The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1968 Page: 1 of 18
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Dallas, Tx 75235
Vke giDSKSiaif stair©®
B
#*ARS WITH LEATH6R upholstery were never
\w made (or girls who wear miniskirts.
QIGOKST MILLSTONES around LBJ’s neck have
D h»*»-n some of his appointees from Texas and
some of his Texas friends.
•G STEEL fat, lush, and prosperous, due par-
_ tially at least to the war in Vietnam, thumbed
its nose at the (’resident, at the people, and at re-
sponsibility last week when it deliberately poured
gasoline on the flames of inflation by boosting the
price of steel
Most of the nation was indignant , .but not
Wes Ward who defended the price hike!
A SO NOW WE ARE TOLD in Sunday’s Amanllo
paper that Jim ( lark, successor to Ixniise
Evans as editorial page editor of the Globe News
papers who gave the area its first taste of editorial
fairness in a deeadc or more when he took over
al*>ut a year ago. has fo*-<-n shifted to another post.
Editorial page duties base been assumed by
Wesley s Ward and Thoma- H Thompson," accord-
ing to the story.
fNE MOMENTARY BREAK In the dark clouds
I was xhon lived We wonder how soon ( lark's
reforms, including the more moderate syndicated
columnists, will be wiped out We wonder how
Editor Thompson can be a part of this unholy
union without sacrificing his journalistic virtue
Sometimes we think the Whittcnburgs want to
fulfill their obligation to the region . but some-
times we wonder
RADY HAZLEWOOD has coined a new trinity,
^9 Governor ( onnaily, Ben Barnes and HonaJd
Reagan
RJOORAV FOR THE DEMOCRATIC Executive
■ ■ C ommittee of Potter county which called for
resignation of The Old Gray fox" from the
Texas Senate
Senator Grady Ifazlewuod elected by the Dem-
<« rats hut supporting the He -publicans from lYesi-
efc nt to i ongn-ssinan. may be the 'Old Gray Fox"
to some but not to us To us he II always be just
the old oray skunk "
He has since denied supfKirtmg the GOP C<In-
gres-man. but his < ommend.timn of our Republic an
Congressman at the- Keagan dinner had only one
implu ation
QOME DEMAGOGUES APPEAL to the voters by
9 being F(»K moiher. home and country But
It* modern de magogue makes hi' appeal by being
AGUNST hippie- rioters. and draft card burners
They are all just alike, all insulting to a
|» r-a*fi s intelligence
REPRESENTATIVE BOB PRICE is -a-nding out
ta»4c;«-*s to high school graduatc-s informing
th-m of all the federal money available to help them
cine r college on the back is a photograph of
Price m airman s garb dimbuig out of a fighter
plane
\i firs! glance, one would think that Price was
re sponsible for all these federal loans and grants
Wunde r how nun> uf i*rjwt ntei nil—I programs
he sup(« elect
We wonder . but ne< very much.
CONSIDER THE USAGE that Mr Texas has
mated (or himself He is rugged, hardy, in-
disiduali'Oe He he lie vex in the virtues of hard •
ship He like s to • rough it " He- sees him-clf as
"ge-timg hi' strictly on his own He ask' nothing
but a <han r to -ixcee-d' And if he isn t given a
th.encv. he will make his own chance'
GEE LOATHES THOSE who want he lp, especially mhE
government help He believes every man | (
should stand on his own two feet . and if he „lh„r
(.ill-, it is nobody s fault but his own
Ml he want- from Lack- Sam is to be let a-
lone
Give- him a six shooter and he- will adt for no
h« Ip from the police or sheriff s department He
can take care of himself . and his property.
SJR. TEXAS WANTS Inch- Sam to be ready at
all time s to ww-ld a big stick whenever it
becomes ne i -ary He wants no barking down
lie w.int' those- i ommie-s stopped in Asia or any-
when- els*- they challenge the supremacy of Lncie
Sam
If he- d h.ed his way. Ihe-n- would have bee n no
fooling around with the Kus'ians and Castro dur •
ing the- Cuban crisis Mr Texas would have pre-
ferred going in and raining bombs on that miserable
little island, wiping out everything except the A-
me-ni an oil refineries and sugar plantations.
