The Fayette County Record (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 28, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 4, 1964 Page: 1 of 4
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Fayatt* A Adjoining
Countlaa:
On* Year---------$S.SO
SI* Month*__________Sl.tO
Thr** Month*________$1.00
La Qrang* City Delivery:
On* Year ---------- $4.00
• Mo*. $258; $ Mo*. $156
READ BY MORE PEOPLE IN FAYETTE COUNTY THAN ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER
FAYETTE COUNTY RECORD
SUBSCRIPTION RATKS
Other T**a* Countlea:
One Year ------------ $4.00
SI* Month* _____...__$256
Three Monthe________$158
Out-of-State
On* Year ..._________ $5.00
• Moa. $2.75; S Mo*. $1.50
Published Twice Weekly By The Farmers Publishing Company, Ltd., La Grange, Texas
VOLUME XXXX1I
Devoted to the Interests of the People of Fayette County and of Texas
LA GRANGE, TEXAS 78945 TUESDAY, FEB. 4, 1964
NUMBER 28
FAYETTE COUNTY FARM BUREAU
KICKS OFF MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
AREA HOMEMAKERS OF TOMORROW
Plans To Register
1000 Or More Told
At Dinner Meeting
Fayette county Farm Bureau
membership campaigners met
for their annual kick-off sup-
per Thursday night in the La
Grange State Bank’s meeting
room, planned an intensive “off
to the races” drive to get a
thousand members or more,
and heard an interesting dis-
cussion relative to foreign mar-
kets.
The evening’s speaker was
Walter Meyer of Austin, com-
modity director of the Texas
Farm Bureau and manager of
the Texas Agricultural Mar-
keting and Development As-
sociation.
Mr. Meyer pointed out, with
the aid of color slides, how
Farm Bureau is slowly making
inroads into the European mar-
kets. He mentioned that Texas
Valley carrots were among the
first items exported and that
they found a receptive market.
The speaker told of his trip
to Europe last summer, during
which he visited England, the
Scandinavian countries and
Western European countries to
determine just what Farm Bu-
reau could do to expand its
operations. He told of Farm
Bureau’s trade development
corporation’s office in Rotter-
dam which, in a relatively short
time, has gotten the program
off to a fine start.
"The work is slow on thia
marketing program, and .we are
endeavoring to lay good
groundwork,” he stated He
told his audience that, there-
fore, progress will he only mo-
derate at first hut he envision-
ed it to be most successful with
the cooperation of all members.
County FB Pres. Franklin
Brandt presided over the ses-
sion. He pointed out that the
1964 membership quota is 925,
but the organization will strive
for more than a thousand. Last
year, an 880 goal was exceeded
with 925 signed.
Local unit member quotas
and chairmen were revealed as
follows:
Ammannsville - Dubina, 63,
Joe Barton; Cistern, 40, Chas.
Rightmer; Ellinger, 58, Arnold
Supak: Holman, 86, John Kana;
La Grange, 200, F. W Janssen;
Round Top-Carmine, 142, Roy
Klump; Swiss Alp, 176, Calvin
Schuetze; Warda, 56, Robeit
Lehmann; and Winchester, 80,
Martin Unger Fayetteville,
with a quota of 20, and Praha
with a 14 goal, are yet to name
their chairmen.
County Judge H. J. Schovaj-
sa was present to officially pro-
claim the week of Feb. 3-8 as
Fayette County Farm Bureau
Week, in conjunction with the
statewide observance.
Leo Heller, county member-
ship chairman, gave the invoca-
tion. Others attending were FB
Service Officer Ben Stohler,
FB Secy. Miss Carolyn Rotter,
members of the press and ra-
dio, and a number of wives of
Farm Bureau personnel.
WALDECK SLATES
M. O. D. BENEFIT
The Waldeck community will
stage its annual March of
Dimes benefit box supper on
Friday night. Feb. 7.
The event, to be held at the
Albers store, has grown in pop-
ularity from year to year and
attracts people from a wide a-
rea—with the net result that a
sizeable amount is realized for
the benefit of the March of
Dimes.
As always, Waldeck folk ex-
tend an invitation to the public
to attend.
