The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, November 24, 1939 Page: 4 of 22
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4
Want-Ad Service—Call 2-5151
THE FORT WORTH PRESS-
Want-Ad Service—Call 2-5151
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1930
The Fort Worth Press Goodbye, Rails
A KCHIPPS HOWARD NEWSPAPER__TORT WORTHERS were pleased to
learn that the city and the traction
A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
DON E WEAVER.....
JAMES A. FOLTZ
Entered as second-class mail matter at the
Postoffice at Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 3. 1921,
under act of March 3. 1879.
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE ....... DIAL 2-5131
a owned and published ,
-daily except Sunday)
E by The Fort Worth ;
Press Company, Fifth j
and Jones Sts., Fort 1
— Worth, Texas.
...............Editor |
Business Manager company have finally come to an agree-
ment for removal of the miles of rails
comiutao
Member of Scripps-
Howard Newspaper
Alliance The United
Press Newspaper En
terprise .Assn., Sci-
ence Service, News
paper In for mation
Service and Audit
Bu re au of Circula-
tions.
which thread our streets, and over
many of which street cars haven’t run
for years.
A nuisance as well as a hazard, the
rails will be removed and no doubt
sold into the munitions trade to make
shrapnel — which will be even more
dangerous. . .
"Why, the street looks twice as
wide as it did before,” citizens remark-
ed after the tracks were removed from
Houston,and Main and the streets re-
paved. We hope that the same pleas-
ant impression will result from clearing
the old rails off the other streets.
It will be recalled that a previous
CLAPPER
A Fair Deal For Our Youth
It More Important Than
Pentions For Our Aged
They Won't Move That!
Friday. Nov 24. 1939.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
plan for rail removal through a fed-
By carrier per week, ’3c. or 55c per month.
Single copy at newsstands and from newsboys,
3c. By mail in Texas, $6 per year; $7 per year
elsewhere.
"Give Light and the People
. Will Find Their Own Way.’
A--:--
eral grant was stopped by court action
brought by Karl Crowley.
No doubt the new agreement is a
better one for the citizens of Fort
Worth. Other factors beside the court
action are involved, however — chiefly
the higher price of scrap-iron due to
the war. The salvage value of the
This Is the Season
Of Baloney Economy
FTTHIS is the time of year when the
news from Washington is full of
statements about how the Government
is going to economize and how there
will be no need for Congress to in-
crease taxes.
3 If you haven't already seen them,
you will soon read reports that Sena-
for Hoozit is demanding budget cuts;
that Rep. Whatzat proposes to organize
an economy bloc to slash all appropria-
aona by 10 or 15 or—remember?—
25 per cent; that various officials, en-
couraged by business improvement,
think present tax rates will bring in
‘enough money to reduce the federal
deficit materially.
old rails is nearly twice now what it
was then.
And so war has brought an indirect
benefit to Fort Worth. Another bene-
fit, more direct, will be the large num-
ber of jobs provided for local workers
in removing the rails and repaving the
places where they have been.
When the last rail is up and the
last bit of paving is finished, Fort
Worth will really have said goodbye to
the trolley car era.
Poll Tax and Electors
GIEVERAL of the legion of candidates
for flotorial representative, in the
special election next Tuesday, do not
1 hold poll tax receipts.
The constitution says state represen-
tatives must be “qualified electors."’
This brought up the questions, what
By RAYMOND CLAPPER
I HOPE those are genuine signatures,
A affixed after careful deliberation, which
appear on the report of the American
Youth Commission. If those signatures
are genuine in spirit as well as in ink,
■ then it is an event of
constructive import for
the future of- America:
This report—and the
American Youth Com-
mission is not a gov-
ernmental body - says
the Government must
provide employment for
young people who can-
not find jobs in private
industry.
Among the signers
are names you would
expect to find, of edu-
cators and such. But
those which arouse my
Mr. Clapper interest are the names
Of Owen D. Young, now retiring as chair-
man of the board of General Electric;
Robert E. Wood, chairman of Sears, Roe-
buck & Co., and Ralph Budd, president
of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy
Railroad.
