The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 41, Ed. 1 Monday, August 9, 1937 Page: 1 of 4
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VI
WEATHER
DENiSON AND VICINITY
.Today and Tuesday, Fair and.,
warmer
THE DENISON PRESS
nBMHBHBBSSGRWBSKS^KZ&BSSBBSMl
38c PER MONTH
A FAST GROWING PAPER
...-.v.*.'v.v.w.w
Representative United Press and International News Service.
DENISON, TEXAS, MONDAY, AUG. 9th, 1937
WEBKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1934
VOL. 4—NO. 41
#
fPeiping Is
In Hands of
Jap Forces
Judiciary, Police and Other
City Administrations are
Taken over By Nippons;
North China Is Taken
Mobilization of
Chinese Forces
Man Power of China Being
Brought Together to btj
Thrown Against Japanese
PEIPING — Judiciary, police
and othej city administration
agencies were completely taken
over yesterday by Japanese au-
thorities and this city is now en-
tirely in the hands of the Nippon?.
This means that North China Is
practically in the hands of the
Japanese, at least a section larg-
er than Checko-Slov: k'a.
The vast resources of China's
Mercury Again 1117 Dead In Grades Of
% Above 100 Mark
Dallas Gets 100 Degree Reading, But Phoe-
nix Arizona Again Registers Highest Tem-
perature of The U. S. at 108 Degrees Sun.
For the third time is as many atures were registered in other
days, the mercury in Denison sections of the city.
Sunday afternoon reached the Bathing places in and about
103 degree mark on the Kingston Denison were said to have had one
thermometer while higher temper- of the heaviest days of the year
. | when thousands of citizens sought
a cooling reprieve from the ter-
jrific heat. Loy lake had several
hundred swimmers during the af-
DENISON
62-50-35
YEARS AGO
By DULCE MURttAY
ternoon alone, with almost a;*
many more after the sun disap-
peared.
Early this morning the mercury
fell to the 83 degree stage, then
W August 9, 1875 W hiked above 90 degrees shortly
While Frank Johnson of this before noon, forecasting more
city, was engaged painting the thermometer readings of above
Car Wrecks
on Weekend
Many More Are Injured In
Car Wrecks Over United
States Saturday and Sun-
day; Five in Train Mishap
Kansas Woman
' Is Killed Sunday
Statistics Show One of Worst
Weekends For Car Fatal
ities Of This Whole Year
Fire School
Rated High
Denison Paid High Compli-
ment by Fire School In-
structor on Men Sent To
Annual School Last July
Necessity for
Proper Methods
Fire Chief Pat Lowe and D.
L. Hosford Score Highest
Grades by Local Firemen
given failure of the steering
Colbert bridge on Wednesday ev- 100 degrees this afternoon.
ening, the scaffold on which he' At Dallas the thermometer
was standing gave way and ho climbed to the 100 mark, while
was precipitated into the river be- exports believe the week will be mechanism t0 work.
low, a distance of not less than the hottest of the summer.
. "i.T.""'"' y"'"".0! foitv feet Mr Clark and Mr.1 Other temperatures over the
^ man power, highlv mechanized, is. y wain ana i\i.. ~
> being turned loose on the Jap-'11"*0 were workinS on anothor "tat* a 2
/ anese and is being rapidly, mo- "ca«°ld "bout 25 fect distanc« lb el 1^0 Cor'nu ChHsti 92
bilized for the first time anrl will and bearing the noise, looked Abilene, 100, Coipus Ohiisti, 9-,
' I around but saw nothing Mr Brownsville, 90 and Galveston, 88.
be sent to the war front. aiouna, out saw notning. Mr. . , M
In the lot for the particular sec-! clark remarked to his companion! Highest temperature m the N -
tor are 100 bombing planes, fifty he wondered what had become of £°n was Jh°enix s llo. d En -
field guns and forty howitzers. [Frank, when, casting his eyes The
It is charged that Japanese com- down t0 the water, saw his head «rcea there 30 P- m-
manders are deliberately staying JP°P UP out of the depths
away from all efforts at I Johnson struck
ADA, Okl^.—Five persons were! An alm0st Perfect 8rade oi' 96
injured in an auto accident Sun-|Wa9 attaincd by, Fire Chief Pat
day afternoon when a bus crash-lLowe and Fireman Douglas Hos-
ed. The injured passengers were 1 ford during the recent Firoman'3
Mrs. Amie Bradshaw and two!sch°o1 at Texas A" and M" co1"
children and Mrs. Joseph Jackson ,ef?e' accordinf? to a letter receiv-
Evans of Ada. Ied here from R- Brayton,
The cause of the accident was , scb°°l director.
