The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
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NEWS
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WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
YORK.-A« • token of good
wiH, President Kemal Ataturk
etf Turkey sends his bomb-tossing
adopted. daughter on a flight over
Greece and the
Pcminmm Balkans. She holds
Bomb Tower a diamond medal |
WaaGoodAim^^^Vo^8;
scored veteran male fliers in a re-
cent work-out
"" .When the timid and demure Turk-
ish women started coming out from
the harem, they-kept right on going.
They seem to be out-distancing our
girls who are merely coming out of
tiie kitchen.
Turkey's "Flying Amazon" is Sa-
biha Gueckchen, twenty-four-yea r-
Old daughter of. a Turkish army cap-
tain who was killed fighting Greeks
in 1921. She is a pretty little thing.
An admiring woman corre-
spondent described her as "shy
and demure." with- quick re-
course to her "modish little van-
— tty case," as she climbed from
her plane after a hard day's
bombing. That was in the Der-
sim area, in eastern Anatolia, In
which she had been blasting the
—Kurds out ofthelr caves.
She Is a first lieutenant in the
Turkish army, th? nnfy woman air
ffwi Iterfeir of Cmrremt
CHANCE FOR RECOVERY
President's Call for Help Indicates Compromise . . .
He Demands Election of Liberals to Congress -
• ••
SEEN an
around the
NATIONAL CAPITAL
By Carter Field
FAMOUS WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT
WASHINGTON.^-Rep.- David J.
Lewis, New Deal candidate in the
Maryland primary against Sen. Mil-
lard E. Tydings, is sure of jusTone TRSFTand thsrTrTfight be too late,
thing—he- does not want Harry L.
Hopkins, or Harold k. Ickes, or any
other New Dealer to endorse him.
Actually he is running on a 100 per
cent pro-Roosevelt platform: He is
running against a man, Tydings,
who has voted against the NeW Deal
as consistently as any other of the
so-called "purge" group. Not only
did Tydings vote against the Presi-
dent on the Supreme court packing
bill, but he has stood with Carter
Glass, Harry F. Byrd, Josiah W.
Bailey and Alva B. Adams on the
Speediest ship In oor navy, the destroyer McCail, was commissioned
at the Mare Island navy yard In California. The McCali, first privately
built navy vessel since 192b, has a specified speed of 38H knots, but in
recent tests was reported to have averaged 42 knots. It carries four 5-inch
guns and four quadruple torpedo tubes hnd Is especially -fitted forquick
ttttankn an nmpltml uhlpw. —
about the balanced budget, about
politics in relief, about federal in-
trusion on state powers, in fact
about everything that any opponent
of the President has worried about.
On the contrary Lewis has voted
and spoken, when he had the op-
portunity, for everything the New
Deal has stood for. Lewis has al-
wavs been a little in front of the lib-
' /^'uJcoJul
force officer in the world.
Her French flying Instructor says
she is the most gifted woman acro-
... „ , batic pilot in the,
Sabtna Best worl(1. she . was
Stmt Flyer, trained In flying
Say Mentor ®nd , «lidi"« *n
Russia and later
was a cadet in the Turkish army
air force school. She rides a single-
seated military plane, handles all
types of planes and is especially
accurate and skillful in bombing.
It is said no aviator in Turkey
can match her in diving and stunt-
ing, but she shrinks modestly from
all such, possibly unfeminine, exhi-
bitionism, and sticks to her, hum
' drum bombing tasks.
e • e
, XJERE is another diverting little
* news note, in sharp contrast,
however, on the emergence of the
modern woman. her home in"
New ]fork, Mrs. Lewis Stuyvesant
Chanler presents prizes of $750 to
the winners-of the'*'annual "Intel-
lectual Olympics," conducted by her
hew history society.
Happily the flying bomb put is
not included in her decathlon. She
« /. r . has been for many
BfUe Civet yearf a diligent
Up Society and earnest advo-
For Religion cate of P«ace and
brotherhood, work-
ing through the international Ba-
j haist movement, of which she has
long been a leader. She derives
from the Blue hook and has turned
SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK
C We tern Newspaper Union.
