The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 250, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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WCATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy to cloudy* today
and Friday
The Denison Press
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
YOUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY NEWSPAPER
t
35c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS {THURS., APRIL 17th, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1*30—DAILY 1934
VOL. 'll—NO. 260
London Has Greatest Air Raid In War History
EVERYDAY
DENISON
By
LOUIS ANDERSON
•-------------------4)
Nomination for the toughest job
riglit now: Clyde Wideman, a cap-
able man, who walked in and took
over the city secretary’s job with-
out a bit of assistance. It was
like walking from light into dark-
ness suddenly . . . When Judge
C. B. Carroll told this corner yex-
wday that six persons had ig-
ipred court summons on traffic
violations, he did not bring out
that under the law the violators
could draw a contempt of court
fine of up to $100 and three days
in jail . . . Best laughs come from
over the nation where draft
boards send hot letters to “men”
asking why they hadn't registered,
later to find out the “men” were
^vomen . . . Joseph Schenck, movie
riiagnate, has been found guilty,
5f tax evasion in a NYC court |
ft Hiid could draw a sentence of ten !
It al-
Name For Dairy Show
Is Chosen; Cash Awards
The Denison Dairy Cattle Show dairy show to he staged here May
was the name selected by the agri-j 15. The committee also decided to
! culture committee of the Chamber! make awards of IS trophies and
of Commerce in a meeting Wed
nesday night for the first annual
Baptists Urge
Tightening Of
Liquor Sales
DALLAS, April 17—The Bap-
tist state Suday School conven-
tion today had urged the Texas
senate to approve legislation tight-
ening restrictions on the sale of
drugstore liquor in dry territory,
as had been done in the House, in
n resolution adopted at the gener-
al session in the First Baptist
church.
The resolution was adopted un-
years in the hoosegow . . It al-1 tVnimousiy by the delegates repre
ways has been a wonder to bhu» | Rentin(? more than 500,000 Texas
corner why one with a big income i Bapljst Sunday gch00l members,
hates to pay an income tax ... j Sundav school workers attend-
Ethel Barrymore has been chosen
by NYC actors as the best for her
performance in The Corn is Green
. , . Nomination for a swell per-
sonality. Mrs. Bess Murphy Drew.
The newspaper profession misses
her.
Berlin is planning to make a
film similar to the Great Dictator
in which HDR and Churchill will
be ridiculed. For showing in
South America ... A newspaper
advertisement on a special sale
listed a prize rug at $29.95, with
addition of ‘‘lasts three days.” . ■
And Jimmy Fidler suggests that
Bing Crosby get wise enough to
quit trying to clean up on horse
race bets, rather get ahead by
charging royalties on jokes about
his nags from air comedians. Ain't
it so, Butch . . . Time’s a wasting:
it takes you 1 -50th of a second
to wink your eye involuntarily . . •
One columnist'suggests that Rus-
Sunday school
ing the convention spent a buy
afternoon Wednesday soaking up
information and gaining inspira-
tion at more than a dozen depart-
ment conferences covering every
phase of Sunday school activity.
iDr. J. B. Tidwell, head of the
Baylor university Bible depart-
ment of Waco, warned delegates
against making some one doctrine
of the church a hobby. No mat-
ter how glorious the doctrine may
be it shouldn’t be ridden to death,
lie suid. He spoke at the ad-
ministrative conference.
"You can kill a snake by grind-
ing its head in the ground once,"
he said, “but some of our people
stay until sundown beating it to
death.”
$200 in cash prizes.
To each dairy farmer register-
ing at least five milk cows, an
attendance prize will be awarded;
to the exhibitor having at least
one animal placing in the events,
registered young dairy bull and
heifer will be awarded.
’I he show will be of the classi-
fication variety and grade cows
of any of the dairy breeds will be
eligible to participate. Cash
awards will he presented for all
animals placing in the show.
Trophies and cash awards will
be given the champion of each of
12 classes, junior champion fe-
male, senior champion female;
junior champion male, senior
champion male, grand champion
female and grand champion male.
Business men will be asked to do-
nate the trophies.