Mr. Brayton complimented the
Last Obstacle In Way Of
Adjournment Is Tackled
Everyday
DENISON
Rebels Die
In Droves
. At Madrid
Deadly Fire of Loyalists 0dd iighta: tw° truckloads of
Troops Brings Death To|men and women P s9inK through
Hundreds of Insurgents!Den,son'the machines covered by
huge streamers revealing the ria-
MADRID—Hundreds of lives' ers were members of the "Black
are reported to have paid the for- Hawk HikinS Club," somewhere in
felt in rebel ranks following their
mutiny in towns scattered over a
wide area of the rebel forces, it Bil1 Conatser and his dad, J. V.
was learned this morning. Reports Conatser, breezed into Waco Sat-
of such mutiny, and consequent ( urday to see the North-South foot-
executlons come from more than a ba" dream Same which the north
dozen different cities and towns. t outfit won 7 to 0. While both
I enjoyed the melee to the hilt, Bill
Sugar Quota
Bill Urged,
Be Passed
Sugar Bloc May be Powerful
Enough to Override Pres-
ident's Veto, Backers Say;
Roosevelt Rests at N. Y.
MADRID-
rebels went
Another Banquet
Wave after wave of j was *or 'he first time confronted j To Quiet Rumbles
down before the with the proposition which faces i
deadly fire of loyal troops as they ^'m at Texas A. and M. as far as j President Planning Speech
defended their position and the ^is football career is concerned.
dead and dying lay in heaps in four of the backfield men for the
city'of" Denison" highVVn'h'aving Sunday's fighting and the posl-; North, including Marion Pugh of
representatives at the school, real-, of the government troops Ft. Worth and W,ldhorse Mayes
j more safe than ever today, it is of Amarillo, are entering the same
j institution this fall. However,
CHICAGO—At least 117 per- izinf? the nec*aaity for ivlnK ev*
peace) «««• out for the
parleys. Ambassador Kowago has! shore and was met by the ferry-1
is de- man who went out to his assis-
tance in a boat and took him on
returned
clared.
to Shanghai, it
Millers Pound
Swift for 6-1
Victory Sunday
Dickerson Scores Only Pack-
er Tally By Stealing Home
In Ninth Fame of Game
board.
Clark says it
must have been
Cubs Again Six
Games Ahead
In Loon Race
at least a minute that Johnson re-'Yank Guns are Silenced but
They beat Indians; Chisox
mained under water. The water
at that spot is full of eddye and
about ten feet deep.
Johnson had no recollection of
touching bottom, but says he
Drop One to Red Sox Sun.
Chicago, for a while thought to
be dropping off in its dash for
sons were killed in auto accidents ; ery Possible protection to property
over the weekend, according to re- and health of citizens here. He
ports from over the country late'a,so Paid h'Kh compliment to Mr.
Sunday night. I Lowe and Mr. Hosford on the in-
tensive study they gave the
KANSAS CITY" Five persons courses taught at the school in an j
were injured when a tail-on acc'i- effort to become thoroughly, fa-
dent happened last Kignt by two' miliar w>tb the latest, fire fighting
Frisco trains backing into each methods.
other.
declared.
to Help in Senate Griev-
ance; Members are Irked
WASHINGTON—The seventy-
fifth Congress got down to near
the last obstacle that stands in the
From Andalusia comes the re- we'll pit Bill against either of them way of its adjournment, the chief
port that about 400 were killed and put our chips on him every
And, Boy, that's enfi-
With Ty Fitzgerald and Bullock
handcuffing Fort Worth with five
hits while their mates pounded
Bloomer for eight, Denison Millers
defeated a strong Swift outfit 6
to 1 here Sunday afternoon.
