The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 56, Ed. 1 Monday, March 7, 1949 Page: 1 of 6
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Mi,
Associated Press Wire
Reports
NEA Features
She SaUg Neuts-Sriegr
THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
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'ii.—NO. 56. .. SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, MONDAY, MARCH 7, 1949. - MEMBER ASSO
TEXAS HOUSE PASSES ANTI-POLITIKING Bl
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, MONDAY, MARCH 7, 1949.
PRESS
-
l^fbuse Labor Hearings
Renew Partisan Fight
Filibuster
ireatens
'Rent Control
Plans for Dairy
Showing Talked
By 4-H Members
■<s ii
ft* 4 •**><<«**# P'«ss
Match 7
' Krpuhliran* (fc»t into
lav 34■ thr Hou«e Labor
' ‘!art«»<! hearing* *#p\ »<**
■ Taft Hartley Saw
fight revolved
F t mt*r kpiHP'PfitRljAp
' «‘v of Sew Jefey. one
'■"'i* of The ifivfr-
ilartie> «J»il rot tun for
«-t \<-a a-♦} recant*
i t of »> or iratt»■
""n a*- the Tool Owiin
Plan* to atari iimrudiatc work-
outs to Nolect a 4-H dairy judg-
ing teurn to represent Hopkin*
j County at Oie Northeast Texas
Demo. M,a,r>' &*»ow Here in May were
mad at a t-H Club meeting held
Red Cross Drive
To Open Here
Tuesday Morning
The special gifts committee for
the annual Red Cross drive in
Hopkins County, which begins
•March 15, will have a breakfast
meeting at Young's ( afe at 7
o’clock Tuesday morning. The
UN Approves
World-Wide Probe
Of Slave Labor
(Hu Associated Pram)
Lake Success, N. Y., March 7.
—The United Nations has an
proved an American request for
a worldwide inquiry into slave
labor. The proposal was submitted
to the Economic and Social Coun-
cil after the AF of L charged that
i millions of Russians ate suffering
inhuman treatment in labor
camps. The American resolution
did not mention the Soviet Union
by name but called on the Int^r
Resident
An investigation in connection
with the death of Houston Gib-
bons. Reily Springs resident, has
been started, Sheriff Avera Ra-
national Labor Organization to In-j sure announced Monday. Gibbons
elude the AF’ of L charges in its succumbed Friday a f t er noon
inquiry. The vote was 11 to 3. shortly after being released to a
Her
JK
here Satuidny The conte-t will h'leeting "ill mark the kick-off of
be held the first day of the show, j !h< O-ecia! gifts drive, with R 1).
\jav j Sanders the special gifts commit-
tee chairman.
I*r, T. O. Perrin will deliver
an inspirational talk to the com-
mittee members, and Johnny
Hick«, chapter chairman, will
make a report on financial ex-
penditures of th> funds in past
years
The purpose of the special
gift* committee i* to seek the
larger donations in Sulphur
Springs, The quota for this
>eai'» drive has been sit at $
031.
with the Soviet bloc voting against ]
it and India not voting.
Bill LaKue, a»si.tant County
Agent, also started laying plans
for a district contest in the near
future to select a 4-H team rep-
resentative for District 5 at the
4-H Roundup at College Station
June 13.
j Discussion wa« also held in j
c: at.r Representative 1-eier f,,nn*fl,°n '",hU,t ’bowing of!
Who replaced Hartley in ,Bi*,U ,h’ dair>' -how here in
. l-.arged that the only! M*> Slide films and instruc-i
Hatties did not run again t,wn' " *?»'«*»> by LaRue 014 f
cau-c he knew he would! fitttfig and showing dairy heifers.!
i• Lor !«w
JbCtl i>4'(*U-r of hi
1*4 U* a'
Kep? e»#r»tat»ke Sum-1
(it, McConnell t*f Leu u«> h A'».« r*-j
5*hr'i that Haiti**) ha$l toM him j
.•■' i I*# for# the iaLur Ja»
pa»»#d that he wa* lea* ir;(f Lon* |
gH’iM Df*mo< t r‘u Kepi<MMTntaUv<> j
L’«*\elan«i Hull**) of Vtrgvm*
hr-tkr in t*•> comment »f the tool
’* ;*ri union headed by Hartley!