A HD IF HE WAS running things, he’d go in there
and bomb heck out of North Korea and
get the Pueblo and its crew back . . and in that
order’ He'd do the same thing to North Vietnam
and Krd < hina
\nd if any of those rioters started any trouble
in a Te-xjs community. they'd get what was coming
to the-m in short order and it wouldn't be
necessary to tall in any outside help' As the- old
ge ntle man in the small cafe down near Idalou re-
marked when he read of a recent not, "If they
tried that here in Texas we'd have it stopped in
IS minutes!’’
WSP . . -THAT’S MB. TEXAS! But after read
I ing a resent edition of the Lubbock Avalanche
Journal, our confidence in Mr Texas has been
shake n We don't know if he is as tough as he let's
on
Nowhere Is Mr Texas more evident than In
Lubbock, Xmartllo and Dallas. Yet, we note that
Mr Texas in Lubbock has apparently pushed the
panic button' lie is said to be ‘'discontented." is
muttering that "it s time for a change." and, ac-
cording to the Lubbock paper, he is "fed up" with
rioting, the war in Vietnam, general lawlessness.
The story continues. "Even at the nsk of e-
k-cting what some term a 'radical with dubious
qualific ations.' dozens of Hub City voters say they'll
mainly register their dissatisfaction at the ballot
box in November (by voting for Wallace.)"
"Chief beneficiary of this malcontent," accord-
ing to the story in the Lubbock paper, "will be
George C. Wallace."
ALLACE NOSED OUT all other major candi-
dates in a recent poll conducted in Lub-
w
bock
Now isn’t that something!
All rational people of both major political faiths
are able to fate life without pushing the panic
button. Rational people know the history of our na-
tion has been a journey from one crisis to another
Study American lust ury' For decades, X look-
ed like our country would not endure Throughtout
our history w have had one war after another, in-
,By H. M. BAGGARLY
eluding the devastating civil war. We have faced
two major world wars, panic, depression, indus-
trial revolution, social revolution.
Technological change has kept us struggling to
adjust.
Yet, we've always managed to live through
each crisis because sane reasonable, cool • headed
people were in the saddle . .people like the an-
cestors of these panicky Lubbockites.
MOOAY WE ARE ENGAGED in a war in Viet-
I nam At the same time we are facing social
change at home, brought about primarily by a group
of suppressed peopk- struggling to achieve full citi-
zenship It s as natural as the birth pains of a wo-
man nine months pregnant.
At the same time we have crisis on the farm
with the farmer n<«( getting his share of the econo-
mic dollar and let this problem continue and
in the next few years we will be having hots and
demonstrations not unlike those now taking place in
the ghettos . . on the farm!
■ IT US COMPAEE the crises of this hour with
L those of 1861. 1870, 1917, 1922, 1929, 1932, 1941,
to mention only a few
In 186145 we lost the cream of our young men
. . almost every home was struck not once but
several times The South was devastated economi-
cally Many towns were destroyed by war.
In the 1870s we suffered economic panic.
During World War I we lost many young men.
Life was disrupted here at home with rationing
and other inconveniences
Then there were the scars of the Great Depres-
sion. lost fortunes, hunger, joblessness, tragedy.
World War II came along, and again we sac-
rificed mans lives the list was long here in
Swisher count) Again life was disrupted with lack
of manpower, rationing, disappearance of new
homes, aulomobiles, refrigerators, and other gadgets
from the- market
QUT THROUGH ALL THESE crises. Americans
D overcame They did not panic There were no
major political upheavals except in 1932 when a
change was demanded in order to avoid revolution
Here we are in August, 1968. and the scene is
l.ubbo*k. Texas Is Lubbock facing crisis’ Has every
home he«-n struck b> the Death Angel as happened
in IMP Is Lubbock in economic chaos’ Are more
people unemployed than employed in Lubbock, and
are the hungry being fed in soup lines and plunder-
ing -tores in search of food for starving children’
We were in Lubbock last month and so no evi-
dem-e of any such disasters
WET, WE HAVE THEM highly individualistic,
I rugg«-d Texas cowboys down at Lubbock cry-
ing like a 65 lb baby that has just lost its bottle!