It is a relief to turn from the at-
tempted raids on federal and state treas-
uries by organized groups of old-age
pensioners and find responsible business-
men frankly facing the problem of the
rising generation, which is- having a hard
time finding work.
This idle youth group, estimated at
3,500.000 to 4,000,000 between the ages
of 18 and 24 years, means everything to
the future of America. These are the
victims of our failure to provide work for
all in a land of groaning abundance:
They are the ones who can properly ques-
tion whether democracy is worth preserv-
ing.
• • •
THEY are the ones who will be living
1 in this country after the rest of us
NoTICE
ARISTAS
AS USUAL
SHOP AND
EARLY
is an elector, and are poll taxless can-
ETHIS is the time of year when Con- ' didates entitled to run?
EL greasmen confer with the Presi-—The Democratic-county chairman, M.
dent and come out of the White House
hinting that great savings are in store.
And we notice in a New York Times
account of one such conference the
following sentence:
“Senator King, in his talk’with re-
porters, coupled a strong recommenda-
tion for economy with a description of
have gone. And our system hasn't done
very much for them in the last 10 years.
Don’t forget that those were youths out
of work, disgusted with chaos and de-
pression, who marched on Rome behind
Mussolini and who became the thugs of
Hitler. American youths have shown |
greater tolerance for the shortcomings of I
| our system than have the old folks, who |
— haveorganized—and—gone—out—to-raid—the-
Ward Bailey, quotes the statutes to Government,
show that any citizen who is in his
right mind and not a felon, a pauper |
Heenleer/
LETTERS
Candidate For Flotorial Representative Criticizes
Attempt to Stop Election By Court Injunction
how he had urged on Mr. Roosevelt
the provision of ‘very liberal estimates
fa the budget’ for reclamation work to
be paid for by the Federal Treasury
in sections of the West, including his
home state of Utah.”
5 There you have the reason why
stories of economy demands by Con-
gressmen should be taken with a big
helping of salt. Sure, every Congress-
on the county, or a U. S. soldier or
sailor, is a qualified elector.
W. Lee O’Daniel held no poll tax
receipt when he was elected governor.
It would seem that poll tax paying
should be no more vital to the quali-
fications of a representative than to
those of the governor.
After all, a poll tax is merely a
Read what Owen Young and Ralph
Budd and Henry Harriman have to say
in the report which they sign:
man believes in economy—except in his
district and on his pet projects..
head tax. Connecting the right to vote
with this tax is a public policy that
has been discarded by most states as
archaic. ‘ .
Let’s Go Over the Top
"No good purpose can be served by
blaming the young person who has not
found a job for himself . . . .-- .-.-
of arithmetic cannot be wished away. . . .
In the entire country, a few thousand jobs
probably are vacant because no competent
applicant has appeared. Another few
thousand chances probably exist for un-
usual young people to make their own
jobs by starting new enterprises. But
there are several million more young men
and women who want to work than
Editor, The Press:
CHARLES T. ROWLAND and
his business associates with their
threat to block the election called
for Nov. 28, remind me of the
man who boarded an airplane for
. The facts the first time. After the plane
was well on the way, the man dis-
covered he had no parachute. He
there are jobs available for them.
"The totals do not balance. The bright
asked the pilot to go back after
the parachute. The pilot told the
man he would soon be at his des-
tination. and the fuel was short.
Now this fuel shortage put the
man at ease to go on.
Now that the cost of the bal-
effort to do this was made either ,
by the governor or by the Legis-
lature during the last session.
The House of Representatives
passed House Bill 308 by a large'
majority, which was a natural re-
source tax, but a Senate commit-
tee blocked it. This bill would
have provided $30 per month with
federal matching for every needy
old person in the state. I wish to j
give due credit to the members of |
plots have been incurred, and the
; ambition of the large number of |
or the lucky get the jobs, but some will candidates aroused, including
have to be left out until their elders, Doug and Jack, it appears to me
who control economic conditions of the that this small error is of no
MR. FARMER DEFENDS
SPECIAL SESSIONS
Editor, The Press:
IN YOUR ISSUE of Nov. 21,
you had an editorial and among
many other things you said:
"The precedent for special ses-
sions is not good. The last one we
had produced nothing but a dove
law.
What had you been reading ?
