Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 180, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1952 Page: 2 of 8
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Qualify For
olf Tournament,
ain Is Medalist
8 Headed by medalist John Paul
Cain, Sweetwater High School jun-
ior, 90 players qualified for the
?• annual City Golf Tournament
which begins today and extends
through Aug. 31.
Young Cain's 72 was the low
qualifying mark. His first opponent
in the Championship Flight will be
George M. Thompson, who posted
a 77.
Defending Champion Ralph Neal
LONG HORN LRACiUK
Team W L Pel. <JB
Odcssu t>3 35 .643 —
Big Spring 57 39 .594 5
Midland 51 45 .531 11
Artesia 49 44 .527 ll /a
San Angelo .47 52 .475 lG'/fe
SWKKTWATKK 15 51 .4«tf 17
Roswell 41 55 427 21
Vernon 32 64 .333 30
Tuesday's Results
Odessa 8, Roswell 7.
Artesia 8-3, San Angelo 1-2.
Big Spring 14, Vernon 5.
Midland 12, Sweetwater 0.
Wednesday's Results
Midland at Artesia.
San Angelo at Roswell.
Vernon at Odessa.
Sweetwater at Big Spring.
WEST TKXAS-NEW MEXICO
Team W L Pet. OB
Clovis 67 27 .713 —
Lubbock 48 47 .495 19'/a
Albuquerque 40 49 .495 20 Va
Ainarillo . .... .44 51 .463 23Va
Borger 44 51 .463 231 a
Laine.sa 43 50 462 23 Va
Pampa 43 53 .448 25
Abilene 41 51 .446 25
Tuesday's Results
Clovis 6, Abilene 2.
Borger 10, Lamesa 5.
Albuquerque 6, Pampa 2.
Lubbock 8, Amarillo 0.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Tea in W L Pet. <iB
Dallas 63 53 .543 —
Fort Worth . . . 63 54 .538 Va
Shreveport . 62 55 .530 1 '/a
Oklahoma City 57 55 .509 4
Tulsa 58 59 .495 5«/a
San Antonio 57 59 .491 6
Beaumont 56 61 .479 7V<j
Houston 50 68 .424 14
Tuesday's Results
Dallas 6, Houston 2.
Beaumont 9, Oklahoma City 4
San Antonio 6, Fort Worth
Tulsa 5, Shreveport 4.
Wednesday's Schedule
San Antonio at Dallas.
Houston at Fort Worth.
Beaumont at Tulsa.
Shreveport at Oklahoma City
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Team W L Pet. GB
New York 58 40 .592 —
Cleveland 55 43 .561 3
Boston 52 43 .547 4 Va
Washington 51 46 .526 6 Va
Chicago 51 49 .510 8
Philadelphia 45 46 .495 8Va
St. Louis 41 59 .410 If
Detroit . .. 35 62 .361 21 xfa
Tuesday's Results
Philadelphia 5-8, Detroit 0-10.
New York 10. Chicago 7.
St. Louis 7, Washington 3.
Cleveland 4. Boston 1.
Wednesday's Schedule
New York (Kuzava 5-6) ifw Chicago
(Kretlow 1-1).
Boston (Brodowski 4-2* at Cleveland
(Feller 7-10), night.
Philadelphia (Fowler 0-1) at Detroit
(Gray 9-10)
Washington (Porterfield 7-10) at St.
Louis (Byrne 6-9), night.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Team W I. Pet. GB
Brooklyn ... 61 29 .678 —
New York 57 33 .633 4
St. Louis 56 41 .577 8'/a
Philadelphia 51 46 .526 13 Vi
Chicago 48 47 .505 15 Va
Boston . 40 54 426 23
Cincinnati 39 59 398 26
Pittsburgh 28 71 .283 37 Va
Tuesday's Results
Chicago 4, New York 2.
Pittsburgh 7, Brooklyn 1.
St. Ix>uis 6, Boston 5.
Philadelphia 6-4, Cincinnati 1-3.
Wednesday's Sehedule
Chicago (KJipstein 6-8 and Lown 3-7)
at New York (Hearn 11-3 and Jansen
11-5), twi-night.
St. Louis (Presko 6-4) at Boston (Spahn
8-11). night.