Hr jowu U.*»t tin# New Y#»k State j
Department refused to permit it!
i.prfxte in New York on the;
| Kfcur-d that it rrally «»> not a
r .if or ‘■»>n, an<J he quoted the;
a'r g?oup a* ratling ;t th« m*i*l
• -.tic orga* tza’jttr «;lh v.hith
err r wii rt?T‘ f r«c !rd
Yugoslav-Hungary
In Border Row
Parade Staged at
Communist Trial
In New York
(Hy AtnoriaUd Prett)
New Voik, March 7. -— F’oi an
hour this afternoon, men and
women paraded outside the New
York F’ccieial Courthouse where
11 of the 12 defendants aie being
tried. The case of William Fos-
ter had been postponed earlier
because erf F’oatei’s ill health. The
New York demonstration was
sponsored by the New Yoik Civil
Rights Congress, which asserted
that more than 2,000 persons took
part.
Wichita F'alls Hospital.
The condition of Gibbons body
when returned here was such
that it warranted an autopsy, and
the remains were carried to Dal-
las Saturday afternoon. Findings
in the autopsy were deemed suf-
ficient to start an inquiry,
Sheriff Rasure stater! that
Some Discharged
Disloyal Suspects
Hired by UN
(Hu .\nnoetalrd Press)
Washington, March 7.—A for-
mer member of the House Com-
mittee on Un-Americq.n Activi-
ties declares that the United Na-
tions has hired some people who
were dismissed from the State
Department on grounds of ques-
tionable loyalty.
Senator Karl Mundt of South
Dakota says the committee has
the names of several such per-
sons in its files. F’or some time,
the House Committee has had in-
vestigators trying to find out
whether foreign governments
have been using the U.N. as a
front for spying in this country.
Says Mundt:
“I believe we should take up
with the United Nations the ques-
tion of Americans who are em-
ployed by it and get an agree-
and | rnent that when
the
Americans are
hired, thev will be screened by
entire investigation has been j t(,e state Department.”
The South Dakota Republican
believes that France or Britain
or other countries should have
the right to screen French or Brit-
ish employees who go to work for
the U.N. '
(fly T-tss)
YijKOftJavi* h** i>roU’»te<i to
Hunifmy border incid«*ritx
And La* Af< the HunftAnan*t
of provoking them. Thi* wm iji*-
\ uw-tl by the \ ujr >*U\ Commun-
'd j»j*rt>'s puhhefttion. Burba,
*hich e*i»i t }»rcfte»t note * hv
nt to the Huntfanan (iove-ni-
nur»t v* n K r b r a a r y 21 rd
"’**' ‘ 1 4mon; othei thlnifA. Ilunjrai
‘ . Mt ‘ r * rr i !*f» (ruard* have been areum-d of
r° 6 l ' '* * “.M -Mi -hut?* it mo the border. The
St i • A * e 11! 11 *u At e j that
► »tumL*,»uf block
•f " fti the >*,t * a! 'im
Man Fined $500
On Liquor Count
Over Week-end
$10 Million in
Antiques Shown
At New York
turned over to Captain Gonzales,
head of the Texas Rangers Cap-
tain Gonzales has promised a
thorough investigation in the
death of Gibbons.
The deceased was taken to
Wichita F'alls by two Hopkins
County deputy sheriffs F'riday,
and authorities called Sheriff Ral
sure long distance about fifteen
minutes after they had left in-
forming him of Gibbons death.
Odom Nearing
California in
Honolulu Flight
Senate Passes
Third of Gilme
Aikin School
(By Associated Press)
Austin, March 7.—A bill ti>
clamp down on politicking in of-
fice by some state officials was
passed by the Texas House of
Representatives today. The vote
was 71 to 58.
Figures Reveal
Over 11,000
Residents Here
Present census taking in con-
nection with the city directory
which is being compiled, indicates
that the population of Sulphur
Springs at this time is something
over 11,000. When final figures
are in. there is a possibility that
the figure might be 12,000, but
indications arc that the popula-
tion count will fall somewhere in
between these two figures.