W* want a chanyal"
t ubbock is jro'perous It has been almost un-
touched b> war casualties There is no unemploy-
ment to speak of The private country clubs are
crowded with golfers, diners and drinkers About
29.900 students swarm over the campus of Texas
Tech People have better homes, more and better
ears, boat' and airplanes than at any tune in his-
tory They fh to the Kentucky derby, the- Indianap-
olis races, the major football and baseball games
ta private planes They go on deep sea fishing
expedition* Their wives fly In Dallas to shop at
Knman • Mann*
In short, in the- history of the world, never has
a city enjoyed a higher standard of living . yet
thew- lovers of adversity, these people who want
to go it atom-, who believe in the self - sufficiency
of the individual, who believe that red • blooded
Texans have always been abk- “to take it." have
somehow cracked up in these affluent, soft times!
Y WANT A CHANGE I They aren't like their
hardy forefathers who for one reason or an-
other thought it best for the country to give both
major panics a turn at bat. feeling that both major
panics wen- capable, on the basis of past exper-
K-oie and performance, to pilot the country
These panic stneken cowboys down at l-ubbnck
are so fru'trati-d and irrational that they can see
no hop*- in either major pany. despite the wide
choice offered them In their panic they are asking
for an untried novice, a racist, a man whom they
themselves, describe as "a radical with dubious
qualifications "
The- Germans wanted "a change" in 1932. • •
remember’
Wonder which carru-d the greater burden . , *
Germany in 1932 or Lubbock in 1968.
Immature Americans will he demanding "a
change every four years until the millennium.
The reason’
So long as imperfect men occupy the White
House we will continue to have a finite Executive
Department that will be something less than perfect.
I \nd even if Jesus Christ occupied the Oval Room
we doubt that many Americans would be able to re-
lognire perfection and would bellyache just as much
a* they do todav )
"Wo want a change! We Ain’t Hh
Caret!"
Will someb*-dy please tell these Lubbock mal-
contents that the Executive and Judicial are two
different departments, that the President has no
control over Supreme Court decisions, that "a change
in November in no way changes the Court, that
chief Justice Warren was appointed to the Court
by an administration put in power by people who
wanted "a change"?
ROES ANYONE SUPPOSE that a return to segre-
1/ gallon is either desirable or possible? Does
anyone with an IQ of 30 or above suppose that Wal-
lair or anyone else can turn the clock back to
1M0" Does anyone suppose that Wallace can do
what the Democrats and Republicans cannot do in
coping with riots? .And would anybody with an IQ
of 30 vote for a man like Wallace just to register
"dissatisfaction" or to slap at the major parties
when the cost of such an irresponsible act in times
like these is no less than that of exploding an
atomic bomb in the heart of New York City just
to scare a dozing bum lying in the gutter’
Those who desire greater conservatism in the
White House have John Bircher Reagan, a man to
the right of George Wallace. Or they have a con-
servative not quite so extreme in the person of
Richard Nuum.
The Tulia Herald
COVERING
VOL *0, NO. 32
TULIA. (SwUhwr County) TtXAS 790*9
THURSDAY, AUGUST «. 19*6
THRU SECTIONS
Mile Long Parade To Be Feature
Of Happy's Birthday Celebration
Happy wM okaarvi its birthday The- planes will be available la- Immediately following the dinner,
Awgwat 17 with a fuR day cole* ter for sightseeing rides. a horse shoe pitching contest will
hr ation which wM begin wMh M- At 11:30 am, honored old timers he held. Those desiring faster and
cycle races, a mile tang parade, will be served free barbecue din* more exciting entertainment may
sky divers Jumping from pianos nit at Stephenson Park, followed participate in the Pony Express
flying over the city and many by a barbecue dinner for every- races. A carnival will be on hand
ether activities. one. for the kids.
MIKE HENTHORN. senior, shows promise of being a
standout on the Tulia High school football team this fall. He
has been selected for the Class AAA Honor Roll by Texas
Football, a magazine dealing with football prospects of all
Texas high school football teams. Henthorn is an end. Two
area teams are pre-season favorites for places among the Top
Ten AAA teams Perrytun is listed in third place and Dumas,
10th. Tulia attained a 6-4 in a rebuilding year last season, but
now must start all over with only three offensive and five de-
fensive holdovers End Henthorn may have all-state potential,
according to Texas Football. Others to be watched include
Ron Inman, center, and backs Jerry Dickens and J. K. Milam.