Signs of Compromise
^pHERE are distinct indications of
* compromise and co-operation in
the American picture, and hopes for
somewhat
lb;'
from society to religious and- hu-
manitarian concerns.
Her husband, now-retired, Is
a great-grandson of John .Jacob
Astor, end's former Ueutenant
governor of New York. He is a
big, gray, silent man, walking a
small white poodle dog, rarely
seen at his wife's salon, but a
loyal partner In her endeavors.
He is the brother of the late Bob
and John Chanler.
The~flaming-haired Valeska Suratt
was an instrument of fate in the life
of Mrs. Chanler. ' They were Jointly
engaged in a Hollywood script enter-
prise when Miss Suratt introduced
her to, Mirza Ahmed Sahrab, de-
scendant of Mohammed and a dis-
ciple of the Ahdul Baha. He was
her tutor in the esoteric faith whose
followers, like those of the Oxford
movement,. ,-fervenUy believe the
World can be saved only by a re-
ligious and cultural international
Ism.
He declared "himself the leader of
the liberals and hel&that, as-suctuit
was his- -privilege "to intervene - in
state primary and election cam-
paigns for the purpose of insuring
the defeat of those whom he char-
acterized as conservatives, the oppo-
nents of his policies.
This aroused the indignation of
many—Democratic statesmen like
Senators Burke of Nebraska and
King of Utah.
"I believe the people In the dis-
tricts and states will resent the
President's interference," Burke
said. _ "If we -were to .follow then
course he has suggested, we would
all be goosestepping behind a lead-
er no matter how beneficent that
leader may be. I do not approve of
that course."
Senator King asserted the Presi-
dent should not use the great advan-
tage he has in controlling the purse
strings of the huge spending pro-
gram. "People who have fought
, iot theUemocratic party for a great
many years do not like interference
in their state affairs by outsiders,"
he said, "I do not believe the
President should meddle in the pri-
mary elections of the Democratic
party .or any other party."
sfeaa oi tuen." With "this highlaca- General opinion . 'was that Mr
demic sanction, they are enabled toRoo8evelt had widened the split in
jfiWll s bachelor's degree to Richard Democratic party and by his
Berth elnjess, who failed to touch words had placed the stamp of his
second when he wast^wre SO years aPProVal.on the attempted "purge"
•go. , directed-by, Corcoran, Cohen and
ethers of his sdvisers.
TSoWN in Peru, this writer knew
some dilatory natives who fre-
. quentiy.uged a word which meant,
••not tomorrow, but day after to-
. morrow and may-
Z*ck Ce*' , be not then."
Degree 20 From ancient
Yeara Late parchments, Trin-
S#^«sfea*£ college dons
I lat-'the reverse expression—"nunc
pro tung," which means "now in
restored prosperity are
revived. The stock market has be-
come unusually active, and private
enterprise is awakening. Unfreezing
of three billions in stored-up credit
isexpected to result from new bank-
ing regulations ordered by the Pres-
ident. Thousands of contracts for
approved projects to cost almost
$500,000,000 have been sent to all
parts of the country by the Public
Works administration.
Mr. Roosevelt, in his latest radio
address to the nation, said: "In
simple frankness and in simple hon-
esty, I -need all the help I can
get," and it seems that the people
are ready to giVe that help if the
administration will do its part
Notable in the President's talk
was the admission that mistakes
have been made not only by his op-
ponents and by industry and labor,
but also by^govepynent leaders. He
sharply attacked reactionaries in
business, blaming them for much
of the current depression.
Asserting his continued belief, in
Individual enterprise and the profit
motive, he Criticized the recent con-
gress for failing to enact his pro-,
gram for government reorganiza-
tion and legislation to aid the finan-
cially depressed railroad industry.
At the same time, however, he said
the legislators "achieved more for
the future good of the country than
any congress between the end of
the World war and the springs of
1933." '
good, for information reached the
British government that Franco had
ordered his aviators to stop bomb-
ing British merchant vessels.
However, this news was followed
immediately by dispatches saying
two more British ships had been
bombed in the ports of Valencia
and Alicante, several seamen being
killed or wounded.
