference the North Korean Fifth
Corps is poised for an attack onTA
Allied forces. MARA OIIAETE
He added: “We are ready forICIRV JvUUllI
it.” 1 =
He said his troops had wiped
out the Korean Reds' Second
By Stabilizers
UN Aggressor
q
On Reds Expected
LAKE SUCCESS. Jan. 30 ( —
The United Nations Is expected to
name Communist China as an ag-
gressor In Korea today, 12 weeks
after Gen. MacArthur first report-
ed Chinese Red forces had enter-
ed the fight.
Russia and Poland served notice
they would speak in the 60 - na-
tion political committee against
such condemnation, and India
warned that passage of the U. S.
resolution would end all hope of a
peaceful settlement in the Far
East. -
The protracted debate, which
roused American emotions to the
boiling point, brought about a great
see - saw of opinion but ended yes-
terday with 43 countries, including
Britain, lined up behind the United
States This is many more than
needed for passage of the resolu-
tion.
The United States put all the
pressure at its command, including
a statement by President Truman
and resolutions by the House and
Senate, into the drive to label the
Communist Peiping regime an ag-
gressor.
RED OPPOSITION
Chief opposition came from the
Soviet bloc, which maintains that !
the U. S. is the aggressor against |
Korea and China, and from India,
which fears a sharp word to the
Chinese Reds may set off World
war III.
India sparked a drive to push
through a resolution calling for
another peace appeal to Peiping.
The Chinese Communists have al-
ready rejected three previous such
offers.
Sir Senegal N. Rau, chief Indian
delegate, said yesterday refusal to
pass his resolution, co - sponsored
by 11 Arab - Asian nations, would
close the door to a peaceful solu-
tion.
Other diplomats asked how it was
possible to close a door on someone
who never had admitted it was
open.
The Arab - Asian resolution, on
which a vote also was scheduled,
would set up a seven-power confer-
ence to solve Far Eastern prob-
lems. Members would be the Unit-
ed States, Russia. Communist
China. Britain, France, India and
Egypt.
At Canada's suggestion it was
modified to provide that the group
should arrange a cease - fire in Ko-
rea before proceeding to any other
business.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 30 —A
plan to control prices by limiting
profits was under government
study today while wage stabilizers
pressed for their first major policy
statement designed to free large
blocs of wage earners from the
pay freeze of last week
A new "margin of profit” system
of price controls was advanced as
one way to replace the dead-halt
i ordered last Frida? on price mark-
tips: Price Administrator Michael
V. Di-Salle said the plan, under
which sellers would have to peg
prices at cost plus a fixed margin
of profit might be ordered by the
end of the week.
The plan Di-Salle said he is con-
sidering would limit profit mar-
gins all along the line from manu-
facturer to retailer The Friday
price order fixed price ceilings at
the highest level between Dec 19
and Jan. 25. Wages were sealed at
Jan. 25 levels.
ASKS PATIENCE
In the middle of the struggle for
an orderly retreat from the tem-
porary wage-price freeze. Wage
Stabilization Board Chairman Cy-
rus S. Ching called on the public to
“have patience." — --
"So much more progress can be
made," he said, if the nine wage
experts could be left alone
Defense Department's Stand
On Upping Draft Limits Awaited
LOS ANGELES POLICE TOLD
Il-Year-Old Girl Sold
For $5, Tank of Gasoline
WASHINGTON Jan 30. U—The I in the 19-26 age group and a low-
House Armed Services Committee ering of physical and mental stand-
called for testimony today from the ards for induction before any 18
Defense Department on suggestions year old may be drafted
to raise the draft age two years
and draft married men under 26
LOS ANGELES. Jan 30. —An
11 -year-old girl says her parents
sold her for five dollars and a
tankful of gasoline
Shirley O’Brien, roundeyed pig-
tailed, quoted this figure to Police-
woman Elizabeth Eggleston last
night She said her parents. Mr
and Mrs. William O’Brien, first
tried to “sell” her for $10 to a
tilling station operator, then took
the $5 and the gas and skipped
The serviceman, Cecil Glover,
said he wanted no part of the ar
rangement but finally gave the
O’Briens the handout • “because 1
felt concerned about Shirley’s wel.
fare.”
I Glover, who has an eight-year-
old daughter, said he turned the
matter over to police as soon as he
became convinced the O’Briens
would not return. He said he had
received a postcard saying their
jalopy had broken down in Bakers-
field and that the family waa hitch-
hiking to Saa Francisco.
The O’Briens had four other
children, ranging from one to eight
years old, he said, and there waa
another no the way.
1 Juvenile authorities, who dis-
closed the story, have taken
charge of Shirley.
who have no children
These were two possible alterna-
tives advanced by legislators in the
House and Senate who are reluct-
ant to approve the Defense Depart-
ment’s request that the draft age
be dropped from 19 to IB The Pen-
tagon asks that this be part of a
Universal Military Service and
Training (UMST) bill to replace
the present draft law.
The Senate Preparedness Sub-
committee hoped to wind up tonight
its public hearings on UMST, start-
ed Jan 10. It scheduled 14 wit-
nesses for the final session.
CLOSED DOORS
Senator Lyndon B. Johnson (D-
Tex), the subcommittee chairman,
said the group will start closed door
sessions tomorrow at which it will
proposed amendments.
Among these are two proposed by
Johnson himself, to require the
drafting of non . veteran husbands
The House committee called As-
sistant Secretary of Defense Anna
Rosenberg to present the pros
and cons on men of 28 and 27
years as a source of manpower
for the armed forces. In earlier
recommendations to Congress the
Defense Department has frowned
on taking older men H it can get
18-year-olds.
With Mrs. Rosenbe rg the com-
mittee called Gen. Lewis B Her-
shey, Selective Service direc for to
recommend what to do about child-
less married men under 26.
CIO LEADER
Late yesterday James B Carey,
secretary - treasurer of the Con-
gress of Industrial Organizations
(CIO), told the Senate subcommit-
tee the CIO thinks drafting 18-year.
olds would be "least disruptive to
our way of life ” He was compar-
ing the proposal to draft boys of
11 with the counter - proposals
to call up older mm - veteran hu .
bands and fathers and, possibly
veterans,>
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 224, Ed. 2 Tuesday, January 30, 1951, newspaper, January 30, 1951; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1648487/m1/2/?q=green+energy: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.