•Jj
Thousands Flee
Mid-West Floods
ffft A MSB Mated Press >
One man Is dead and two tin-}
mas Nolan. 22, and Ufcarles Wer-
. . , myth, .20, students at Creighton
7r'7.t’\,.St“d7lL!!f.JM!MI"K.!tKi"lverMty. in Omaho. They have
(Hy Associate d Press}
day as floods inundated or threat-
■ cried hundreds of homes in West-
been missing since yesterday in
, i , , , the flooded area near Limona
A strong ta.lw.nd has been hur-, ern Iowa and Nebraska. Beach. Southwest of Omaho. Thev
jM .ng long distance flier Bill i At Missouri \ alMy. Iowa, more . „,,re on a huntin(r tH when
Odom and his lijrlit plant* on then | than one-thousand persons are they disappeared
New Ymk^CflfT Deale.s!''*>' f,"m M,,nolulu to ,ho l'niled 1 hon’'',ess 1,nd. ,,isa^'ru. thn'*tcn"| At Missouri Valley, hardest hit
I States Odom ,s heading f-r New j some town* along the Missouri a.ld f town jn tho f!of)<1 arca ,hc town
i are exhibiting tieasuies \ allied at
i* \ v
•t! <•!
I
4 v« r u r.
- d '• f thi* month. The Hour# \
1 "imivitrf h»R aptoved
. ’• ; n u* til luh 1 **50. and I
• v*•. fo.ii* Trimma-i
; r ♦“) t nf this time.
: i■ ..It in a sharp innean# j
r ic-el i/f rent payments that I
a r » • »d *• r1 *M’ effect oil I
i {,i«* ffimon.if of j
ounli y It TRould ii*o force!
-v» !<> irrrr»Ar their rent*
p; U at the rxperii*# of diets, i
t»if, rlothmit. a*wi other
‘it.oj. t»f i.fr Meanwhile, I
*t< Hanking ftubM'ommittee ’
id:oheanntf* - arut that'*
the po%*»bi!uy vf trouble
i pii'niLf il 1<h1mv.
Wood*, the ho us m j,f ex*
teltmi; the Settatom
n lack t)f cash fnt hi*
H»* *aid He would ha' e to
! ’ c bottom the Lari el
the next payroll Well,
o?e recalled an earlier communi
cation from Hungary' which had
*>ugife»ted that “cxtntordtna* y
i mr*«uie* ‘ mifht be taken as a re-
out i Milt of the incident
Sulphur Sprinfr* law rnfore,-
merit offner* had a huay weekend,
rerorda revealed Monday morn*
ir.K Th*. sheriff » force hroiijfhi
m one man charfrd with poaeea-
sin; intoxicanU for the purpose
i 10-nullion doliai > at
j nual National Antitjiics Show,
In a move to stimulate the use
i of antique*, they said they arc
! keeping prices down.
Dealer* from 1 f» states are of
| feiinif for sale and inspection
‘J
the fifth an- j 4,i 1 Si •' ,n
I iicord for
an effoit to set a new
distance flight by a
j lit*ht plane. At last word, Odom
| was within a few hundred miles
Bitr Blue Rivers in Nebraska.
is without tfas, heat and water and
' B
The politics measure provides
that elected or appointed state of-
ficers, whose terms run for mors |
than two yeanj, must resign be-
fore running for other offices. It
would apply to such offices as the
Highway and Railroad Commis-
sions and to the Senate.
-H
(By Auoriitri Preu) ' '.3
Austin, March 7.—The Texas m
Senate passed the third of tha
Gilmer-Aiken Public School bills ■;
today. The vote was 27 to two. 1
Passage came after foes of the
educational measure began a new
bombardment of amendments, and
then gave up the effort.
The bill is by Senator A. M.
Aiken, Jr., of Paris. It provides
for money for the revolutionary ^
education program. The measure
now goes to the House.
Two other Gilmer-Aiken bills
approved by the Senate earlier
are awaiting public hearing by thf f
House Education Committee. They
would reorganize direction of tha
State School System, and set up
a minimum program of education.
A measure barring Commu- J
nists or members of any party who
advocate overthrow of the govern-
ment from the general election
ballot was passed by the Texaa
Senate. It received no dissenting |
vote.