Guard Bruce Whisenhunt. tackles Walter Oler and Mac Devin
and backs Jerry Stevens and Odell Moffett are other keys in
the refurbishing plans. (Herald photo by Joe Foster)
NFO Vice President
To Speak Here Monday
ERHARD RFIHGSTEH
•
COUHTY OIRLS TO COMPETE
ROB MISS GRAIH SORGHUM
Thirty four girls from Texas,
Oklahoma, and Arizona will com-
pete for the title of “Mis-. Grain
Sorghum of the Nation Saturday
night at Dimmitt
The winner will succeed Diane
Bryant of Mule-shoe as the ninth
"Miss Grain Sorghum and will
win a iH.oou '<holanhte
Contestants from Swisher county-
are l-nretta Bonds, daughter of Mr
and Mrs i.ouic Ronds. Tulia. and
Lillie Cox, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs Tom Cox of Happy.
Area formers and all aHnr» in*
forastad in tha future af agricul-
ture and farm pra>parlty are In-
vited ta haar Erhard Rflngafan,
vka presidaat af tha Hatfonal Par-
mars Organisation, whan ha spaaks
Monday night at 9 a'ctocfc in Twf-
ia High School auditorium.
This I- o n e of two speeches
whuh lYingsten will make in the
Texas Panhandle and South Plains.
He will speak at Dumas Tuesday
night.
According to Bill Watson, pre-
siden: of the local NFO, an effort is
being made to get all farmers of
the area to attend one of the two
meetings.
Pfingstun’s subject wiM ha "Eco-
nomic Impact af Far mors' Low
Prices and What Rural Amarka
Can Oa About It."
Pf ing'ten was horn and raised
on a farm in Gage county. Nebras-
ka He received his college educa-
tion in Kansas In 1932 he began
his iareer as a fanner in west-
ern Iowa He served in World War
11 and later bought a farm in Wood-
bury county, Iowa
He joined the NFO at its be-
ginning and has been a member
continuously. He was elected to
the national tioard in 1960 and was
appointed director of the Meat
Commodity Department in 1961.
He has served as national vice
president since 1962
V. at son said he hopes that sever-
al hundred farmers from Swisher
and surrounding counties will be
present.
Manpower Survey Office
Opens Monday In Tulia
Monday, marked the first day To register they have volunteer-
of a two months long labor sur- ed to give a comprehensive listing
vey designed to attract new in- of (heir work history and training
dustry to the Swisher county area, alorg with a minimum of personal
The Tulia Chamber of Commerce information taken only to estab-
has asked that all citizens of the lish the accuracy of the report,
area cooperate in making this a In these communities the high
successful survey. school juniors and seniors have
Every person, 16 years old or b»-en administered the General Ap-
oldtr, is asked to go by the Swi- titude Test Battery, and have been
s h e r County Manpower Survey offered general vocational infoima-
Office of the Texas Employment bon as a group For those who
Commission located at 119 S. A us- have desired a more detailed study
tin in the building formerly oc • of their educational and work po-
cupied by Zakka Department Store tentiuls. vocational counseling has
to regisier his or her skills. been available on an individual
Twenty three counties have been basis,
served by this state agency since Fron* these personal interviews,
1962. The compiled results have aptitude testing and counseling sts-
l>roven to be a means of attract- sion--' pertinent data has been ob-
mg industry and economic invest- tamed, compiled and presented to
mints seeking locations which of- the «(immunity leaders of these
fer adequate skills and labor mar- counties in the form of an eco-
kets The published results will be nomic base report,
available approximately 30 days Using the Economic Base Re •
after the completion of the survey, ports, these active and effective
Citizens of Swisher county have community leaders have had the
an excellent opportunity to invest necessary information to plan for
in the future growth of this area detailed satisfactory and compre-
by registering their skills and work hensive economic growth based oa
e\|jeriences Both employed and factual knowledge of the actual
unemployed residents are urged to industrial requirements for their
n-gister. Wives may register for respective counties,
their husbands. The Labor Survey Registering the citizens of any
office is open Monday through Fri- given county is not just a matter
day 8 to 5 p m. of listing the job preferences of
Since 1962. 23 Texas counties the unemployed. Such information
have been served by this program is of great importance, but it is of
The Economic Base Reports re- little use by itself in attracting
suiting from the labor surveys of new industry. What is important
these counties have been of im- in this survey now in progress is
measurable aid in their respective a complete cataloging of t h e
economic developments. skills, job experiences, job poten-
The people of these developing tials and job preferences of all the
counties have registered their citizens of the county,
skills as an expression of civic For additional information con-
pride and as a personal statement cerning the Smaller Community
of their individual investment in Team operating within t h e county
the communities which they call contact the local Chamber of Corn-
home merce or Industrial Foundation.