- - %
Swedes Celebrate*
MERICANS of Swedish descent
by the thousand and—many
from Sweden gathered at Wilming-
ton. Del., for the celebration of the
300th anniversary of
the landing in Amer-
ca of the first
eral procession. Back in 1916, when
he ran for "the senate before, that
time against Dr. Joseph I. France,
many Marylanders voted against
Lewis and for France because they
thought Lewis wa-s-a Socialist. Rea-
son? Because Lewis was called the
father of the parcel post He and
Jonathan Bourne, then a Progres-
sive Republican senator from Ore-
gon, pushed the bill through con-
gress, which took the express busi-
ness away from the railroads. It
seems funny, now, but that brand of
radicalism was what kept Lewis out
of the senate 22 years ago, on an
election day when Maryland was go-
ing strongly Democratic for the rest
of the ticket.
This time Lewis is making a fight
for the senate again on the liberal
side." His not warning any Hopkins,
or Ickes, or Jimmy Roosevelt en-
dorsements is not pussyfooting,
though naturally some of the New
Deal .element so regards it It is a
— clear-visioned view of his own state.
Swedes and Finns!* ap^rafeaTof Maryland independ-
Wants L'berals Elected
•M OSTT of" the President's jradio
From the old coun-
try came Crown
Prince Gustaf Adolf
with a large party,
but he was confined
to his suite on the
liner Kungsholm by
illness. His place
„ , „ „ was taken by his
Prince Bertil ,orii Prince BertiL
The principal event of the opening
ceremony was the presentation of
a monument erected by Sweden on
the landing site. The presentation
was made by Prince Bertil and ac-
cepted by President Roosevelt
Then the President presented the
monument to Gov. Richard McMul-
len for the state of Delaware.
After the monument ceremony
there was a lawn party attended
by Crown Princess Louise.
The celebration was continued for
four days In Delaware, New Jersey
and Pennsylvania, parts of which
states were embraced in the New
Sweden-founded in 1638 by a com-
| en«e, an estimate of "an electorate
I which likes to decide its own prob-
i lems without outside interference.
Endorses New Deal
Lewis is not saying that the in-
tervention of jfimmy Roosevelt and
Harry Hopkins in Iowa was a blun-
der, and that their endorsements of
Otha D. Wearin actually helped Sen.
Guy M. Gillette. But-he knows the
same'sort of thing, done in his in-
terest, would be fatal in Maryland,
would help renominate Senator Ty-
dings. He has been having a lot of
troOble making the New Deal see
this, and has been to the White
House several times to make sure
that no unauthorized endorsement
is issued for him.
Lewis is not pussyfooting about
Roosevelt himself. His first public
statement or hig candidacy hot- only
speech was frankly poiitiefflT B^any of 150 Swedes and Finns sent
Wk BssebaB morals
"« • P tang** aad hand
Fred Marble that ran be didn't
V the easlam gate
j gbt epen the way fee
sfe
m
E
Latest War Scare
DOHBINQ of loyslist Spanish
cities and of British ships in
Spanish ports by Generalissimo
Franco's insurgent planes led di-
rectly to the most recent war scare
u Europe. It wss reported In Lon-
don that the loyslists had thrwn.
*£ ^mb IullaB a d German
cWes if Franco did not .call off his
•'n"en' and hi Italy it was assert-
ed that this probably would be re-
\ *• •a ,rt of war and would
causa tor appropriate action.
The rusnors were denied, but thetr
may havs
to America by Gustafus Adolphus
——
Mustn't Seize Hainan
'"pHE, British and French envoys
A in Tokyo warned Japan that any
occupation of HainanrChinese island
off the south coast of China, would
be met by joint Franco-British ac-
tion. The island, which lies near
French and^British trade routes,
was bombed~by Japanese flyers.
Germany is recalling the Germans
who have been acting as advisers to
the Chinese army, and diplomats be-
lieve Germany may now give active
aid to Japan.
*
Ireland Installs Hyde
IRELAND'S first president. In the
* person, of Dr; Douglas Hyde, was
installed in St Patrick's hall, Dub-
lin castle, where former viceroys
held their social
functions. The cere-
mony was conducted
entirely in Gaelic
and was> witnessed
by state an^church
officials, members
of parliament and
representatives of
foreign countries.
Amohg the last was
'American Minister
John Cudahy.