The legislature is starting tha
new week with its calendars jam* J
packed . . . and dozens of impor- |
tant committee hearings are sched-
uled.
The Senate has 102 bills on
which committees have acted fa-
vorably. The House more than
forty such hills.
The theoretical mid-point of
the session comes on Friday. The
Constitution suggests 120 days as
tin* length of the regular sessions
of the Texas legislature—and Fri-
day is the 60th, or niid-point, day.
The dead man "as George John-1 authorities say none is in prospect
son. about ii, who was drowned|for several
of sail* Hr pleaded gxiilty and thi» week antiques of every period
I of the California coast and, in his
i winds, ‘Away ahead of sche- j
t duie.” He was joined bv a Coast j
i Guard escort plane.
) in his flooded
I Iowa home The
Missouri \ alley,
missing are Tho-
More Protestant
Churchmen Face
Bulgaria Trials
'It. r*.M>
i A Bulgaria!’, government spokes-
| man disclosed that more trials of
I Protestant rlrtgvmen arc rn pros-
! peet. following (he sentencing of
I the first 15 tomortow, A govi*rn-
( rnent .spokenman refused to say
how many more churchmen are in
jjail hut a British official in Sofia
estimates that they total 40,
The Bulgaiian spokesman said
that two or three more trial* arc
Count) Judge Wayne Gee fixed
his fine at $500 plus ruuit costs.
A fine of $200 plus court costs
"as placed on anothir local mac
b Judge Gee on the same rhaige
of (Kisseasing liquor for the pur
I os,- of sale.
In other action hy the sheriffs
fori e. a local man was arrested
and charged with illegal posses-
sion of firearms, and also for
carrying man* knucks.
City policemen brought in a
total of 13 men over the week-
end. Eight men were booked in.
intoxioaton charges, three for
driving without licenses, one was
arrested for vagrancy and another
for gaming.
The two Highway patrolmen
began duties here la-t week stop-
ped 11 motorists on various
counts over the weekend. Five
and category, ranging in price |
fi iiiii 25 cents to $250,Odd
The show opened today at Mad-
ison Square Garden. Exhibit- in-
clude furniture, glassware, fire-
arms, china, silverware, jewelry, j
lamps, dolls and othei item- < Springlike weather prevailed in
Among them me a gown worn ! Bulphui Spring- Monday, with the
at the inauguta! hall for Alnaham Vrat covered the sky most
Clear and Warm
In Local Area
Associated Press
News Flashes
Lincoln in 1860. a set of furniture j
of Sunday disappearing. The
made by Duncan I’hyfc fm
giami-on, the first television
made and the general order leury rising t*
jtempeiatuic Monday morning
was 40 degree-, Weatherman
set ! Ralph Dili reported, with the mrr-
with which Gen. Robert
ended the Civil Wai.
E. Is
| Tempcia!'
68 degrees.
61 deglees h) noon,
o high Sunday was
scheduled and that thev will !>c i
l, ij .. . . . j motorists were opciatlng alitomo-
held Mi the provinces, perhaps; hiu. . ......* *....... ■
Mai.atoi Burnet Ma \liank He added that all Protes-
P aiobna. nothing van lie ^xot gioup* in Bulgaria are in-
Rrolma. nothing van lie ’*”* Kioups in ivutgana are
*. ■ ut providing more ra-h eluded in what he referred to
, g a- the Democratic leader-;
, !;* ues to pieaa for a show-!
,, the filibuster. Dernoera- j
tContinued on page au)
"this conspiracy." All but one
of the List 15 defendants confes-
sed to treason and espionage
against Bulgaria’s Communist
government.
biles with defecting lighting, three
were stopped for speeding, one
man was charged with driving
while intoxicated, and two drivers
were operating cars without driv-
er* licenses.
Vastly Enlarged
Powers Urged for
Commerce Dept.