The Denison F’uture Farmers of
America chapter was given the
concessions right and''will be
A
111
Action
On Tax
Bill Seen
{
I m
The Cass County Kids of Sta-
tion WFAA, Dallas, who are in
entertainment demand at all kinds
of events, ranging from cowboy
roundups to debutante parties, will
accompany the 40th annual Dallas
Business Tour to Denison Friday,
PeH 12:15 to 1:10 p. m. Their reper
mitted to keep all profits for its ■ toii-e includes popular, modern,
treasury. western and hill-billy numbers.
Invitations will be extended to j The (;ass County Kids have been
all farmers in North Texas and | on jjje a;r waves of the southwest1
Southeastern Oklahoma to register|for four years. Together with a1
who will accompany the Dallas
goodwill delegation, they will pre-
sent an informal entertainment
program here to which the public
is invited. The 78 Dallas business
men and their entertainers will
travel aboard a 12-car special
train, made up of deluxe railroad
equipment. The 1941 Dallas Bus-
iness Tour will travel 1,900 miles
in five days, and will visit Deni-
son and 34 other cities in Texas
and Oklahoma. George I. Plummer
for the show. Jerome McKinney,
committee chairman, was in
charge of the meeting.
Easy To Meet
All-Out Demand
For Oil In US
iUl luut J ....... —
band and other radio entertainers is general chairman of the tour
12“Grade System
In Texas Schools
DHS Principal
Is Honored
Superintendent B. McDaniel
said today that Denison public
schools probably would concur
with the remainder of the state
a Texas 12-grade
sia, after watching Adolf at work
for a while, will change its form-1 biographical
er ruler to “Ivan the Sissy” . . . “Leaders in Education,” received
Omaha>, Neb., experimented the through the mail Wednesday uf-
th(
other day and what it learned
should hold attention of
drivers- One police can started
over a four mile course tn town,
ignoring all common courtesies,
WASHINGTON, April 17—Re-
cent estimtes by various authori-
ties, including the Bureau of
j Mines, thqj an increase of 20 per
cent in the demand for crude pe- ........._ ______
troleum and petroleum products j establishing
will result from an all-out defense , school system,
effort, or actual warfare—an in-1 while verification of the con-
crease of approximately 300,000,-1 curreIR.e would have to wait until
Thumbing through a 1-123-page; Q()0 ban.eU of t.rude production a j---
directory, entitled, ypar_is beinR generally accepted |
us conservative.
ad
(Continued on page four)
Discussion Of
Engineer School
, " )Plans for locating of a state
■aeronautical engineering school to
be operated along the same prin-
ciples as Texas A. & M. and Texas
Tech, for this area, will be discuss-
ed in joint meeting this after-
noon between the Denison and
Sherman Chambers of Commeve
in the local chamber’s offices.
A bill to create the school for
Grayson county has been intro-
duced in the state legislature by
Yenaitor Olan R. Van Zandt of
Tioga. There are only two other
schools of this nature in the Unit-
ed States, one of which is in New
York und the other in California.
, ternoon, E. E. Rogers, high school
dizzy I principal, fund his name listed
among the 15,000 educational
leaders of the nation.
-Mr. Rogers’ name was the only
North Texas school head lusted and
he was selected because of a re-
cent thesis he wrote on school
legislation which is now being us-
ed as a basic course at Southern
Methodist University. ‘Another
reason he was was listed in the
huge volume is because he is the
state representative of high school
I rincipals und supervisors for the
National Educational Association.
A brief outline of Mr. Rogers’
accomplishments was also listed
The principal said he had no
advance notice he would be listed
in the book, and that it came as
a surprise.
FELONY CONVICTIONS
ARt NO HINDRANCE
A man convicted of a felony,
but who receives a suspended sen-
tence, is still eligible for induc-
tion into the military servic - if
otherwise subject to the Selective
Service act, the Denison ,-.ren draft
board was informed today by Gen-
eral J. Watt Page, state director.
General Page pointed out that
this rule applies in those cases in
which the suspended sentence is
still pending as well as in those
cases in which the suspended sen-
tence has been set aside.
The local board was instructed
to check its classification records
and to reclassify and induct in the
order of their order numbers all
registrants heretofore placed in
Class IV-F ns felons who came
within the review of this ruling.