Big: House Trailer
Damaged In Mishap
A 55-foot house trailer was
considerably damaged, princip-
ally to the undercarriage, in an
accident on the US Highway 77
bluff drive during the rain
Thursday at 12:35 p. m.
The huge trailer, which was
towed by a 1962 Chevrolet
tractor, was coming downhill
when the trailer jackknifed and
fell over against the embank-
ment on its right side.
Driver and lone occupant of
the Chevy was Eschel S. Brant-
ley of New Summerfield, Tex-
as, who was unhurt. A pipefit-
ter, he was moving from Cuero
to Jacksonville, investigating
sheriff’s officers said.
The trailer « as pulled out by
the Meiners Motor Co. wreck-
04 INCH DRIZZLE
Occasional drizzle and mist
in the 24-hour period ending at
7 a. m. Monday registered .04
of an inch on the official gauge.
Prospects were for more of the
same, as well as colder weath-
er.
Von Rosenberg Infant
Buried Here Friday
John Von Rosenberg, infant
son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Von
Rosenberg of Bryan, died early
Friday at Fayette Memorial
hospital where he was bom the
evening before.
Graveside services were held
at 4 p. m. Friday at the La
Grange City cemetery with
Rev. Troy Jarvis officiating.
In addition to the parents,
he is survived by two brothers,
Albert Karl and Eric Earl; and
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Von Rosenberg of La
Grange, Mrs. Nelson Jennings
of Granger and Earl Esslinger
of Cameron.
Koenig Funeral Home was
in charge of the services.
LODGE TO MEET
Rutersville Lodge No. 152
will have its regular meeting
on Wednesday, Feb 5, at 7:30
p. m. Bring bowls for the chili
to be served after the meeting,
officers said.
ENROLLS AT SWTSC’
Douglas Keilers, the son of
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Keilers of
La Grange, has enrolled at
Southwest Texas State College
in San Marcos for the spring
semester Douglas is a former
student at Blinn college in
Brenham,
Monroe Kiel Rites
Are Held At Seguin
Funeral services for Monroe
Kiel, 54, were held at the Se-
gi in Presbyterian church Mon-
day at 10 a. m., with burial in
the Guadalupe Memorial ce-
metery near Seguin.
Mr. Kiel passed away Satur-
day at the Guadalupe Valley
hospital in Seguin from the ef-
fects of a stroke he suffered
Jan. 1.
He was born and reared in
Fayette county.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs.
Margaret Kiel of Seguin; five
sisters, Mrs. Otto F. Tiedt of La
Grange, Mrs Margaret Fritsch
of Pasadena, Mrs. Helen Suth-
erlin of Luling, Mrs. Ora Nell
Schmidt of Seguin and Mrs.
Gloria Simpson of Oklahoma
City; and a brother, Garfield
Kiel of Seguin.
DELOllES PIETRC H
Carolyn Heinsohn of the
Fayetteville Rural High school
and Delores Pietsch, La Grange
High school, are the Homema-
kers of Tomorrow in this area
in the 1964 Betty Crocker
search for the American Home-
maker of Tomorrow.
Having achieved the highest
score in a knowledge and atti-
tude test given senior girls,
they now are eligible, along
with winners in other state
high schools, for the title of
state Homemaker of Tomor-
row.
The state Homemaker of To-
morrow is awarded a $1,500
scholarship by General Mills,
sponsor of the program. The
runner-up receives a $500 scho-
larship. The school of each
I* *
V* '
CAROLYN HEINSOHN
state Homemaker of Tomorrow
is awarded a complete set of
Encyclopaedia Britannica.
The state Homemaker of To-
morrow, accompanied by her
school advisor, also will join
with other state winners in an
expense-paid educational tour
of New York City, Washington,
D. C„ and colonial Williams-
burg, Va„ next spring. During
the tour the 1964 All-American
Homemaker of Tomorrow and
national runners-up will be
named. The Betty Crocker All-
American Homemaker of To-
morrow will have her scholar-
ship raised to $5,000, with sec-
ond, third and fourth place
winners being awarded scholar-
ships of $4,000, $3,000 and $2,-
000 respectively.
Things Looking Up!