Catholic Press
wntown Section of Asks End of U.S
alt Lake City Rocked Aid to China
y Sharp Earthquake
Yugoslavia Files
7 New War Claims
Against Austria
iHy Assmexated Prim)
Salt Lake City, March 7. -The
Hownlowu section of Salt l-ake
rtty was shaken by an earth Item-
late Sbiuiay night, hut there
per, nq reports of damage. Ac*
to police, the quake was
felt j < 1 53 a. m„ Monday. K8T.
tremor was felt In the edit-
rooms of the Salt laki* Ttib-
tl Salt l*akc Telcgtam and
office* of the Associated
tg example of the degree of
Rn« person said a floor
|5 feet acroaa the room
borne. Another person said
tremor sent a piano skidding
a room-
Mil
<■» Metaled Prtttl
In a note to the Big Four For-
eign Ministers’ Deputies, Yugo-
slavia filed seven new war claims
on Austria today. The Deputies,
in session in London, are already
bogged down in their efforts to
write an Austrian Independence
treaty, The new claims helped
I tighten the deadlock.
t By Asm noted Praam I
A Homan Catholic ni\wq>apvr
in Nanking has called for an iin-
inediatr end to United States aid
to Nationalist China. The Cath-
olic paper contends that the
Amrriean aid program has pro-
longed the Chinese civil war.
The newspaper (Yi Shih Pao)
follow* a bitter anti-Communiat
line and is controlled by Arch-
bishop Paul Yupin, who now is
visiting in the United Slates.
It chargee in en editorial that
recent American aid ha* been ex-
tended to carry out United -State*
military objective* in China. And
it add* that the Nationalists must
stop receiving the aid to show
they are sincere in their peaee
negotiation* with the Commu-
nisU.
iHy Asmtriatrd Press)
Washington, March 7. — Con-
gress gut another remodeling plan
front the Hoover Cimmiasion to-
day. the most indical to date.
This one ronicrns the controls
over the country’s railroads, high-
Vvay transport, planes, ships, and
commercial fishing.
In all the previous irpnrt*. the
Hoover Commission's main tom-
plaint hes been the Bureaucratic
waste and inefficiency of various
cabinet department*. And it often
has recommended that the «xe he
used in them. But in today’s re-
port involving the Commerce De-
partment, the Commission propos-
ed the the Government's controls
over the country’s transport he
put under the Commerce Depart-
ment because, it said, the present
set-up makes for double expense
and red tape.
Not all of the commission mem-
bers agreed on this. But it is noted
that on the ride of the majority in
favor of widespread change was
former President Herbert Hoover.
It also i* noted that one highlight
of Hoover’s Government service
was his terms as Secretary of
Commerce under two President-
Xow here are some of the specific
changes recommended whereby
the Secretary of Commerce would
become even more powerful, in
peacetime and in wartime:
The National Advisory Commit-
tee on Aeronautics, which now is j Buss,
independent with some 7.006 em-
ployee*, would bv taken over bod-
ily by the Commerce Department.
The same would happpen to the
Coast Guard, which now is undei
the Treasury. . . The Public Roads
Administration, which now is un-
der the Federal Works Agency. . .
The Office of Defense Transpor-
tation, which now is under the
President. , .And all the business
and executive duties of the Mari-
time Commission.
t,v Associated P'fss'
A file to,lay in the Japanese <
t»w i. of 1 amatn destroyed I80j
homo- and damaged 217 others, i
Belgian Communists have join-
'll the paiade of Communist I
gioups in various countries
come out for Russia first.
The Russians -tai ted aei ini fir-
ing practice today in the Berlin
Ait lift conidnis then announced
they had called it off.
In Munich. Germany, a United
State- Mihlniy Commission
resumed its spy ti lai of eight Eu-
ropean' ibarged with gathering
American military information for
a foreign power.
In Washington. Senator Karl
Mundt of South Dakota says the
1 inted Nations lias hired some
pin sons who were dismissed by
the State Department as security
risks.
Prosecution and defense attor-
neys make their final summation*
today in the treason trial of Axis!
Sally. The ease is expected to go
to a jury late Tuesday at the
earliest—-more probably on Wed-I
nesday.
In Bulgaria, meanwhile, a peo-
ple’s court is preparing to deliver j
its verdict tomorrow in the espio-
nage trial of 15 Protestant minis- I
da.vs. All the town’
inhabitant* are to be inoculated
today against typhoid.