Fitzgerald toiled five innings,
•truck out ten men and allowed
two hits before he retired with
an injured arm. Bullock took
over the mound work and held !
the packers to three hits the rest avenue today and a gang of men i
of the way, besides retiring eight
went down so far he had strong |the National league pennant, has
misgivings about reaching the sur-1 iust started, according to experts
face alive.
The plank on which Johnson
was standing and which went
down with him, was broken in
striking the water while Johnson
humself suffered only a few slight
bruises.
August 9, 1887 .
Six carloads of machinery, to
be used in boring the new Mis-
souri-Pacific artesian well, were
unloaded at the foot of Austin
who watched the double header
win over Boston Sunday after-
noon 3 to 0 and 3 to 2.
Meanwhile the Giants let the
Cubs go six games ahead by win-
ning one from Pittsburgh 10 to 2,
then dropping the afterpiece of a
double header 3 to 0 because Jim
'Weaver baffled them with three
hits. St. Louis beat Philadelphia
3 to 2 and tied the second game
6 to G in twelve frames, called
because of darkness.
by the strikeout route.
The highlight of the game came
In the ninth when Dickerson, Swift
first sacker, doubled, advanced to
third on an infield out, then stote
h n.j Xpr .tie omy run.
Box Scores
Swift— ab r li e
J. Tool, 3b 3 0 1
B. Pulliman, 2b 3 0 0
Noorian, cf 3 0 0
Dickerson, lb 3 11
S. Tool, rf 4 0 1
Smelley, ss 2 0 0
Polanavich, c 3 0 1
J. Jullimaii, If 2 0 0
Temple, If 10 0
Bloomer, p 3 0 1
i Cincinnati blasted Brootdyn 6
were at once set to erect a sev-| . *
... . . „ , „llf to 4, then tied them in the night-
enty-five foot derrick and to put ■ , . . ,
nnnnrnfim caP !-uP in ten stanzas, also call-
the engine and drilling apparatus
in position ready to begin work.
The company has at last resolved
to find water in sufficient quan
ed because of darkness.
The Yanks had their home run
barrage stopped for the first time
, .. , . . - .. | in eleven games but managed to
tit.es to supply their wants, if it I ^ fl to 5 Boston won
exists anywhere under Den son., off ? ^ fl ^ ^ ^
o , and to this end they, will drill to
O.n depth of 3000 feet if need b?
0 | in order to strike arteMan water.
t I The result of this ptitei prise will
0 bs looked forward to with interest
0 as it will serve to cast light upon
11 the mineral formations underlying
HOUSTON, Tex.—-Mi-a Mary
Lewis was perhaps fatally injured
and her sister Miss Kate Lewis,
badly injured and three others
shaken up when their automobile
was wrecked near here. They
were on a vacation trip from Kan-
sas City, and were on their way
to Galveston.
Plymouth Car
Strikers Are
Back at Work
Chief Lowe said the- high
grades, the highest ever scored
by Denison representatives to the
school, would not affect the key
rate scale here, inasmuch as it is
as low now as it can under statit
regulations. The minimum was
received following the 1936 school
at College station, attended by
Mr. Lowe and Fire Marshall Dick
Gray.
in a revolt among rebels.
Miss Reynolds
Dies Saturday
At Home Here
thing now standing in the way be-
ing the sugar quota bill which is
being urged by the sugar bloc.
It was declared today that
'should the bill as favored by the
Tax Payment
Is Put Over
Until July 26
winning streak snapped at 13 to 0
when Johnny Whitehead held them
to four scattered hits.
Philadelphia tired of losing
continually, took both ends of a
twin bill from St. Louis 5 to 4
In
DETROIT—A total of 21,000 ' AUSTIN—Because the twenty-
automobile workers wh0 have been' fifth of this month falls on Sun-
idle at the Plymouth corporation! day, Texas employers subject to
the Unemployment Compensation
Act have until midnight, July 26,
to pay their contributions of one
and eight-tenths per cent on their
June payrolls. Interest of one per
centum per month is collected on
delinquent contributions.
This announcement was made
today by Orville S. Carpenter,
Chairman-Director of the Unem-
ployment Compenseation Commis-
sion.
Subject employers are also re-
minded that their second quarter-
ly summary reports on earnings
of employees muse
for several days because of a
strike, will return to their work
today for the first time since the
strike which has cost millions,
was inaugurated.