A street
Anyone wishing to enter floats
or entries in the parade is asked
to contact a Happy Jaycee by Au-
gust IS.
All interested persons are invited
to make plans to spend August 17
in Happy.
Mbs Happy
Contest Is
Saturday
The Happy Jaycee • Ettas are
sponsoring a Miss Happy and Little
Miss Happy contest, at t o'clock
Saturday in the Happy school aud-
itorium. The winners will reigi
over the Happy Day Cetebratton,
August 17.
To qualify as a contestant, the
girls must have a Happy maiing
address or attend school In Happy,
and Little Miss Happy mast ho
between • and 11, Miss Happy
must be between 12 and IS or b*
a senior in high school next year.
Anyone wishing to enter may
contact Mary Stubblefield, Tra •
verne Vcrmcicre, Gay Fellers or
LaVeaaa Jackson, contest chair-
man.
am
Patients In
Hospital Tuesday
Lusk and twins,
Longoria
twins, Mrs.
Mrs. J. C.
Raymond
Sr., Raymond
Paul Gua-
Wheat Meetings
SetForFriday
City Reports Interest
In Street Paving Project
BUT THESE LUEEOCK CWMYl individual-
0 istic. rugged, adversity loving, conservative,
would turn their back on Reagan and Nixon. . .
and vote for an obvious irre.sponsibte demagogue
who could do more damage to our country than a
thousand Stokeiy Carmichaels or Rap Browns!
WEE HAT M IT THAT has robbed Lubbockites of
It their reason aad sanity? Where is the stam-
ina which enabled their ancestors to meet a cri-
(Continiied on page 4)
City of Tulia reports new inter-
est in a paving project for the
community. In response to the in-
terest. the- city is asking all in-
terested property owners living on
unpaved streets to coniact the city
immediately. Where as m.rny as
75 per cent of the projierty owm r*
in a block are inten-Mcd. the block
will be paved and curbed Cost
for each owner will In- an esti-
mated >4 95 per linear foot
After a projxrty owner ha- ex-
pressed interest, the city will con-
tact the- remaining owners within
his block.
Where as many as 75 |x-r irnt of
the owners want paving, the block
will be paved and the other 25
per c»-nl assessed.
The- project is contingent upon
finding a company which will
handle the paper for those owners
who ne*-d financing arrangements
In other business this week, the
city council named Weldon Smith,
now with the police department,
acting chief He has had 12 years
experience with the Plainview po-
lice and llak- County sheriff's de-
partment.
The city rejected a requested
extension of its contract with l’io-
nter Natural Gas Co The com-
pany asked for a 2V - year con-
tract beginning in 1972 when the
present one expires The- city of-
fered an alternate proposal which
would extend the present contract
until 1978.
•re m
R. J. Hodges, Jr., agronomist
with the Texas Agricultural Ex -
tension Service, and Dr. Robert
Center, Lubbock, will address a
meeting at 9 o'clock Friday night
in the Swisher county courtroom in
Tulia. At 2 o'clock Friday after-
noon they will speak at the com-
munity center at Vigo Park.
Hodges w ill speak on wheat var-
ieties for this area, particularly
varieties that are good for graz-
ing
Dr MetzcT will talk about wheat
yields and what should be done to
expect and receive the best yields.
All Swisher farmers are invited
to attend either of these meetings,
according to Chile Smith, county
agricultural agent.