GENERAL RAIN SOAKS LG, AREA
fayettfR lads E Schulenburg Crash Is Fatal
IN CALF EVENT
Rainfall averaging from 1 Vi
to two inches and better soak-
ed this entire area Thursday,
with most of it falling in the
early afternoon, and it tended
to put a crimp in dropthy con-
ditions that had been eased
somewhat with earlier precipi-
tation.
A hard shower that lasted
for better than an hour even
put some badly needed stock
water in some farm tanks—and
for the first time in many
Friday Rites Held For
Mrs. Edwin Jasek, 89
Mrs. Edwin Jasek, 89, of the
Ellinger area, passed away at
Fayette Memorial hospital
Thursday afternoon.
Funeral service* were held
at 9:30 a. m. Saturday at the
Jacmenek Chapel with contin-
ued services in Hostyn Hill Ca-
tholic church, the Rev Fran-
cis Kolar officiating. Burial
was in the church cemetery.
Mrs Jasek, nee Rosie Hafer-
nik, was bom at Haw Creek on
Nov. 5. 1874, daughter of Joe
and Joan Margaret Haferaik
and was married at Ellinger to
Mr. Jasek on Nov. 19, 1907,
She spent her lifetime in the
area.
Surviving are her husband;
four daughters, Miss Tonie Ja-
,sek. Miss Mary Jasek. Mrs.
Melvin Becker, all of Ellinger,
and Mrs. B. S. Klimicek of
Wharton; one aon, Joe Jasek of
Ellinger; one brother, Charles
Vavra of Ellinger; four grand-
children and two great-grand-
children.
Rosaries were recited Friday
evening by the parish. CD A,
K of C, Altar Society and KJ-
ZT
Koenig Funeral Home was in
charge of the funeral.
months, there was standing
water in pastures and at the
ends of plowed fields a day la-
ter.
The official gauge at La
Grange showed 1.58 inches.
However, the fall was more to
tlie south and west, with more
than two inches reported a-
round Schulenburg and also in
the Muldoon community.
Thursday’s rainfall brought
the January figure to 3.04 in-
ches. Normal is 3.27. Last year
the first month of the year had
a bare .86 inch, while in Jan-
uary 1962 precipitation totaled
3.53 and for the same month in
1961 it was 1.84 inches.
Of interest should be the fact
that on only one occasion since
Hurricane Carla days of Sep-
tember 1961—when 10.04 was
measured—has it rained more
than three inches in any 24-
hour period. That was on Nov.
13, 1961. when 3.45 was meas-
ured by the official gauge. Ne-
ver once since then has there
been as much as two inches in
any single day! Tops in the 26-
month-plus period was a 1.92
measurement on April 26, 1962,
and a 1.80 gauging on Oct. 29,
1962.
Even though the January
moisture figure didn’t quite
reach normal, all are pretty
well agreed that what fell did
get the new year off to a good
start and are hopeful that there
will be more to come.
4-H, FFA Youths
Due To Scramble
In Houston Show
At least eight Fayette coun-
ty 4-H and FFA lads will be
contestants in the calf scram-
bles at the Houston Livestock
Show and Rodeo, scheduled
thi* year faoni Feb. 19 through
Mar*h 1.
Kifk Morgan. Plum clubber,
and Cliffofrd Gie$e, Thomas
Knippel, Donald Mloerbe and
Wayne Otto, affiliated with the
La Grange club, will, vie in the
7:45 performance on Feb. 20.
Glenn Peck : ■ khn Everett
Tiedt of the local 4-H club will
contest in the 7:45 p. m. per-
formance on Feb. 24; and Clar-
ence Schley, a Fayetteville
FFA chapter member, will take
part at the same time the even-
ing of Feb. 26.
The Houston show’s calf
scramble will again qualify as
the “world’s greatest” when
the first of a series of 19 con-
tests takes place in the Sam
Houston Coliseum on Feb. 19.
During the course of one sea-
son, 400 boys scramble for 200
calves. Half of the calf certifi-
cates are given to boys inter-
ested in dairy cattle and the
other half to those who prefer
beef cattle.