Pittsburgh (Pollet 4-11) at Brooklyn
(Erskine 10-3).
Cincinnati (Wehmeier 4-8) at Philadel-
phia (Roberts 15-6), night.
OTHER TUESDAY RES1LTS
Big State League
Temple 6. Texarkana 4.
Paris 6, Tyler 4.
Wichita Falls 9. Waco 0.
Austin 6. Long view 2
(■lilt Coast league
Brownsville 6, Laredo 1
Corpus Christi 5. Harlingen 2.
Galveston 7. Port Arthur (J.
Texas City 5-12. Lake Charles 4 7.
Sooner Stat#' League
Chickasha 6, Pauls Valley t.
Sherman 12. McAlester 10.
Shawnee 6. Lawton 4.
Ada 9. Ardmore 2
meets Bill Kennedy, a 77 qualifier,
in his first match. Cecil Bruner,
who lost to Neal in the finals last
year, opposes Lawrence Mullins in
his opener.
The complete pairings with quali-
fying scores:
Championship Flight
Ralph Neal, defending champion,
vs. Bill kennedy, 77; R. O. Peters,
76; vs. Jack Patton, 78; Grady
Norris, 75, vs. Pookie Montgom-
ery, 77; Cecil Bruner, 76, vs. Law-
rence Mullins, 78.
John Paul Cain, 72, vs. George
Thompson, 77; Red Alston, 76, vs.
F. L. Shaw, 78; Salty Barton, 76;
vs. Pat Gerald, 77; Ike Lee, 78,
vs. Clyde Southworth, 79.
First Flight
Henry Bennett, 80, vs. Doil Fea-
gan, 85; Kelton Green, 83, vs. Ber-
nie Hawley, 86; Hez Hawley Jr., 83,
vs. Jack Voss, 86; Doug Henry 84,
vs. Roy Craft, 87.
Hank Meyer, 81, vs. E. B. New-
burn, 85; Charlie Ambrose, 83, vs.
Elwood Hartgraves, 88; Tom An-
derson, 83, vs. Gus Goetsche, 86;
Rov Prim, 84. Earl Vandervoort,
88.
Second Flight
W. O. Shultz, 88, vs. Leo Jones,
89; Tom Marsh, 88, vs. A. C. Bish-
op, 89; Floy Pittman, 88, vs. Hap
Greer, 89; Jimmie Tucker, 88. vs.
Huhg Colwell, 91.
Bobby Clark, 88. vs. Morris Har-
ris, 89; Chunky Ritter, 88, vs. Don
Whorton, 90; Joe (Roscoel Gar-
land, 88, vs. Maynard Bishkin, 89;
Henry Rogers, 89; Hershel Gordon,
91.
Third Flight
H. B. Hill, 91, vs. C. C. Arm-
strong, 92; Gene Jones, 92, vs. Bob
Henderson, 93; J. S. Schooler, 91,
vs. Benny McElroy, 93; Geep Wil-
liams, 92, vs. Norton Darnell, 93.
John Majors, 91, vs. Bill Sheri-
dan, 92; D. L. Perry, 92, vs. Moe
Reich, 93; John Darnell. 91, vs. Joe
Wheeler, 93; Ray Walker, 92, vs.
Red Black, 93.
Fourth Flight
C. E. Harrell, 93, vs. R. E. Hen-
drick, 96; Wade Wills, 95, vs. Hollis
Ellis, 99; Bubba Meyer, 94, vs.
J. W. Scott, 97; Ross Thompson,
95, vs. Vince Cornoyer, 99.
Bill Carson, 93, vs. Buck Allen,
96; Dickie Pearce, 95, vs. Jake
Boatright, 99; George Allison, 95,
vs. Cecil Voss, 98; L. B. Johnston,
96. vs. Marshall Pior. 99.
Fifth Flight
Jeff Dulaney, 99, vs. Hal Etz, 99;
Bob Law, 105, bye; Clifford Wil-
son, 100, bye; Bill Ellis, 107, vs.
Bartell LaRue, 106.
Kenneth Lafferty, 100, bye; Dick
| Grellner, 106, bye; Bob Wyatt, 103,
! bye; and Doyt Dill, 109, bye.