Evidently not the record. I was a
member of that session, Septem-
the House of Representatives who
supported that bill, which placed ber-October, 1937. Two dove laws
the tax on those best able to pay.
It would be nonsense to submit
a constitutional amendment in-
' volving a direct sales tax which
JOHNSON
Who Will Replace
Hitler? The Result
Might Not Be Good
By HUGH 8. JOHNSON
THERE may be some doubt
A about whether Hitler will
make a massed assault on the
Western Allies—straight through
the center or around the ends
through Switzerland or Belgium
and Holland. He probably won’t.
There is far less doubt about
what the Allies will do in the di-
rection of a bloody advance. They
can’t buck the
center. They
won’t try the
enda.
Either side
risking the
land offensive
is almost sure
to fail. The
slaughte r
would be be-
yond anything
the world has
seen or imag-
ined. The
chances of suc-
cess are far too
Mr. Johnson
thin to risk it. -
There is another possibility
much considered earlier hardly
mentioned today—a clash of air
armadas. To the extent that air-
craft have replaced cavalry for
screening, observation and dis-
tant raids, it might be assumed
that its strategical use would be
similar. In old wars the opening
action was frequently a great
cavalry combat. The object was
"to put out the enemy’s eyes."
Lees defeat at Gettysburg is
sometimes laid to the absence of
Stuart's cavalry at the beginning.
Air forces are so much more
powerful than cavalry that if
either side should lose control of
the air there would be a great
shift of advantage to the other.
On this theory many' military ob-
| servers expected a terrific clash
In the sky long before this.
• • •
A
DUT, skeptical as we are concerning
D what will result from all the talk
about economy, we find it easy enough
to believe that the coming Congress will
not revise federal taxes upward.
Not because tax revision is undesir-
able; it is urgently desirable to broad-
en the income-tax base, increase middle-
bracket rates, and get rid of some of
the hidden consumer taxes, thus mak-
ing more citizens tax-conscious and in-
sistent on economy.
Not because the Government doesn’t
need additional revenue; even if some
expenditures are reduced there will be
greatly increased spending on national
defense which should be financed by
taxes, especially on profits from war
business.
But because 1940 is just ahead and
because political courage isn't equal to
the task of increasing taxes, no mat-
ter how necessary the increase, in a
national election year.
Youth at City Hall
| THE Fort Worth Community Chest
1 X is within $46,000 of reaching its
| 1939 goal of .$292,103. The drive is
| not finished. Many citizens still have |
not made their pledges and many work- |
ers still have subscription cards to
canvass.
Let’s go over the top and give the
Community Chest the amount which a
conservative budget committee has set
as the minimum needed to finance the
27 Chest agencies.
The Chest has failed in recent years
to reach the figure set by the budget
committee. That meant that each
agency's share was reduced and that
the agency had to cut its service a
proportionate amount below the point
of efficiency.
There are two good reasons for put-
ting the Chest safely over the top this
year.
First, our welfare agencies will be
more adequately financed.
Second, it will be a good thing to
show ourselves that we can finish this
vital job without failing.
Silver Bricks
: (OVERNMENT agents are hunting
L is a new set of faces at City Hall U a gang of New Mexico swindlers
THERE has been no recall, but there
today. They are young faces, for they
belong to members of the Fort Worth
Chapter of De Molay, an organization
of young men.
a The youths sit in the chairs of
Mayor Harrell and the Council mem-
bers. They preside for a day over the
police and other departments of city
service.
E It is good experience for them, and
no doubt for the regular City Hall
Workers. Closer ties of interest
tween the public and its servants are
needed
■ The too-common notion of the
be-
av-
erage citizen that government is a
mysterious realm, somewhat sordid and
thoroughly foreign to himself, is what
is responsible for the low estate of
politics — the science of government
—today.
# The average citizen must wake up
to the fact that government is him-
self. If it is not himself it is not a
democracy. If he takes enough interest
in It to insist on its being sound and
efficient, he will have good government.
If he ignores or neglects it, he will
have bad government.
# That is why it is a good thing for
young citizens to go into the places
of government and take a hand, even
only for a day, in order that they
may feel a more intimate relationship
between themselves and their govern-
ment.