When the calf scramble con-
testant wins, his work has just
begun. With his cash certifi-
cate he purchases the best ani-
mal he can find. He must then
care for the calf, furnish mon-
thly records to the Houston
Livestock Show and his spon-
sor, and return his animal to
the show the next year.
As a result of the calf scram-
ble contests, nearly a million
and a half dollars in livestock,
cash and prizes have been put
into the hands of Texas youth,
giving them a substantial start
in business.
Poll Sum Believed
Over 4,000 Total
Although deputies weren’t
anywhere near completed with
mail payments Monday morn-
ing, Taxman Gilbert H. Eck
predicted that the poll tax sum
Leps Whip Tomball
By 70-to-42 Score;
B’s Triumph, 57-25
After a slow start, La
Grange’s Leopard cagers be-
i gan hitting with gusto in the
second quarter and emerged
70-42 victors over the Tomball
Cougars at Tomball Tuesday
night.
The tilt, which saw the Leps
pile up their biggest point total
of the campaign, opened the
second half of District 21-AA
action for both quintets.
La Grange was ahead by 11-
8 at the end of the first eight
minutes. A 20-point production
in quarter No. 2 put the locals
into a comfortable 31-16 half-
time advantage. The talley was
45-24 at the three-quarter
mark, and the Leopards finish-
ed it with a 25-point splurge in
the final canto.
Ricky Peters dropped in 16
and David Schultz had 15 for
the winners. Tomball’s Smith,
with 25, was the game leader.
The Lep reserves won the
opener handily, 57-25, to give
LHS a sweep of the double
bill. Bruce Frenzel registered
21, Robert Tiedt 11, and Roy
Maas and David Fritsch each
basketed 10 to set the La
Grange pace.
Tuesday night Bellville’s
Brahmas will be here for a
twin bill, and Friday night Ka-
ty’s hot Tigers come to La
Grange.
C OF C SPEAKER
IS EX-GRID STAR
M
i
j_i
1
JACK D. KYLE
Columbus Negro
Is First Traffic
Victim For Year
DEADLINE ON LINT
ACRES NOW 18TH
The main speaker for the
Feb. 18 annual banquet of the
La Grange Chamber of Com-
merce was an illustrous sports
figure at Sam Houston State
Teachers college prior to em-
ployment with the Texas De-
partment of Corrections in
1958.
A native; of Rockdale, Jack
D. Kyle, attended Sam Hous-
ton where he was a four-year
football letterman and was
team captain in his senior year.
He also was selected on the all-
conference team for two years.
Following graduation in 1952
with his master’s degree, Mr.
Kyle was with the Huntsville
school district the next six
years as coach and teacher, also
finding tune to serve as
ruler of the Huntsville Elks
lodge. He went to the Ferguson
unit in September 1959 as war-
den of the unit, and in 1963 he
was selected Warden of the
Year by the Department.
., Tickets for the banquet are
$1.50 and are on sale at
A 23-year-old Columbus Ne-
gro Saturday morning became
Fayette county’s first traffic
fatality of the year 1964.
Charles Edward Wilson, who
resided at 717 Fannin St. in
Columbus; was killed when his
1961 model sedan went into
Middle Creek 1.7 miles east of
Schulenburg.
Patrolman Leonard Swan,
stationed at Schulenburg, re-
ported the car which Wilson
was driving went off US High-
way on the wrong side of the
road. The victim apparently
was going east at the time of
the fatal accident, which occur-
red at about 3 a. m. Saturday.
Wilson's body was taken to
the Davis Funeral Home in Co-
lumbus.
This was the first traffic fa-
tality for the county since last
Christmas Day. A young Pasa-
dena man and wife, enroute to
Bastrop for the holidays, were
killed when their station wagon
overturned on State Highway
71 just this side of Kirtley.
There were 17 people fatally
injured in 1963 in Fayette
county road mishaps.
Dispatches In Saturday mor-
ning’s daily papers stated that
the Texas ASCS committee
Friday had extended the date
“for release of acres” from
Feb. 4 to Feb. 18 for the south-
ern area of the state.
The Fayette county ASCS four local^ drug stores,
office here had not received a
memo on the order Monday
morning, although it was
known to be official.