Dr. Hyde read and DouK1m y« e
signed a declaration in which he
promised to defend the constitution
and dedicate himself to the service
of the people of Ireland. Prime
Minister De Valera made a speech
in which he ssid:
"You are now our president, free-
ly chosen under our 99m laws, in*
heritlng authority and entitled to the
respect which Gaels ever gsve to
rightful chiefs. Not all the territory
of .Ireland is at the moment under
your sway, but the Justice of our
clslm and the tenacity of the Gaels
will set thst right"
President Hyde has been s poet,
historisn and educator. He is the
son of s protestant clergyman and
It Is hoped ha will bring about a un-
ion of Roman Catholic Ireland and
Protestant northern Ireland.
present this year, perhaps based on
sounder grounds, perhaps not. There
13..JXH wafy of lelUng juntil Novem.
Put on Presure
At any rate, they put the pressure
on Sen. Robert F. Wagner, two
years "ago,- to run for governor, and-
did not relax it until Lehman con-
sented to run again. This year they
have been putting the pressure on
the senator again. He never did
want to run for governor. It is no
stepping stone to the presidency for
him, for he is ineligible for the
higher office, havings Deen born in
Germany.
But the mere fact that they have
been begging Wagner to run for
governor shows the mental state of
^he Democratic leaders.
~Now the problem is complicated.
They are letting Wagner alone now,
willing for him to run for re-election.
But they have to find somebody they
think they can elect governpr, if
Lehman goes for the senate, or for
senator, if Lehman decides to run
again for- governor.— And, terri-
ble thought, maybe somebody for
both senator and governor if Leh-
man .decides to retirel
All of which is all the stranger to
outsiders, especially in view of the
size of New York state, when actu-
ally the Republican leaders are in
the same quandary. They were wor-
1 ried to death, before Copeland
passed from the scene, about whom
to put up for governor and senator.
Now they have to find a candidate
for the governorship, and in addi-
tion two senatorial candidates.
Looking at the Republican prob-'
lem, and..igcijleptaily at most of the
candidates mentioned for the three
places, one wonders why the Demo-
cratic leaders are worried.
Presidential Booms
The battle of the various anti-
Roosevelt groups — conservative,
radical and personal—is transferred
by the adjournment of congress to
the stated. The picture is cluttered
up by presidential booms. ^ Garner
for President movements are more
serious than even the vice president
thinks. In fact he does not think
very much about it, having had to
be coaxed at length to make a fight
for the nomination in 1932. Then
there ris the Jim Farley for Presi-
dent boom, sprouting in Boston and
elsewhere. Last, and not politically
very important for the time being,
is the Joe Kennedy boom, which
flowered In London just before the
ambassador sailed for home.
The importance*of these prema-
ture presidential booms is way out
of proportion to the chances of those
mentioned actually landing the nom-
ination. If Garher were just a few
years younger he would fit the pic-
ture perfectly of the type of com-
promise candidate the anti-Roose-
velt people want Jim Farley and
Joe Kennedy are both Catholics, and
ADVENTURERS' CLUB
HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES
OF FEOPtE IIKE YOUKSEtn
Vanishing Corpses "
H'
By FLOYD GIBBONS
Famous Headline Hunter
ELLO EVERYBODY:
You know, boys and girls, I've often noticed^
leads to another. That's probably becausMhetll
that goes wrong so upsets the fellow it happen ^1-
well—he just loses his head and plunges right na^l
another danger. —
It's-bad business when a man loses his head in the taecrf
But at the same time it has produced a lot of red-hot dtum.
and triple-barreled, adventures, and the story I'm going to telh
is a mighty good example.
Paul. Moore of
events this yarn deals with happened to him and two other l di La
tember, 1923. w
WlU
uere's on J
Hid
Ho
alls'-
have
. time."
Mil right.
; you
with
At that time Paul was Just a kid of twelve, Ut1b| h 1
Rapids, Mich. Paul had just been riven a .22
selling perfume, and one Saturday he and his two frlcaj* 1
Kohles and Archie Eastman, started out on s hunting trip.