To Make Appointment
The city commission Friday will
appoint i> fire marshal to replace
George Shields, who recently was
appointed, but declined the posi-
tion. Earl Whlteacre is holding
the job until another appointment
can be made.
Daring Hijackers
Rob Messengers
For Newspaper
HAN ANTONIO, Tex., April 17
Police spread a net Wednesday
night for a during gunmen who
obtained $2,009 in cash and $200
in checks in a mid-day robbery of
three San Antonio Express Pub-
lishing company messengers.
The robbery occurred in the
lobby of the Express building as
the messengers, Bill Mergele, A.
C. Strum and J. J. Thomas, stood
there waiting the car which wax
to have taken them to the bank.
One of the bandits, armed with
a gun, snatched the bag contain-
ing the money and fled to the
street, where his confederate was
awaiting in an automobile.
They drove off and escaped in
traffic. Witnesses obtained the
license number of the automobile
and police were checking auto
camps and filling stations through-
out the area in an attempt to trace
the men.
Petroleum economists have
vised the government, through the
Office of Production Management,
that the oil industry can meet this
call for increased nroduction with-
out a ripple; that it will mean
merely turning a few valves now
holding shut-in production. Ex-
perts in the refining branch of the
industry likewise have advised
that refinery capacity now idle,
though in good condition, can be
Utilized to increase the output by
25 per cent almst overnight. Any
conceivable added demand for
crude or refined products can bo
met by the industry w-ithout inter-
ferring with normal consumption,
the government has been advised.
Specific needs of the armed
forces of the United States, in-
cluding both army and navy, eith-
er for an all-out defense effort, or
even or actual hostilitiw*. have not
been made known, but experts
have named over-all estimates to
| cover the expected increase in de-
mand. These range from 75,000,-
I 000 to 150,000,000 barrels a year
under a maximum peuee-time de-
fense program. These estimates
do not include aviation, or 100
octane, gasoline. A tremendous
increase in the consumption of
such gasoline is expected, but the
industry again lays claim that it
is amply fortified in this field and
can produce aviation gasoline to
meet any maximum demand with-
out interference with the normal
conduct of the industry or cur-
tailment of normal consumption.
Telegraph Men
Are Unionized
Omnibus Measure Is
Reported Out By
Senate Committee
Major Lines Of
Battle Forming
At Mt. Olympus
I BERN, Switzerland, April 17—j LONDON, April 17—More than
I The major battle lines are forming i 100,000 incendiary and explosive
today between allied and axis bombs were dropped on London
AUSTIN, Tex., April 17—Im-
mediate senate consideration is
seen today for the $23,661,000 a
year omnibus tax bill that the
state affairs committee reported
out late Wednesday night.
These are the allocations of the their
bill: To the old-age assistance
fund, $7,200,0(30; teacher retire-
ment fund, $3,500,000; adult blind
fund, $400,000; destitute children
$1,500,000.
The remainder of the bill's yield
would be divided between the gen-
eral revenue fund and the avail-
able school fund. In what portions
it would be divided was not cal-
culated, but it .probably will be in
the proportion of three-fourths to
the general fund and one-fourth
to the available school fund.
New taxes in the senate bill, of'
forces near Mount Olympus, and
Germany claimed Yugoslavia no
longer had a potent army.
The German army wax report-
edly smashing at three British and
Greek defensive lines nca/r Maunt
Olympus, but the Greeks said
lines were holding fast
during the night, the greatest air
raid ever made on a metropolis in
history, it wa; believed today.
Berlin said the raid was one of
reprisal against the British for
one made by the RAF on Berlin
recently. And the Reich said that
more would follow if the British
against furious assaults. The use “bad judgment” and again
Greeks said a “new phase of the bomb Nazi objectives.
war” was underway, but did not
clarify the statement.
Smoke pal!:; over the city hung
thickly today and thousands of
Germany officially claimed that | persons are wandering the streets,
Yugoslavia no longer was able to , homeless and with their family
give the Nazi army there ary | f*ead. London made no effort to
trouble and that as a result toe I ,-stimate how many persons were
German army in Yugoslavia could killed jn the raid, but it was ex-
be pulled away for fighting in ; pPcted to be an enormous number.