Atrocity
NOW that Nazi planes have bombed
, the Shetland Islands, we demand
the severest penalty of the law for
—the first humorist who—cracks—that
- “It’s a pony war.”
who sold silver bricks for more than
they are worth.
Silly swindlers! They should have
played safe and sent their bricks to
the United States Treasury which,
thanks to the efforts of Silver state
Senators, makes a business of buying
silver for more than it is worth. -
It is not safe to put a can of kero-
sene on any surface too hot for one’s
hand.
country, find some way to open the gates.
. . . The fact that the elder people own
the property and control practically all
the jobs lays upon them the major re-
sponsibility for making the opportunities
match the number of youth they have
brought into the world."
• • •
THERE it is laid cold on the line.
1 Until the elders who own the prop-
erty and who have the economic control
can make the system work more effec-
tively, something must be done in other
ways. The American Youth Commission
frankly says the Government will have
to do the job, by providing public em-
ployment. Public works, expansion of
CCC, enlargement of National Youth
Administration operations in providing
work through high schools, are the chief
means at hand. NYA has built about
600 mechanical workshops in connection
with high schools, where youths learn
manual skills and are paid a small sum
per month. It goes far toward preserv-
ing the morale and self-respect of boys
and girls from relief families, than which
nothing is more important to democracy.
Let youth grow up embittered and you
have something to think about.
It will cost money. But not so much
as might be expected, the Young report
says. The work proposed is neither full
time nor highly paid, and some assets will
accrue —, such as schoolroom equipment,
and other things made in the shops. Con-
tributions to youth also should somewhat
reduce relief needs of their families.
The committee offered this recommen-
dation with hesitation at a time when
economy is needed in government. But
it considers the need of a fair deal for
youthful victims of our own management
of affairs paramount. Economy that
breeds a resentful generation is penny-
wise, pound-foolish.
If we do not want to get trade by
trading and do not wish to lower bar-
riers to facilitate trading, let’s stop
talking about the glorious possibilities
of trade increases in the western hem-
isphere.—Assistant Secretary of State
Henry F. Grady.
Charm vs. Efficiency in the Business World
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
A CCENT on feminine youth in business
A proves that our knowledge of both is
slight. The boss who hires charm for
the office may get what he pays for,
but it doesn't make _
sense when he yells
about being cheated be-
cause his work is neg-
lected.
Older women are in-
variably more depend-
able, for two reasons.
They've been married or
have given up hope of
being married. What-
ever their past has been,
by the time they reach
40 they have learned to
put their work first and
to depend upon it for
their deepest happiness.
They love their jobs
with "all their hearts
and all their souls and Mrs. Ferguson
ail their strength"
which, according to the masculine code,
is a highly desirable state. At any rate,
they have found the secret of absorption
in work, the Nirvana of the 20th Century.
The old remark about God and Mam-
mon la still as true as It ever was. That's .
why no young girl can serve a corpora-
tion and Cupid at the same time and ex-
was so overwhelmingly defeated in
the election of W. Lee O’Daniel
as governor, and a great many of
the the members of the present Leg-
| islature who ardently opposed a
direct sales tax. We have a direct
worthy consideration of
courts.
If the men who back Mr. Row- ,
land were sincere and alert, this | mandate in the Constitution to
issue would have been raised be-
fore the ballots were printed.
Now folks, while all this squab-
bling over just as good as nothing
is going on, I am just wondering
how the poor old folks—those who
were once the cream of the crop
of our great state—just how they
feel over us of the younger set,
who can, in most cases, do for
ourselves.
Now for me. I am ready to do
my part to try and get the gov-
ernor and the law makers togeth-
er, and then we. will have done
something worth while. Passing a
bill to raise enough money for
social security should not be at all
| hard to do.
I am personally acquainted
with some of the men in both
houses, and I believe all the men
who now hold a place in either
house are Intelligent and really
want this issue disposed of.
Now since the people have never
had a chance to select a man they
want to represent them from such
a large number of candidates, I
think this brand of politics should
be tried, as the voters heretofore
have had only had a small selec-
lion to pick from. And if they
don't vote in this election, and
' some negro or Republican should
be elected, the people of both Tar-
rant and Denton counties really
would not have a complaint' to
make.