Art and Archie had air rifles. . Paul had no cartridges tor hit1
Art said he knew where he could get some. They started out e«rb1L
their lunches with them, and after walking a couple hours, esnJl
patch of woods four miles from the outskirts of town.- '
• Art Pounded the Cartridge.
There didn't seem to be any game in sight, so they sat do*#,
bank of a small creek to eat their lunches. Paul had put down h ]
and was just starting to untie the package that contained his grub/
Art spoke up, saying there was a wild canary on the othej side of fi
"Let's have your gun," whispered Art "I can't get
Patrf passed over his rifle. Art had the cartridges in his owe j
He took one out and tried to put it in the chamber. It wouldo'tl
Young Art didn't know that the cartridges he had brought j
home were the wrong caliber. He thought this one wouldn't n |
praised the ^resident to the skies,
but endorsed the New Deal in toto.
But that opening statement, rather
curiously worded, also stated that
his fight was being made exclusive-
ly by Marylanders. Lewis knows his
state fairly well, and knows that
any outside interference would not'
be welcomed.
Incidentally, Gov. Harry W. Nice,
the third Republican governor since
the Civil war, is being Importuned
by friends to make the race this
year for the senate, instead of run-
ning, as he has planned, for re-
election as governor. His. friends
are pointing out that Lewis may
win the primary, due not so much
to New Deal popularity as to the
fact so rnany Marylanders
seem to be sore on Senator Tydings.
New York Situation
New Dealers and Republicans
alike view the situation In New York
precipitated by the death of Sen.
Royal S. Copeland with mixed emo-
tions. It is generally conceded by
those In the know that Gov. Herbert
H. Lehman can have the nomina-
tion for Copeland's se&t if he wishes
it. Several other prominent Demo-
crats would like It, but few if any
nf them would want to take on Leh-
man for a battle, especially as the
contest will be by a rather hard-
boiled party , convention, looking
with cold calculating eyes at the
primary,~
where the individual voter marks
his ballot for whomever, he pleases
without a care ss to what the effect
may be on carefully laid strategy
plans of his party leaders*
But then whom to nomlnste for
governor? It is a curious fact that
the bigwigs of the Democratic par-
ty in New York were no littla^con-
cerned about this two years sgo, snd
again this time. They were al-
most in s panic two years sgo, until
well into the summer, when they
thought Lehman was going to re-
lire; At that time It Was by no
means clear to them that a big
Democratic victory wss shead.
They were genuinely afraid that if
Lehman did pot run they would not
014 *ut* hou e. but lose
the 47 electors! votes of New York
for Roosevelt
Actually of course Lehman had a
but ran wsy
the idea still pqfrsfsts in many guar
ters that it would be Uphill sledding
to elect a Catholic, despite the fact
that the Ku'Klux Klan no longer
flourishes.
But these booms, and others which
may be expected—there is a lot of
talk aboui-Cordell Hull—start peo-
ple thinking about "somebody else."
They tend to commit politicians who-
will name delegates, and {fend to
"tie them away" from Roosevelt
or even somebody Roosevelt might
approve. Their effect is very clear
to New Dealers, who are more than
a little disturbed about the* possible
consequences.
All of which turns back on the
importance of the primaries yet-to
come, and to what may happen to
New Dealers in the election to fol-
low.
Docile Congress
It is generally agreed that the
congress just adjourned—the third
of the Roosevelt regime—was "re-
markably docile tpjf the fifth and
sixth years of an administration.
Expecially because of its extremely
top - heavy Democratfc majority,
which in the nature of things would-
encourage division Into factions.
The President was bumped on a
few things, but astofitshingly JeW,
and he made some surprising come-
backs, especially after the rejebtjon
of the wage-hour bill.
ection will depend the tetfffS?r of
his fourth congress. If Roosevelt
should win in most of the "purge"
states, particularly Maryland, Geor-
gia, South Carolina, and Nevada;
if his Senate leader, Alben W. Bark-
ley—as seems likely—wins his con-
test for renomination, and if the
Democratic loss of senste and house
seats is held to a reasonable figure,
the next congress will probably be
the most docile any President has
ever had In his seventh snd eighth
yesrt. ^
Iowa and Pennsylvania could go
Republican strongly in November
without affecting this .situation.. Of
course If either or both shmttd* go
Democratic that would make the
President sill the stronger. But both
are regsrded as "enetny country."