Five Local Golfers
Enter Ruidoso Meet
Five Sweetwater golfers will en-
ter the Cree Meadows Invitation
Golf Tournament at Ruidoso, N.
M., which is scheduled July 31
j through Aug. 3.
Ralph Neal, city golf champion,
i George Thompson. Dr. R. O. Pe-
i ters, Ike Lee, and M. C. Alston will
j compete in the tournament.
The trip to Ruidoso is to be a
i "family vacation" affair. Several
Sweetwater families left Wednes-
day morning and will vacation
there for a week. They plan to go
to the horse races, visit White
Sands and watch the tournament.
The Sweetwater group included
Mr. and Mrs. Neal; Dr. and Mrs.
Peters and daughter, Carolyn;
Trent Butler, Sandra Hale: Mr.
and Mrs. Ike Lee and son. Mike;
Mr. and Mrs. Alston and daughter,
Kay; Gayle Meyer, Joy Pace: Mr.
and Mrs. Thompson and children,
Ross and Georgana; Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Glass and sons, Frank and
Sammy; Eugene Kouri, and Letty
Thorton of Trinity, Tex.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Murchison
left for Ruidoso several days ago.
SPOiT
PURTS
Batter Or Poorer Teams?
Are Longhorn League teams pro-
viding better baseball for their fan-
dom this year than in past sea-
sons?
A check of the records reveals
that the question can be answered
both "yes" and "no", depending
on how you look at it.
Except for the first year of oper-
ation (1947), a team has had to
compile a won-lost percentage of
.542 or more in order to be eligi-
ble for the Longhorn loop playoffs.
This season, it appears that a
club can finish with as low as a
.500 percentage and still make the
post-season championship playoffs
between the top four outfits.
Some may contend that such a
case indicates a stronger, more
evenly-matched brand of baseball
this year, while others will point
out that the leading clubs of 1952
couldn't get rolling like the teams
ol 1948-49-50-51, thus meaning a low-
er grade of baseball.
The fourth place finishers and
percentage of past Longhorn
League campaigns:
1947—Sweetwater, .485.
1948—Vernon, .546.
1949—Vernon, .543.
1950—Vernon, .542.
1951—Odessa, .547.
Through Monday, this season's
fourth place team, Artesia, boasted
only a .516 avearge, but managed
to hold a three-game margin over
the fifth place club, San Angelo,
whose percentage was .485.
—SS—
Can Braves Stage Miracle?
Time is running out on the Sweet-
water Braves.
If the local Longhorn entry in-
tends to be around for the Septem-
ber playoffs, it will have to win
at least 28 of its final 44 games.
That 28-16 finish necessary to put
the Braves in the playoffs means
playing ball at a .636 clip, some-
thing Sweetwater hasn't been able
to do all season.
We hate to admit it, but the sit-
uation looks hopeless. Only a mir-
acle—and what a miracle!—could
enable the crippled Sweetwater
club to accomplish 28 victories dur-
ing the next 41 days.
Counting the three postponed
games, 25 of (he Braves' final 44
tilts will be against first division
opponents and 19 with the three
other second division clubs.
Here is Sweetwater's
schedule:
Opponent . Here
Odessa 3
Big Spring 2 6
Midland 3 3
Artesia 3 3
San Angelo 3 3
Roswell 5 3
Vernon 3 2
LEAPNC LADIES — Different types of broad jumping were illustrated by women in the Olympic
Games. Menezes de Cardosa of Brazil, Australia's Verna Johnson and France's Suzanne Glotin, left
to right, used their arms and legs in varying techniques to gain maximum distance in Helsinki. (NEA)
Sweetwater Reporter, Texas, Wednesday, July 30, 1952
remaining
There
2
Best- Olympic Brawls Are Not In
Boxing Ring, But Among Officials
Total
22
By OSCAR FRALEY
HELSINKI. July 30 IIP) — The
best fights of the Olympic games
were not being waged Wednesday
in the "messuhalli," an oversized
quonset hut where the boxing bouts
are being held.
As a matter of fact, the fisticuffs
on the whole were rather dull.
The best brawls were going on
among officials of this idyllic quad-
rennial brawl.