The trouble spots in Nebraska
appear to he the towns of Crete
and Seward, in the Elkhorn Val-
ley. \ olunteer crews worked
throughout the night to protect the
town of Ashland from the rising
Platte and Elkhorn Rivers - and
Wahoo and Salt Creeks.
Nebraska ( tty escapee) a flood
crest of the Missouri River yes-
terday but hundreds of acres of
nearby lowlands were inundated.
Mayor K. E Harris expressed
toj belief that Ashland itself wras not
| in much danger, but thousands of
| a ere* North and Northwest of the
i town are under water,
j With the North part of Crete
! flooded. Mayor Thomas Aron has
has j th’seribed the condition as the most
! severe in history. The weather
| Bureau at Norfolk said the F'ik-
! horn is expected to continue ris-
| ing for another 24 hours.
The Big Blue at Seward still
j is rising at the rate of about six
| inches an hour and has entered
| the Western end of the town. More
| than thirty families have been
forced out of their homes.
Some slight relief is promised
today in the form of rising tem-
peratures for the area, but colder
weather and snow flurries are
forecast for tomorrow.
Belgian Commies
Pledge Aid to
Russia in War
(Bv * ax’, Mtrd Pr»n)
Joe Stalin’s friends in Belgium
staged a meeting over the week-
end and issued one of those ‘‘Rus-
sia first" resolutions. In effect,
the Central Committee of the Bel-
gian Communist Party announced
the Reds would not fire a shot at
the Russians in the event of a
war. This is how the resolution
reads:
"The Communists would refuse
to cooperate in an aggressive war
against Russia in which Belgium
would lie forced by the American
imperialism servants governing
this country.”
i ■
1
WEATHER
(By P-caal
Flast Texas—F'air in the North |
and considerable cloudiness in tho |
South tonight and Tuesday,
W armer in the North Tuesday 1
with scattered showers in tho
Southeast and extreme South.
West .Texas — Considerable J
cloudiness tonight and Tuesday. |
In Vatican City today, Pope
Pius expressed the wish that no
celebrations lie held March 12lh,
the 10th anniversary of his coro-
nation.
In Berlin, a German News
agency licensed hy the Russians
says a German youth has been ar-
rested on charge* of spying for
the British, Americans and
French.
Also in Berlin, a conservative
newspaper tells its readers that
The Hoover Commission would Soviet, secret police have spread
give to the Commerce I>c|iartnieiit a net for turncoat Communist*
highway and railroad safety fune- ! in the Rusrian zone of Germany,
tiona and railroad merger* now Still another dispatch from Ber-
undcr the Interstate Commerce lin say* Genera) Lucius Clay ha*
fommiarion. It would lift air saf- ! approved the sentence* of 19 Gar-
ety operation* from the Civil Aero-1 man* convicted of the mass mur-
nautics Board. And the Interior, doi of more than one million par-
Drpartmcnt would !o*e to thy *ons, mostly Jew*, Thirteen of the
Common e Department all control j defendants are under death sen-
over Commercial Fisheries. tence.
ArmySecretaryRoyall
Due to Resign Post
Next 10 to 20 Days
60 Fishermen
Marooned on Ice
Floe in Lake
(tty Aw>r,*to4 Prtmf
About 60 fishermen are ma-
rooned on a big ice floe in Green
Bay, off the Michigan short.
Sheriff Edward Reindl nays the
ice floe broke away from the
shore and began to drift into
Lake Michigan.
Aircraft have been dispatched
to the rescue from a number of
nearby field*.
Key West, Florida. March 7,~~
Presidential aide* said today that
Secretary of the Army Kenneth
Royal! soon will follow Defen**
Secretary James Foriestal Into re-
tirement. Theac official* state that
Royall will resign with ten to 20
days.
Meanwhile. President Tiutnait
has settled down to enjoying a
two week vacation at the Key
West submarine base. Tomorrow
he will travel to Winter Park,
Florida, whara he will apeak an#
ieceise « degiee from Rollm* Col- S
lege. Otherwise, Mr. Truman ha* 1
no other plane than to work MW
official paper* flown to hint ,
from the White House.
tig
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Bagwell, Eric. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 56, Ed. 1 Monday, March 7, 1949, newspaper, March 7, 1949; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827740/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.