A. D. BECK.
1126 College, City.
raise taxes for this purpose. What
we need to do is Work it out ac-
cording to the known wishes of
the people.
The heads of most of the de-
pect to get a raise every six months.
Although she may punch the time-clock
at the proper hours, she is never a full-
time worker, since her mind is partly oc-
cupied with other matters. For a certain
number of minutes every day she will
ponder the possibility of a date with
Johnnie, or wonder whether she can in-
duce Jim to take her to the movies
Saturday night.
There's nothing astonishing or .alarm-
ing about this. Getting married has been
woman’s main business ever since civil-
ization began. I think it is still, and
always will be her most important mortal
assignment, and that consequently there’s
nothing disgraceful in her digression
from a fixed industrial routine to ac-
complish the purpose.
And for this reason it is useless to
berate the girls because they run to the
beauty parlors every whipstitch to get their
locks brushed upward, or moon at their
desks, or because so few of them seem
fired with the ambition to be private
secretary to the president.
Even being president wouldn’t appeal
to most of them, for the simple reason
that the word success has a different
meaning in the feminine vocabulary. In.
spite of our unwillingness to admit It,
the average girl’s idea of success is to
make a good marriage. And to this
end her energies will ever be bent.
WAY TO PAY PENSIONS
ALREADY PROVIDED
Edittor, The Press:
THE LAST Legislature spent a
lot of unnecessary time trying to
do something that had already
been done back in 1935. This
wrangle at Austin reminds me of
the old man who looked every-
where for his pipe and finally
found that he had it in his mouth.
Every Legislature that has con-
vened since 1935 has had a clear
mandate from the people to pro-
vide funds for old age assistance
and this has never been done. If
succeeding Legislatures had done
what a great majority of the peo-
ple asked them to do we probably
would not have such a spectacu-
lar political display of trying to
cram something into the Constitu-
tion that is' already there. If such
legislators had done their duty
the old folks would have been
drawing $30 per month instead of.
the meager $6. During the last
campaign the people were prom-
ised everything, even $30 without
any additional taxes. Such propa-
ganda is sure to rebound to the
sorrow of those who advocate
something for nothing. Experi-
ence in governmental affairs must
regain the ascendency if true
democracy is to survive. There is
nothing that blasts the hopes of
the people more than false prom-
ises made in political campaigns.
We all know that it takes money
to run the government. And it
must be paid just like we pay our
personal obligations. I do not
know of any way to pay pensions
without additional taxes, except to
put all funds of the different de
partments at Austin into the gen-T
eral fund, but strange to say no
partments at Austin are elective,
but after the election according
to the present set-up they become
dictators instead of servants of
the people. The Governor may do
a lot of cutting here and there,
but due to the enormous amount
of special funds created by past
Legislatures his efforts to eco-
nomize is negligible. There is
enough money in the special funds
and that paid for useless employ-
ment, counting the consolidations
that could be made, to pay all
needy pensioners the required
amount of $15.00 per month as
stipulated in Article 3 of our Con-
stitution. But not until bureau-
cracy is dislodged and the will
of the people is installed at Aus-
tin will this be done. Either of
the plans I have advanced in this
letter for raising funds required
by our present Constitution would
in my humble judgment meet the
approval of a great majority of
the people.
The foundation has already been
laid. Let us build a structure on
that foundation that will show to
the world that we are humane to
the aged, the blind, and the crip-
pled children within our great
State of Texas.
E. T. WYATT.
Stephenvile, Texas.
SIDE GLANCES
were passed, and in addition
scores of other laws, nearly 200
pages.
"Give light and the people will
find their own way," flies at your
masthead. Well, then, tell the peo-
ple the truth. ′
In a special session we passed
a pension law, in a special session
we passed the oil conservation
law; in a special session we
passed the anti-gambling laws; in
a special session we got the only
money for the old people. I could
mention many other good laws
passed in special sessions. This is
enough.
I suggest that you dignify your
candidate for the Legislature, re-
spect the constitution, and hold a
high standard for the people to
look at.
But this letter is too strong.
You won't publish it. Anyway,
you may know that one man
called your hand. It is no time to
make a farce when winter is here
and men, women and children are
starving, and shuddering, freez-
ing in the cold.