Settlement of all matters was
made in an agreement made Sat-
urday, by a committee and was
ratified Sunday at a mass meet-
ing.
NORMANDY BREAKS
THE RECORD AGAIN
time,
dence!
I R. D. Leatherman, the Kialto &
. Star manager here has returned; bloc be vetoed by Mr. Roosevelt,
j from a three week vacation in that there will be enough votes to
override his veto.
The president is remaining ov-
er another day at Hyde Park
working on his speech to be de-
livered Tuesday nignt at another
dinner planned for bringing about
peace in the senate.
There is a strong sentiment
that the defeat of Senator Pat
Harrison by th® margin of one
vote for the office of senate lead-
er was brought about by under-
cover support of Mr. Roosevelt
for Senator Albn Barclay of Ken-
tucky.
California and other sections of
j the United States, satsfied but a
Miss Ida Reynolds, 64, resident IittIe tired- He teI,s us he never
of Denison for four years, died so much as wet his bathing suit
at her home Saturday at 5:45 p. | dur'ng period—quite a knock
m. at 1705 Woodlawn BouTevavrd.! for those Su,iny California boost-
She had been ill for one year. ers who say their state has the
Funeral service will be con- ')es^ swimming in the world.
ducted Monday afternoon at 31
o'clock from the Short-Murray' Denison boys who have left for
chapel with Rev. Burton Coffman CaW°rnia seem to be doing all
of the Walnut Street Church of l'ight, according to those who have
Christ, Sherman, officiating. In- returned here for visfts. Charlie
terment will be at West Hill cem-1 ''ace and Fred Schweisinger are
etery, Sherman, with Short-Mur-' t'>e latest to blow in. Both are
ray. directing. j beading back for the state of per-
Miss Reynolds was born in Ell- • petual sunshine pretty quick.
ingham, 111., March 7, 1872, her, -
parents being Mr. and Mrs. J. B. I *r°r ^'rst ^me since moving
Reynolds. She had followed the' l,ctures appeared, a real picturiza-
teaching profession for years and V°n a newsi>aperman is shown
was a graduate of the Denton! 'n Exclusive" starring Fred Mac-
Teachers' college. She had taught ®'uri-ay, Charlie Ruggles and
in Grayson county for twenty-' Frances Farmer. Ii reveals just
' what a paper hound really knows
eight years, part of which was at
the Houston ward school. She
went to San Antonio where she
was connected with the agricultur-
al extension work until illness
forced her retirement.
but doesn't print., and just how
human they are. However, one
rarely finds those hard drinkers
shown in the film. The profes-
sion, just like any other business
She had made her home with a requires sobriety, honesty, etc.
Without them a writer wouldn't
last long on a first class paper.
Hither And Yon
WITH KEN
::lsw YORK—The Normandy
held the record today for the best of earnings
time made across the Atlantic be filed with the Commission by
, i . , j and 7 to 3, using five hurlers
1, Denison that have never been had ^ five.innin(f ,OTltc,t called h„.
" before and will help to test the ex-
Totals 27 1 5
Millers— ah r~ h
Shearer, rf 4 11
Rushing, lb 4 0 1
Lake, ss 4 10
Brantley, c 3 0 0
Boatwright, cf 4 11
Mosse, 8b 3 0 1
Beckleman, If 4 12
Luck, 2b 3 0 0
( ^' Fitzgerald, p 12 1
4 Bullock, p 2 0 1
istance of natural gas and oil in
this vicinity. Artesian water is
what the railway company is af-
® ter, but they may strike something
® ' of even greater value before they
are through.
Died: At the family residence,
on Woodard street at 4 o'clock,
today, Miss Blanche Gunter, aged
23 y,ears. Funeral services will be
conducted by Rev. T. E. Sherwood
cause of rain, Detroit defeated
Washington 5 to 1.
In the Texas league, Fort
Worth toppled Dallas 12 to 5;
Oklahoma City ran roughshod ov-
er Tulsa 15 to 5; Galveston edged
out Beaumont 2 and 1; San An-
tonio took both ends of a bargain
bill with Houston 8 to 1 and 5 to
2.
ocean, both east and west when
the ship completed the trip across
the second time in less than four
day,®. The record was 3 clays, 22
hours and 17 minutes.