Greece. Fire fighters this morning had
In Africa, German troop; wer jUst about put out all the blazes
repulsed with heavy losses, Britain started by the Nazi bombings that
, ■ i «... n-iiiJL ... ik. .. .i .1______*.
claimed, by British units at
Libyan port of Tobruk, a
fered as a substitute for a house j Berlin claimed was being evacu-
ated by the British. Heavy fight-
ing at the city is reported still un-
der way.
The Greek high command com-
munique disclosed that one Ger-
man column entered the upper
valley of the Aliakmon river
a formal school board meeting, a
survey of the individual members
showed them to be overwhelming
favor of the evtra grade system.
AUSTIN, Tex., April 17—Rapid
adoption by Texas schools of the "rjrt^n
twelve-grade system brought an-
nouncement today from State
Supt. L. A. Woods that a recog-
nized pattern had been designated
by the state department of educa-
tion.
hill estimated to yield $.1,899,060
more than this one, wouid reach
milady’s cosmetics at 2 per cent of
sales price, also her radio at the
same 2 per cent while the master
of the house would pay the state
one per cent of the cost of his
new automobile. The children also
are hit by the bill, which proposes
an impost of soft drings, l-6c for
each bottle sold and 20c the gal-
lon of syrup.
took the life of some of the great-
er-known Britishers, including a
Lord and his wife.
The RAF struck hard at inva-
sion ports on the French channel
and German areas, including Bre-
men.
the region of Grevena. sixty miles
south of the Yugoslav frontier in
a drive toward Kalabaka, which is
the entrance to the plains of Thes-
| saly.
LON,D|0N, April 17—The Cert
in I man air force struck its most in
. ... ^.4
Even the old topers must eon- j The other column plunging
tribute, for the substitute levies I southward from the Kozan» Plat
$1.28 tax per gallon on all liquors j eau to the east also crossed the
sold in the state and also a 20c I Aliakmon river. This drive was
tax on each liquor prescription : toward the western slopes of
tensive and destructive blow of
the war at London during tho
night- Virtually all of the sprawl-
ing metropolitan area was sub-
jected to a sustained aerial bom-
bardment lasting about eight
hours.
Hundreds of planes, evidently
more than Adolf Hitler ever has
sent across the channel in one
Voucher* Received
Twq state aid vouchers have
been received this week by the
Cit/ten0 National hank, county
scool depository. One W'as tor
slightly more than $12,000 in
transportation aid and the other
represented $L50 on the per cap-
ita apportionment.
The four Denison Western Un-
ion employees, under management
of Joe Ward, are included in the
6,000 WU employees of the south-
west chartered by the American
Federation of Labor organizers,
which it was declared to be a ma-
jor victory over the CIO. It is al-
so believed the company's natioh-
wide personnel will soon “go A-
F. of L.”
Paul C. Holmes, divisional sec-
retary-treasurer of the Telegraph
Workers Union has submitted the
charter for ratification to Western
Union employees in eight states—
Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Lou-
isiana, New Mexico, Colorado,
Kansas and Missouri.
The Telegraph Workers Union,
successor to the Association of
Western Union Employees, a com-
pany union outlawed by the U. S.
Supreme Court, is recognized as
had
I ll/VUIl. | —-----
The available school fund would j eastern anchor of the allied do
receive approximately $2,765,000 fense line. Obviously this ©as.-
and the general fund $8,295,000 j ern column intended to skirt Mt.
additional revenue. | Olympus and encircle its firecely
On oil the bill proposes a levy | fighting defenders,
of 4c a barrel and 4 per cent of j Kalabaka is the northern rail-
#n‘ . value when the market price is ; head of a line running to Trikka
Woods a«ked all county and o- ^ a barre|. This it is esti- j l„ and connecting with Laris; ,
cal superintendents to put the new would add $8,0T0,0OO to . Athens and the main Greek rail
plan into operation as early as poa- ^ re’venue from this source and j network.
sible. -e lhe total yie|d from 0ii $22,- I Farther east, the German com
The recognized pattern consists Thc Houge bill levied ' mand .said, the Germans
of an elementary school of eight >> , wouW R wgg Mtjmated, crossed to the south hank of '!