CLARENCE E FARMER
Candidate for Flotorial Rep-
resentative.
(Note: The old age pension
issue was made a farce long be-
fore this special election came
along.—Editor.)
Little Lines
By MARGIE R. BOSWELL
Pleasure’s most common ail-
ment is creeping paralysis.
When work steps in, wishes
take shape.
The imagination is a poor shock
absorber. •
Feathers are powerful, in pow-
erful pinions.
Do sparkling eyes always indi-
cate supersight?
THE fact that it hasn’t happen-
1 ed may' give some indication
of purpose — especially Hitler's
purpose. That sort of strategy
would have been the first step in
■ Ever inthauPto Ntxatshwe=
the probabilities are strong that
he would have started in the air
long ago.
This is the more likely in view
of the fact that the Allied air
force, with American additions, is
getting stronger faster than his
own.
If no great moving thrust is in
prospect, command of the air
won by a destructive collision
isn't half so important. Fixed
ground defenses against aerial at-
tack have clearly been effective
beyond expectation. A decisive
mass battle in the air seems less
and less likely.
The growing equality of air
strength and the surprising per-
i formance of ground defense and
detection have also lessened the
probability of destructive bombing
raids on great centers of popula-
tion and industry. There seems
to be a sort of mutual recognition
that the .military effects are
small, the psychological gain
nothing, and the destruction of
enemy assets certain to be offset
by destruction of home values.
• • •
NO what does this all add up ?
A To a gamble on the German
side of being able to strangle the
Allies by destruction of commerce.
To a hope on the Allied side of
revolution in Germany,
The German “strangulation"
strategy isn’t working very well.
The Allies have much to consider
before, they des roy Germany by
mutiny. The contagious disease
of Communism has advanced to
her very boundaries. Through
Hitler’s blundering trade with
Stalin it more closely threatens
both Baltic and Balkan states.
Neither the Allies nor the rest
of the world can consider the col-
lapse and communization of Ger-
many as any bargain. She was
aforetime a great activator and
balance wheel for the commerce
of the whole world. Communism
is a paralyzer of trade and com-
merce and a constant threat to
democratic institutions.
Britain and France say — not
very frankly — that their aim is
to destroy Hitlerism. As matters
have worked out and Hitler has
blundered, he will probably de-
stroy himself. It is not too early
to begin to wonder what will re-
place him. It could be worse
than Hitler himself.
That is a principal reason why
war aims should be plainly stated.
Germans should be shown that if
they kick Hitler out the result
would not be preferable to a
peace at once.
COPR. 1939 BY NEA SERVICE, INC, T. M. REC U. A. PAT. OFF
0-29
"Please, Father, don't act so gay—people will think you're
my boy friend or sugar daddy!" .
This Is Life
By JACK MAXWELL
NOTHING to ’rave' over: A few
days ago, while giving the Philos-
ophy of Life, by Baten, the once-
over, I came across a bit I’d writ-
ten years ago, The Straight and
Narrow Trail. And, what I’m
driving at is this:
Recently, while limbering up my
age-worn 'Jinis' I took a short-cut
across a bit of lawn, following a
path others had made. There was
a sign saying: 'Use the sidewalk.
Don’t walk on the grass.’ But I
high-tailed it right across, follow-
ing the path of ‘Least Resistance,’
as I thought I was saving several
steps. This morning I tried it
again and, 'Got Called,' as per the
next spasm:
Just about the time I was "Do-
ing Good,' a guy squawked at me
to keep off the grass’. . , and I
did just that. Later, I took a
chance and stepped the distance
between the short-cut and the
'Straight and Narrow Trail.’ Tho
I VIOLATED a LAW and, some
bird’ told me where to Head In,
and I had to LIKE IT ... I saved
only 8 steps by my Jay Walking.
If this thing carries a MORAL,
try ar 5 find it. However, from
here oq OUT, I’m going to En-
deavor to stick to that dern slice
O CONCRETE and, avoid having—
that Punkin Roller call MY
HAND.
/
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Weaver, Don E. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, November 24, 1939, newspaper, November 24, 1939; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1685359/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.