July 31. First quarterly sum-
mary reports were due May 31.
These reports are made on forms
(Continued on Paire A)
- I at the residence tomorrow at 3:30 les Senti| George Stoneri Ct c<
0!p. m. with Interment in Oakwood Ca|vert> j„hn FinnjKani w> Cum.
I cemetery.
6 8 0
Totals 32
Runs by innings:
Swift 000 000 001
Millers 002 220 000
August 9, 1902
mins W. B. Munson, M. J. Fitz
gerald, J. R. Culinane, William
The meeting called by the may- j Mosse, Ralph St. John, M. R. Her-
or at the cityihall last Friday night ron, John Dinscth, Frank Mamola,
1 to arrange for the anniversary
6' celebration on the 23rd of Sep-
tember was poorly attended, only
thirteen being present. Those who
Music With Coats
STOCKBRIDGE, Mass— When
a symphony orchestra was playing
a concert Sunday before a large
audience, the conductor remarked
that the "hall was Infernally hot"
and asked if the listeners objected
to the musicians removing their
coats. They roared back a dis-
approve). They wanted their
musicians coats and all.
B. B, Pyle, Levi Lingo, Hugh
Hanna, B. C. Murray, J. C. Let-
cher Turner iWilson, Prof. J. E.
Blair, C. D. Kingston, H. C.
were present, however, were en- Johnson, M. C. Husted, Woodmen
thusiastic and they, went to work
with a determination to make the
celebration a success. They ap-
of the world; F. E. Allison, Trades
Council; J. E. O'Brien, machin-
ist; H. Huson. W B R E.; T.
1 The alpha rays shot out by ra-
dium travel, 18,750 miles a sec-
ond-
pointed sub-committees to arrange , Robinson, BUofW.
matters and report to the gen-1 Joe Euper was made chairman
of the general committee and
manager of affairs.
Pension Refunds
Total $50,000 In
Denison Monday
Approximately $50,000 was paid ten day vacation in Arkansas,
local employes of the Missouri- ——
Kansas-Texas lines Monday morn-| Dispatcher H. A. Lampman has
ing in amounts ranging from eight left for a ten day vacation at Chi-
eents to $106. The money rep- cago.
resents deductions made by the! —
road under the old pension law. KRAFT NEWS
preceding the present railway re-; A. J. Riddle, Southwestern div-
tirement act. Under the old act ision general manager, has left
the men contibuted a small per-' with Mrs. Riddle and daughter,
eral committee at a subsequent
meeting. The general committee
is composed of the following gen-
tlemen and nearly every order In
the city is represented: James
Boyd, R. M. King, John Leeper,
Dan Tracy, A. B. Hall, B. F.
Shepherd, J L. Higginson, E. E.
Mrs. F. R. Lawhon and daugh-
ter, Eloise, left Saturday for
Memphis, Tenn., to visit with the
former's brother C. A. Morgan
and family. Miss Eloise is em-
Davis, J. S. Knnur, J. E. Howard,' ployed* in the office of Babcock
Jerrie Strait, Ben Johnson, Char- Bros.
cent of their salary to an equal Rose Marie, for a three week's
amount supplied by, the rail com-. vacation, to be spent at resorts in
pany. This was abolished under Colorado
the new system and the amounts
paid are being returned.
sister, Mrs. Ethel Boren for some
time, at which place she died. Be
sides, Mr. Boren, a brother sur-
vives, Ila Reynolds, of Luella.
Leatherman is
Back After 3
Weeks Vacation
A a
After being oui of the city for
a period of three weeks, R. D.
Leatherman, manager of the Ri-
alto and Star theatres, is back on
the job today, greatly rested and
delighted with his visit to Cali-
fornia and parts of Texas since
coming back to the state this past
week., he states.
Mr. Leatherman left here with
the intention of making personal
visit to Hollywood where the pic-
tures are in large part produced
which he furnishes his patrons.