After all, Iowa even stood against
the Woodrow Wilson sweep of the
whll« Pennsylvania
went tor Hoover In IMS.
' • **n ■saitaale. WMU aorvtset
ard
"Lo
1 ye doii
mm
groi
tT 1
"Any (
tback
i creek?
Archie Pitched Forward on His Face.
chamber because the gun was new. He tried to force it in with his
and then, in his baste to get a shot at th$ bird/before it flew sag;!
picked up a stone that happened to be lying at his feet"
-Art hit the ballet two or three times with that steae. Ad
then, suddenly, there was a load crack. The ballet exploded, lit
dropped the gun, crying, "I'm shot!" Then he fell to the grasl
aad lay still.
-The other two kids stood speechless. Art had- killed hlmseBI
had an uncle who lived about a mile away on the other side of the
and the first thought that popped into his mind was to ran tat
get help.
He told Archie to stay behind with Art, but Archie insisted,■
along with him. They started" off on a short cut through the aosdi
ning as fast as their legs wauld carry them.
On the other side of the woods they came to the tracks of tbi
urban line that runs but of Grand Rapids. There was a third rs|
the right of way, set up a foot or so above the ground.
—1—Paul knew about It—He WSg well up ahead of Archie? snd 1
over it with a flying leap. But he didn't think to warn Archie ibodl
electrified rail. His mind was too full of the thought of Art ljrhl'
there by the creek bank.
Archie Stepped on Third Rail.
The next thing Paul knew, Archie was stepping on that rsl
just lit on it for an instant Then he pitched forward on his few-
he, too, lay still!
Archie's body was lying between the two tracks. "I
look at him," says Paul, "and decided be was dead. Then I tana
and ran as if the devil was after me."
It was a long way to his uncle's house, and by that time Pm'1
all but out of breath. But he didn't dare stop running. He stumbw'
At last he reached the house and burst in, panting, "Uncle Abe!
Art's killed himself with my/gun and Archie's been .electrocutgdj_
Everyone in the house, Including two old ladies who were
Paul's aunt, dropped whatever they wereTdolng and Parted-
tracks. They hurried through brush and corn fields to the spot'
Archie had fallen—and when they arrived, there was nu sign 01
Uncle Abe turned on Paul. "Young man," he said sternly,
sure this isn't a joke of some kind?" But It was no joke to Paul. Her™
maybe a passing interurban had stopped to-Ptek.Archie up. HfJ
the track and started through the woods tbwara the stream who*
had left Art
Both Bodies Had Disappeared.
Hie women turned back, but Uncle Abe followed along t*r!
They ran through the woods in breathliess haste—tore up to the po
Art had shot himself—"-and then Paul .stopped dead in his trscu-
was gone, too! „
It was too much for PauL His uncle-Was looking at him suspit
and he hardly knew what to say. . . |
How could Paul ask him to believe that two dead boyi M«
disappeared, one right after the other? He stood there silent s
and then he heard sounds of splashing water, and of voices corn™
some point down the stream. Together they walked toward thoie
and there they found—Art and Archie. , ]klj 1
It was all explain^ Va.iiv enough."^Archie had been knoc
by the shock from the third rail. He had a big bump on Ws
that was all the damage that.had been done to.him. , t0#
When he came to, he went back to'where Art had fallen *
him bathing his leg, which had been grazed on the calf by • f
exploding shell. Together they had moved down stream s wsj*
that's where' Paul found them. ^ ^ ,lin#l
And that's all there is to this stofy, except thst s
thst. Art and Archie siid Paul took that .22 rifle and pitched It to w*
river. .
Copyright.-—WNU Service.
Elephant Bona Rampant - *
Angry because his.keeper forgot
to bring his meal punctually, a bull
elephafit st Etah, United Provinces,
became enraged and demanded
service, then helped himself ,to it
He threw the keeper over a fence
to Jolt the man's memory, next
broke his chain and uprooted a tree
to which he bed been tied. After
pulling down every telegraph wire
in the vicinity, the beast sulked in
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Curry, W. M. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1938, newspaper, July 8, 1938; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth243072/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.