"Our fowmre bare boon focad
•Mi Hm preMtm af Muf H 4u H
mate Nw moat profit from vbsaf
acreaf and bare te combat in-
n rtn knll —»— M
•ECU# utrenHi nMI| nMfnfv pnCVt
bo aaid.
Quarter Horse
Show Is Slated
SwisBoc CgBBty Activlttet
SGCtotfGft ||M GfMOGGIOCB^ )fg
lav More* fbtv and Pair for Tbare-
day. Aay- 22, at M ojw. la Iba
GUADALUPE LEAL
Lupe Leal
Is Killed
In Vietnam
The Defense Department Monday
notified the family of Army Pfc.
Guadalupe M. Leal of QuWaque
that he was killed in action Aug. 1
in Vietnam.
LoaL Ml was kilted by b
marter Bra wbMa on • patrol
which ba bad mbrntaaranTlte
r af Company C
THt Cavalry, aad
Mrs. Wiley Bom
Starnes, Rhonda Hale,
man, Mrs. Tad Raper, Earl Mitch-
ell
Dismissals since last week: Rich-
ard Fudge, Mrs. T. W. Moore,
Tommy Beck, Emily
Warren Orr, Mrs. Mary
I.. F. Campbell. Mrs. O. A. New-
ton, W. O. Borchardt, Jeaate Wil-
helm. Paul Raymond.
BORN TO:
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lusk, Bovina,
a boy and a girl.
Mr. aad Mrs. Raymond Longoria,
Krss, a girl.
New meter connections reported
by City of Tulia since last week:
Andrew Huron, 4M SW 3rd; D. L.
Vickers, 622 N. Donley; Marvin
Serna, 566 NE 2nd: Perry RnsaeU,
502 S. Fannin; Paid Bryan, Amer-
ican Independent Party, IM W.
Broadway; Gene Clements, Mali-
bou Apartments; Ivan Crosby, IM
N. Briscoe; Glenn Mansell, 416
NW 7th; Jimmy Mahaney, Mali-
bou ApartmenLs; Bytha Mossburg,
313 S. El Paso; J. L. Dodson,
362 S. Dallas; T. H. Whitehurst,
167 N. Fannin; W. T. Massey,
Malibou Apartments; Cruz Chapa,
467 S. Armstrong, Space i.
Marriage licenses issued by the
county clerk since last week: Ro-
bert Connley Akin, Tulia. and
Vickie Lynn Ewing, Tulia; Joa
Wade Johnson, Happy, and Jean-
ette Marie Huseman, Nazareth,
•
New subscribers to Hie Tulia
Herald since last week: H. H.
Vardell, 617 N. Armstrong St.,
Tulia. Texas; John Howell, MSA
Foster St., College Station, Texas.
Weather duriag the past week
has been dry aad hot.
The all - round high point horse
will receive a saddle. There will
be a jackpot of $10 in each perform-
ance class. Trophy spurs w ill go to
c-ac-h first place halter horse.
Entry fees are Halter, M: Rein-
ing. 910. Roping. 812 50; Cutting.
815; Western Pleasure, 810; Bar-
rel Racing. 810: and Youth activi-
ties. 81. A trophy will be awarded
in each youth event.
Judge will be Herb Howell. Show
manager is Kenneth Littlefield,
Route V, Tulia.
To be succes*Jil today a man
must have the horsepower of an
optimist and the emergency brake
of a pessimist.
He was a 1967 graduate of Quit-
aque High school and a member
•x St. William’s Catholic church of
Tulia. He had been employed at
Bob s Super Market here until his
induction shortly after the first of
the year. He had visited here this
summer, just before leaving for
Vietnam. His brother, Ysidero, k
employed at Bob’s.
A native of Seguin. I-eal mar-
ried Janie Martinez Oct. 14. 1867,
in Tulia. He was the first Vietnam
casualty from Briscoe county.
Survivors include his wife; par-
ents. Mr and Mrs. Clemente Leal
of Quit aque; aad three brothers,
Clemente Jr and Vangelio, bath of
Quituque, and Ysidero of Tulia.
STAYTUNK) TO
KTUI
1260 ha
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Baggarly, H. M. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1968, newspaper, August 8, 1968; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth506913/m1/1/: accessed May 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Swisher County Library.