Argentine mitt moguls were shak-
ing a frenzied finger at a Finnish
referee, claiming the gent was of
pinkish tendencies. The Russians
screamed "foul" when Zoe Ann
Jensen of the U. S. was given two
extra dives because the spring-
board went bad, and the Reds got
even in their own little way with a
diving judge who ignored the cat-
calls to subtract on westerners and
add on easterners.
Reds Yell Robbery
Adding to the confusion, the Rus-
sians were yelping that they had
been "robbed" of the lightheavy-
weight weight-lifting title and
nerves were so tight even among
the semi-official families that Hun-
gary and Romania was ordered to
replay their water polo game.
Pete Mello, the United States
boxing coach, wasn't bashful about
getting into the fray, either, he
was one of the first to protest a
boxing match in which a Finnish
referee halted a bout between an
Argentine and a Russian so the
Red could have his even-redder eye
patched. When things looked real
tough for the Soviet slugger, the!
referee disqualified the South Amer-1
ican.
"That Finn was simply scared to j
death of the Russians and you can
generally associated with Moslem
prayer rugs. Little Zoe marched
right up to the officials, told them
their springboard would not do to
flip flap-jacks, and got them to
give her another chance.
Late Tuesday night a number of
gents with red stars featured prom-
inently on their jackets were de-
manding that she take her first
dive points, worth slightly less than
a Finnish mark, or that the whole
business be run over.
Braves' Schedule
Wednesday, July 30—Sweetwater
at Big Spring.
Thursday, July 31 — Sweetwater
at Big Spring.
Friday, Aug. 1—Sweetwater
Odessa.
Saturday, Aug. 2—Sweetwater
Odessa.
Sunday, Aug. 3—Odessa at Sweet
water.
at
at
Waters, Carrasquel
Feam To Beat Tyler
By UNITED PRESS
The Austin Pioneers edged Tex-
arkana out of third place in Big
State League standings Tuesday
night and wound up in a tie with
Wichita Falls for second by defeat-
ing the Longview Cherokees 6 to 2.
Wichita Falls held onto second
by only the barest of margins as it
steamrolled hapless Waco 9 to 0
to push the not very ferocious Pi-
rates a full 40 games back of the
league leading Tyler East Texans.
Meanwhile, Tyler was dropping a
6 to 4 decision to the Paris In- i
dians. I
Temple beat Texarkana 6 to 4 to j
move to within two games of the ]
top and tie the Bears for fourth
place. Seventh-place Longview re-
mained six games off the pace
with Paris just ahead four and a
half games out.
The score by innings:
Paris 030 000 100 02—6 15 1
Tyler 000 200 002 00—4 12 2
Waters, Carrasquel and Diaz;
Pringle and Fernandez.
Artesia's Rodriquez Gives
Iron Man Stunt, 8-1,3-2
An "iron man" stunt by Arteslu's
Mike Rodriquez topped Longhorn
League play Tuesday night, as all
four first division teams register-
ed victories.
Rodriquez twirled seven and five-
hit ball to defeat San Angelo twice,
8-1 and 3-2. The double win put
the Drillers only one-hail game be-
hind third place Midland.
League-leading Odessa clipped
Roswell, 8-7; runner-up Big Spring
downed Vernon, 14-5; and Midland
blanked Sweetwater, 12-0, in other
games.
Tonight's schedule: Sweetwater
at Big Spring, Midland at Artesia,
San Angelo at Roswell and Ver-
non at Odessa.
Two home runs by Leo Eastham
one a bases-loaded blast—guided
Odessa to its one-run triumph over
Roswell.
Eastham Gets 2 Homers
The Oilers were trailing 7-3 in
the eighth inning when Eastham
poled his grand-slammer to tie it
up, 7-7. Odessa scored once more
in the eighth to break the dead-
lock.
Eastham highlighted the winner's
three-run first inning with a solo
homer. Villarreal was the winning
pitcher, Audie Malone the loser.
Reggi Corrales of Big Spring
spaced 10 hits to gain his ninth vic-
tory. Vernon's Lloyd Wallis, who
walked the first four batters to
face him, suffered the defeat.