grades followed by the x an ar< $9,000,000 additional rev- I Aliakmon from the heights of K
tour-year high school, ho said, tu , >
added that it might be changed to ciue._____
a six-grad© elementary, three-year I
junior high and three-year senior ii- L U/atpr
high system for those who desire lUgll YY CXICI
’ Wood.- »id, Stops Drilling
schools will be supplied with out- 11/_ I, At PiifP
lines listing minimum require- ] yVOiK I UTC
ments of each of the eight grades —--
comprising the elementary schoool j DURANT, Ok-, April 17-
“No school should be classified j water as result of heavy
under the new plan as a
toward tne western siopt-a ui ......... , ,
Mount Olympus, which forms the !' !ghtp threw everything they had
into the raid.
They topped their previous peaks
of spectacularity by dive-bomb-
ing,, apparently using tht dreaded
, Stukas which had such devastating
'and demoralizing effects in Poland
and the western campaign-
The extent of casualties was
unknown when the all-clear before
(Continued on page four)
Suggs Honored
With Membership
j zane. This is about fifteen miles
I south of the town of Kozane. The _
, Aliakmon describes « sharp V | Tom Su^ Denison born
I across the Greek peninsula before | ^ has Wn ^
I emptying into Salonika. j M distinuished honor, it was an-
South of the Albanian town of rounced todav having been made
Corizza, the Italians were ack-1 member of ^be American Judica-
1 nowledged to have taken the gorge
| of Kiasma Marit (apparently
-Hign i the Devol river )
rains
.... „ seven-1 stopped drilling on one Pure Oil | DEATH ROLL
grade or as an eleven-grade | company well today and forced |
school,” he declared.
He explained that pupils com-
pleting the seventh grade this year
under an eleven-grade system "*
.supreme Court, is recognized as accreAiieA e!e,uentary school
their exclusive bargaining agency 11,1 1,1 , , .
by the charter, Holmes has declar- ! operating urn tt 1 .
oil from his Dallas headquarters. ' should he at mitt' > m x
Holmes also disclosed there had
been a fight between the 'A. F. of
L. and CIO organizers to affiliate
the TWU.
Winner. To Regional
Denison high school students
placing first in the recent district
literary events at Dallas, will leave
Friday for participation in the re-
gional meet at Denton, Coach Otis
L. Hilliard announced today.
Date Set For
Dam Arguments
OKLAHOMA CITY, April 17-
Oral arguments on Governor Phil-
lips injunction against the $54,-
000,000 Red River dam today was
set tentatively for April 28 be-
fore the U. S. Supreme Court, Wil-
liam Coe, attorney for the gov-
ernor announced.
Coe today mailed copies of a
brief to the court expanding upon
the governor’s contention that
construction of the dam is uncon-
the ninth grade of a- twelve-grade
system.
The state board of education,
Woods said, has officially recog-
nized the twelve-grade system by
adopting textbooks for that type
of organization.
"We can no longer operate ef-
iciently and effectively a system
of schools in which there exist two
distinct types of organization,”
he added. “The revision will not
cause any change in work or in
teacher assignments.” t
First Step In
US Bond Sales
The first step in the new federal
defense bond sales program will
be established at the Denison post-
office May 1 when new postal sav-
the Red River is not navigable at1 ing* stamps proclaiming ‘'America
the place where the dam is being!on Guard” and picturing lhe
buj|t_ | Minute Man" statue at Concord,
"It is a matter of judicial know- Mass., will be placed on sale to
ledge,” the brief stated, "that | the public.
most if not all the projects author-1 The 'vil> bc 4in
. , , , nations from 10 cents to $5. They
,*cd by the 193« net of congress!^ , uspd fo nlflkp instllllmei*
purchases of defense bonds.