The newsstory mentioned on-
ly the word “release,” but local
ASCS aides said they were
sure the extension order also
included the “requesting” of
additional cotton allotments.
Junior High Gage
Meet Flag To LG
La Grange won its own invi-
tational junior hign cage tour-
ney here last weekend, defeat-
ing Hallettsville, 38-16, for the
championship in the finals Sat-
Ited unlay nighl.
Giddings copped the consola-
tion title ever Columbus. 42-26,
and Bastrop decisioned Schu-
lenburg for third place, 30-26.
Results in the preliminaries,
quarter-and semi-finals were:
Schulenburg 46, Fayetteville
|the i 28; La Grange 40, Giddings 30;
Elm Grove Road
Contract Is Let
ANNOUNCE ARRIVAL
Mr and Mrs Julius V Tupa
for 1963 will exceed the 4,000 Qf Houston are the proud par-
THREE-VEHICLE CRASH
None was hurt and about
$60 in damages resulted in a
three-vehicle collision on E.
Travis St. at the Jackson St.
school crossing Thursday at 9
p. m. Constable L. R Ulbrich
(now police chief) reported a
1955 Ford pick-up driven by
Larry R Ripper of Rt. 2 hit
Charles Plumlee’s 1950 Ford in
the rear, and the latter, in turn,
was knocked into the rear of
Albert Oehjen’a 1853 Ford.
Both of the Fords had stopped
for a red light, the officer said
BACK ‘ON JOB’
Mrs. Leon Rosenberg, who
had spent about 10 days in an
Austin hospital, returned to her
position as bookkeeper at the
Koenig Funeral Home Thurs-
day. Ernest Seidel is also on
the job after being hospitalized
twice in Fayette Memorial hos-
pital.
THEFT IS SOLVED
Sheriff T. J. Flournoy re-
ports that the theft of a saddle,
bridle and blanket from the
Heck camp house on the river
near Winchester was solved
Wednesday with the apprehen-
sion of two teenagers from
Houston. One of the youths
formerly lived at Giddings and
| the other at McDade, the she-
I riff said. The stolen merchan-
dise was recovered.
MINOR FIRE HERE
Firemen were called to the
Emil Piatsch home on N.
Franklin St. here at 9:15 p m.
Thursday, but a fire that had
started in a bedroom closet had
been practically extinguished
by the time they arrived. Dam-
age was reported to have been
light
mark.
A large number of last-min-
ute mail arrivals were being
worked Monday, but an ap-
proximate figure isn’t expected
until about Tuesday.
Mr. Eck said that 390 poll re-
ceipts were issued at Schulen-
burg and another 285 at the
Flatonia sub-station.
La Grange folk had paid 474
polls when the Friday close of
business deadline arrived, said
City Taxman H. C. Henniger.
JCS WILL MEET
La Grange’s Jaycees will
meet in the La Grange State
Bank building Monday night
(tonight) at 7:30 for a regular
session that has four important
topics on the agenda. They are:
making plans for the March 2
visitation meeting here. Car-
mine cage tourney, ball park
and Jaycee Demon baseball
club. H • *
ents of a baby girl bom on Jan.
24 in the Spring Branch Memo-
rial hospital. She weighed eight
pounds and will answer to the
name of Tina Marie. Welcom-
ing her are her eight and a half
year old sister, Gayle Lynn,
and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Felix Schultz Sr. of La Grange
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tupa
Jr. of Houston.
HAS SURGERY
B. B. Mazac is resting well
after submitting to a major
operation Thursday morning in
Veteran’s hospital in Houston.
He is in Ward 203, Bed 5.
RETURNS HOME
Patricia Stutheit, who had
been a patient at John Sealy
hospital in Galveston the past
79 days, has returned to her
home here where she will be
for the next several months.
Mueller’s Here, Schulenburg: Clinic
Austinite Held In Fayette Break-Ins
An Austin man, about 34, is
being held in jail at Hamilton
for attempted burglary there
and is also wanted in connec-
tion with afoout 75 break-ins in | parked on a
various parts of South-Central
Texas including Fayette coun-
ty
The suspect, Clarence T.