The Broncs tallied twice in the
first and six times in the second
to afford Corrales plenty of coast-
ing margin. The Dusters got to him
for four runs in the sixtli as John
Reimold homered.
Tuesday's line scores:
Odessa 300 000 050— 8 12 3
Roswell . 001 110 400— 7 17 1
Villarreal, Ortiz (8) and Castro;
Weaver, Parra 18), Malone <8) and
Calo.
Vernon 000 104 000— 5 10 4
Big Spring . 260 030 21x—14 11 1
Wallis, Fox 12) and Niedson;
Corrales and Valdes.
San Angelo
Artesia
First Game
. ... 000 001 0— 1
300 140 x— 8
Gabor, Tinkler (6) and Dacko;
Rodriquez and Briner.
Second Game
San Angelo .. 000 110 0— 2 5 0
Artesia 000 000 3— 3 6 1
May, Saldana 17) and Solis; Rod-
riquez and Briner.
TAXI
DIAL
3333 - 4878
RIGSBY TRANSFER
Local and Long Distance Moving
Packing, Storage
DIAL 3191—NIGHT, DIAL 2484
THANKS
To everyone for your wonderful sup-
port in my race for County Treasurer, I
am humbly grateful.
MRS. S. N. LEACH
22
Zeke Knew "Secret"
If Midland baseball officials had
intended to keep the news quiet on
Zeke Bonura's firing until after
the move was officially made, they i
did a poor job. . ,, .. ,, .
Everyone we saw at the All-Star j clu°te, me- . Mell° bellowed. Its
game last Friday knew that Bon- f -ucky thing we have good ath-
ura would get the gate Saturday 01 we d never get anywhere.
| 1 ve just told my guys to go out
and knock 'em stiff. That way
there can't be too much argument,
I although even then you're not surv
f.\'. ' - ■
FOR SALE
1—Frame House, to be moved
from our property by purchas-
er. Sale to be by bid and the
right to reject any or all bids
is reserved. Building is wood
construction, sheetrock lined
over-all length 64 Ms ft., width
18 ft., 4 rooms, bath, hall and
porch Building located at our
local plant site and may be in-
spected by prospective purch-
asers between 8 00 a. m. and
4:30 p. m.
United States Gypsum
Company
Sweetwater, Texas
Akins, Saxton
Fight Tonight
CHICAGO, July 30 IIP)—Light-
weight Virgil Akins of St. Louis,
j boasting a string of four straight
| knockouts, will go out of his weight
class Wednesday night to meet un-
J defeated welterweight Johnny Sax-
ton, Newark, N. J., in a 10-round
I television battle in Chicago Sta-
| dium.
j Saxton, who has won each of his
30 professional fights, 15 of them
by knockouts, was the 12 to 5 fav-
orite He will have a five pound
veight advantage, expecting to tal-
ly 146 pounds compared to 141 for
Akins.
Akins, though ranked number
three among the lightweights, has
no record comparable to Saxton,
fourth ranking welterweight. Akins
has won 25 of 33 pro bouts with 10
knockouts.
night.
The Midland directors, who vot-1
ed to give Zeke the boot last Thurs-
day, didn't tell Bonura he was out
as manager until after Saturday's
double-header with Vernon.
Following the games, fans and ■
Vernon players swarmed around j
Zeke to shake his hand and wish
him well. Several minutes later, he j
received the "official" word that I
he was no longer manager.
The San Angelo paper reported j
that Bonura made it plain he didn't!
resign. "They asked me to resign, j
and I refused," Zeke said. He made j
them fire him.
The club called in Bonura Sun-1
day afternoon for a meeting of all j
Midland players, some of whom j
had threatened to leave the club, j
[ Bonura urged them to continue I
j with the Indians.
Zeke will return to New Orleans, |
j where he owns real estate . . .
Art Bunge, southpaw pitch-first
baseman who spent a few days on
: the Sweetwater roster last week,
is now being given a trial by Big
j Spring's Pat Stasey.
! Bunge played first base for the
j Broncs Monday and regular first
sacker Rick Gonzales was shifted
to left field . . .