xtitutional. Coe stressed the fact
other than the Red Rfter project
are to be built on navigable waters
of the United States,”
Advertise in the Denison Press
:r=i.0huS,d^an"h lTKOMAS FR-'NK NORMAN
Drilling operations on the com- Funeral services for Thom.i.-
i any’s No. 1 Little-208 in sw sw Frank Norman, 70, former janitor
nw of section 27-5-7 which is in ■ of the First Prebyter ar church,
the old Washita river bed, wax who died early Wednesday, wcie
stopped for 17 hours by water held at 2 p. nr today from Short-
which flooded its pump. It had Murray chapel, Rev. James E
lesumed drilling however, and was Spivey officiating
below 3,400 feet in the Woodford, j Interment was in Oakwo .d com-
Work was also stopped on the | etery, Short-Murray directing,
company’s No. 2 Crissman-104 in ; Pallbearers were E E Cornish,
ne se se of section 20-5*7 which is j Will ^ oung, 11 t 1 ru;.t, E
buiiding derrick. , Hensley, * P. Wood and Pnu.
Other Bryan county operations Borum.
were:
No. 5 Little-106 in ne sw sw of .IAME-S 'F FUNSTK1N
section 27-5-7 was drilling belov j Funeral services for James F
4,458 feet in the Viola. ! Funston, 73, retired Katy auditor
No. 1 Little-209 in sw se sw j and Crew dispatcher, who died at
of section 27-5-7 was drilling he
low 3,255 feet in the Woodford.
Marshall county reports were:
No. 1 Little-210 in ne se nw
of section 34-5-7 was drilling at
3,2,13 feet in the Svcamore.
No. 1 Little-2u7 in ne sw nw
of section 34-5-7 was drilling be-
low 3,709 feet in Hunton lime
No. 2 Metz-105 in ne sw
| tun1 society.
The organization has for its
purpose the improvement of the
:>dn.inistration of justice, some-
thing which Judge Suggs he* in-
terested himself in for several
years.
The membership includes mem-
bers of the bench as well ax at-
torneys and a few laymen who
have given special study to the
matter.
Judge Suggs is this week hidd-
in court in Collin county, and i«
expected home over the weekend-
TILLMAN LEAVES FOR
WICHIVA conference
Following a recent meeting of
the Wichita Falls city council in
which it agreed to call a bond el-
ection on two bond issues totaling
$250,000 to finance the city’* ob-
ligation for construction of the
air corps training school there,
ui.u V. V ■■ —.....» it 11 tWl P' Iiuiiniif. .xeiivv. -1
a local hospital Wednesday morn- Earland A. Tillman of the
ing, will be held Friday afternoon ' pj g. engineer office here, left
at 4:30 from Short-Murray chapel,
Rev. James E- Spivey officiating.
Interment will he it Fairv ew
cemetery, Short-Murray directing.
Pallbearers are Con Corcoran,
Earl Tanner, Harold l.aughlin,
Tom Anderson, H. L. Willis, Ern-
est James, J. L. Treadway :nd
today to confer with city officials-
The bond issue is to also ineluie
completion of an addition to the
Wichita Falls water system, en-
gineers have been adv sod. Mayor
W E. Fitzgerald hax indicated the
bond issue will be in May. Of
I the bond issue $110,000 will be
i>o. i .............- u ' “• “• --------- | me uunu I-™- -
of section 28-5-7 swailibed through Alva Dowling. The Elks lodge „s,,d ,0 ,.0vet purchasing of right-
tubing for 24 hours and gauged | w-d] officiate at the grave. of-way and other obligations
17 timirs making 90 barrels! -—— — ■ -a-- ! citv
for 17 hours making
of oil.
No. 3 Metz-105 in sw nw nw of
section 28-5-7 was drilling below
2.716 feet in the Mississippi-Oaney
shale.
No. 1 Thompson-206 in sw xw
sw of section 21-5-7 flowed
barrels of oil in 24 hours through
6-64th inch choke.
Two \Fir«* Reported
the city.
I The school is to bc constructed
under supervision of array engin-
i eerr here.
The home of David Bruton, ne-
gro, 612 Walker street, was slight-
ly damaged Wednesday afternoon
by fire from an overheated stove, I
while ten* home of F. D. Stevcr, | if you do not receive yew Pre*
| in south Denison, was destroyed | betore i .30, pleaac *ofl
| by fire early this morning.
NOTICE-
«ne will be sent you.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 250, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1941, newspaper, April 17, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527907/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.