He says that the stupendous-
ness of Hollywood does not tell
the«story." Tt was completely ov-
erwhelming, he said, and no one
can imagine its magnitude. He
said he saw enough to know how
to really get into the thing right
on another visit which he says he
will surely take. To really see
the place right, one must have an
engagement several months ahead,
he stated, as there is always a
waitine* list
Mr. Leatherman said that Los
That. Pa<L-U*e and Doug Hos-
ford had the interests of Denison
at heart is shown in their grades
of 96 scored at the recent fireman
school at College Station. Realiz-
ing the full importance of learn-
ing everything they could for the
betterment of the city, the pair
studied hard and long during the
several day class period. Deni-
son's fire force is probably one of
the best in the state.
Nomination for the funniest pic-
ture scene during the past three
years: Impressions of a woman
bathing by a man in "New Faces
of 1037." When he scratched
after pantomining removing a cor-
set, even the women in the theatre
screamed with laughter.
J. C. Parker, Railway Express
messenger, on runs between Den-
ison and Waco, left with his fam-
ily on No. 3 this morning for a
two weeks vacation to be spent at there.
Chicago and Cincinnatti.
Dispatcher E. L. O'Conell re-
sumed his duties Monday after a
Angeles was so big in the business
n . . , , , , area that one could keep driving
Brister, packaged loaf _ , .,
for twenty-five miles in one direc-
tion and never get out of the dis-
trict. He stid that is why eiti-
ens of Los Angeles claim that
the business and city property cov-
ers more acreage than any town in
the world.
From the Florida Times-Union
Have you heard a radio announcer
say he was going to make an im-
portant announcement and then
follow it by an important announ-
cement?
For the first time in many,
weeks, Bill Fields came out first
best aganst Charle McCarthy Sun-
day night when, after an ex-
change of witticisms, Fields told
Charlie, "Aw, go sit in a post hole.
The exterior walls of Caste<
Nuovo are windowless structures
measuring four feet in thickness,.
On each of the four corners is a
massive tower also devoid of win-
dows or apertures except within
about 6 feet of the very top. A
moat still entirely surrounds the
castle with the characteristic
draw bridge of olden time, still in
use and lowered on its creaking
chains to afford us entrance. Ac-
tual construction on this castle be-
gan in 1283 and it not entirely
I completed until 1443 (approxi-
mately 50 years before Columbus
discovered America) when the last
stone was laid in the triumphal
arch of Alfonso 1st., at his com-
mand, commemorating his en-
trance into the city on Feb. 27th
of that year. This castle continued
to serve as the residence of kings
and viceroys during the middle
ages, down to Chas, III. Some-
one interrupts to ask if we meant
to say that Castel Nuovo hswl a
roof that covered two full sized
blocks? Perhaps we should have
been more explicit in stating that
the castle is built in the form of
a hollow square and the Interior
i3 not completely roofed, but con-
tains an open courtyard instead.
The inner walls are also as replete
with windows, balconies and lat-
ticed porticoes as the exterior
walls are devoid of them. Much
of the "life" within the castle
really took place npon the huge
balconies or in the immense cob-
blestone courtyard below. Any-
thing from a duel to a bullfight
was often staged here for royal
entertainment.
S. A.
cheese sales manager, has depart-
ed on a two week vacation, part
of which will be spent at Fort
Worth. Mr. Brister plans to at-
tend the Frontier Fiesta while
Miss Maxine Cook, general of-
fice accountant, is now spending
a weeks vacation in Houston.
FORMAL PROTEST IS
REGISTERED TODAY
LONDON—Formal protest was
made by the British government
today to the rebels of Spain for
an airplane attack on a British
vessel last week. The protest was
lodged through Sir Henry Chilton,
Accompanying Mr. Leatherman ^ton-dor for Great Britlan.
was Morris Regensburger, the two
| Denisonian« making the trip over-
1 land.
Drlv Safety—Net C irlossty
MILTON CHRISTMAN HOME
DAMAGED BY FIRE SDN.
A small fire starting from "
lighted cigarette, damaged the
Milton Chrlstman home, 1001 W.
Murray street early Sunday, morn-
ing, according to fire reports.
NOTICE
If yoa do not receive yoor
paper by 5 p. m. each day,
please phone 800 ®nd ont will
be sent yon.
THE DENISON PRESS
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 41, Ed. 1 Monday, August 9, 1937, newspaper, August 9, 1937; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth327668/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.