Spec Gammon, Odessa writer,
i favors a return to the fans voting |
for the Longhorn League All-Star
teams instead of this season's
[ method of sports writers and man-
j agers picking the top performers,
j He forgets that the unbalanced
! population of Longhorn cities would
handicat) the smaller towns in
landing their stars in the classic.
BUTCHERS STRIKE
REYNOSA, Mexico, July 30 —
'IP)—Mexican butchers were on
ol winning."
Six Eliminated, One Lost
Argentine boxing coach Alfredo!
Porzio was nearly in tears.
"Six men eliminated in the first [
round — and only one lost," he j
stormed. "My heavyweight was
crying before his match today, he !
was so upset and demoralized, |
Then lie loses the first time in his
career. The morale of my fighters i
has been killed."
There was a lot of salty water |
under the nasal bridge too, in the |
swimming department. The crowd
concentrated on a lady judge nam-'
ed Bochina, who happens to be j
from somewhere east of Helsinki, j
When American or British dived,
Madame Bochina held up the low-
est point score among all the j
judges. When a Russian diver, her |
card always showed the highest
total in sight.
Then Mrs. Jensen, wife of Jackie,
the Washington Senator outfielder, |
contributed to the confusion when j
she did a dive that was a real ;
floperoo. She landed in a position
SAFETY
INSPECTION
DEADLINE SOON!
On or before September 6th all cars and trucks
in Texas must pass a rigid state safety inspection.
Ford Dealers invite you to come in for a special
safety check regardless of make or type of motor
vehicle you are now driving. Stop in today!
Wi
Si
-1
i
To All Who Voted In Precinct I and 2
Many Thanks for your Splendid Vote and
Support given me. Such evidence of Friendship
compels me to put forth greater effort for your
safety and protection.
A. C. COOK
Sweetwater Reporter
Published each afternoon (except Sat*
jrday) also Sunday morning by the
Sweetwater Reporter, Inc.
Entered as second class matter at
post office in Sweetwater, Texas, under
ict of March 3, 1872.
Subscription Rates
Ry carrier In Sweetwater and sur-
rounding area, 25 cents per week; $13.00
per year. Ry mall In Nolan and adjoin-
ing counties, $5.95 per year. Elsewhere
by mail $7.05 per year.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of any
person, firm or corporation, which may
appear in any of the Reporter's publi-
strike Wednesday against retail 1 nations win be cheerfully corrected upon
meat price ceilings set by the Mex-
ican government.
Butchers Tuesday refused to kill
any more cattle, and meat disap-
peared from all meat counters.
Ohfi OUT OF -rfiree
NEEDS THIS SERVICE!
According to preliminary reports on a nationwide Safety Check made last
May, nearly one out of every three of the nation's motor vehicles (32.6%)
is unsafe! Of over 300,000 passenger cars checked, 31.4% were in need of
service. Of over 46,000 trucks checked, 39.7% were found unsafe! Brakes,
lights and steering headed the list of parts most usually found defective.
being brought to the attention of the
publisher.
{Llmer Wright Publisher
\llen Raker Editor
Corner Rfixter Circulation Mgr.
■H. K. McKlnney Advertising Mgr.
3ob Ranor Mechanical Supt
8
HERE'S WHAT WE DO
if you come in for safety service:
★ CHECK BRAKES
'★ CHECK FRONT LIGHTS * CHECK REAR LIGHTS
★ CHECK STEERING ★ CHECK EXHAUST SYSTEM
* CHECK TIRES * CHECK WINDSHIELD WIPERS
* CHECK GLASS * CHECK HORN
* CHECK REAR VIEW MIRROR
At A Special Low Price $1.00
HERE'S WHAT YOU CET
if service is needed:
NEW-CAR SAFETY
★
NEW-CAR PERFORMANCE
★
NEW-CAR DEPENDABILITY
★
NEW-CAR ECONOMY
AT A SPECIAL PRICE!
m
'3
m
LET US CHECK YOUR CAB... CHECK ACCI&BtiTS!
....
Afvl .i-.'fc >:
. ,wKN«W
218 W. 3rd
Dabney Motor Company
"Ford Soles and Service 34 Years In Sweetwater"
j.
I
Phone 4305
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Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 180, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 30, 1952, newspaper, July 30, 1952; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth283888/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.