Cross, gave Texas rangers at
Waco a written statement ad-
mitting his entrance into Muel-
ler Floral here and the Ihle-
Mikesky c!i;.ic at Schulenburg
shortly after midnight Jan. 14,
Sheriff T. J. Flournoy said.
In the statement. Cross
states he drove to La Grange
in his 1958 Oldsmobile and
side-street. He
walked to the floral firm and,
after breaking in through the
front door, tried to punch the
lock out of the safe but was un-
successful. He then prowled
through several desk drawers,
the statement continued, but
found nothing.
Crosa said he then drove to
Schulenburg where he broke
into the clinic and got $13 from
a desk drawer.
Sheriff Flournoy said Croas
was apprehended in Hamilton
last week while in the act of
burglarizing a business place.
Charges of burglary will be
fil?d in the justice of the peace
courts here and at Schulen-
burg, Sheriff Flournoy said,
The cases will be bound over
both I Bastrop 31, Columbus 18; Hal-
banks, CC office and by dire- lettsville 26, La Grange seventh
tors. grade 7: Hallettsville 23, Bast-
rop 19; La Grange 42, Schulen-
burg 22; Giddings 47, Fayette-
ville 15; Columbus 32, La
Grange seventh grade 13.
Named on the all-tourney
team were Stephen Pesick of
La Grange, Wilkins of Bastrop,
Kipp of Giddings, Fritsch of
Fayetteville, Segura of Schu-
lenburg and Schulte of Hal-
lettsville.
The La Grange High junior
class sponsored the event.
A contract for 4.24 miles of
construction on FM Road 2762
in Fayette county has been a-
warded to an Austin firm, it
j was officially announced in
Austin last weekend by the
Texas Highway Commission.
Werneburg Construction Co.
submitted the low bid of $137,-
663 on the project. Grading,
structures, base and surfacing
from the end of present FM
2762, 4.3 miles northwest of
US Highway 90, northwest to
FM 1115 near Elm Grove, is
expected to take 125 working
days, according to M. G. Cor-
nelius, district highway engi-
neer at Yoakum.
W. L. Patrick, resident engi-
neer at La Grange, will be in
active charge of the project
while it is under construction.
HENDERSONS HAVE SON
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Henderson
became the proud parents of
their second son when Gilbert
Hollis, weighing eight pounds
four ounces, arrived at Fayette
Memorial hospital Friday
morning. He was welcomed by
11-month old Jordon, his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert A Koenig, and Mrs.
Margaret Henderson of Aus-
tin, and great-grandmothers,
Mrs. Frances Vasek of West
Point and Mrs, Ida Richardson
of Pasadena. His mother is the
former Betty Jane Heinsohn.
who is making her home here
while her husband is attend-
ing a mortuary school in Dal-
las. Upon completion of the
course he will join the staff of
the Koenig Funeral Home.
ZOC'HS HAVE SON
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Zoch of
Winchester are the proud par-
oi
ents of a son, weighing nine
t&stsya?-
Members Sought For
SH Discussion Clubs
The Confraternity of Christ-
ian Doctrine of Sacred Heart
church, under the direction of
Rev. Harry Mazurkiewicz, is
putting on an extensive drive
in the parish for new members
to organize more religious dis-
cussion groups.
Discussions are scheduled to
begin the week of February 16
and will continue for eight
weeks. The subject will be
“Biblical Questions” which is a
simple form of questions per-
taining to the Bible, and should
be of interest to every indivi-
dual.
Couples or individuals may
join and those qualified to be-
come leaders are especially
urged to join. Those interested
are asked to contact the chair-
man, Mrs Alvin Weikel, or the
co-chairman, Mrs. Frank Ha-
nacek, no It tor than February
8, and tell them what day of
the week they would like to
meet.
A number of discussion
groups have been meeting for
two eight-week sessions for se-
veral years. They have been
well attended and proved to be
very interesteing and educa-
tional.
“Take into consideration that
Lent is a time for us to do ex-
tra spiritual works, and what
better way is there than learn-
ing more of the Holy Bible,”
said Father Harry, and he ur-
I
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Sulak, L. J. The Fayette County Record (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 28, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 4, 1964, newspaper, February 4, 1964; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth990071/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.