Borger News-Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 47, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1947 Page: 1 of 4
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_
«J| WEATHER
|l W»* 1 Texas: Colder tonight, with lowest tem-
§1 perature 20 26 in Panhandle and South Plains
M end 26-32 elsewhere except 32-26 in Del Rio-
II Eagle Pass area and Big Bend country; Strong
II sortherly winds in Panhandle tonight.
JOIN
THE MARCH OF
DIMES
THE CARBON BLACK CENTER OF THE WORLD
Vol. 21—No. 47
NEA Service
Associated Press
Borger, Texas, Monday, January 20, 1947
<Four Pages Today)
Price 5c
437 Killed When Greek Ship Strikes Mine
^Stevenson on Job Early lor
Last Day as Texas Governor
By DAVE CHEAVENS
AUSTIN. Tex., Jan. 20—</P>—
A tall, rawboned figure of a man
today strode uphill across the cap-1
itol grounds from the governor's!
mansion at 1010 Colorado street
Coke R. Stevenstm, alert and'
vigorous at 58, climbed the back
stairs and entered his office on the
second floor of the big pink gran-.
Ite building where he has been
_ l serving as governor of Texas since
WASHINGTON, Jan 20—(/PI— 8’ 194,'\ .. , _
Cen. George C. Marshall will take %v,asI,1 1 l,n ^ob duite a*
hiv oath as secretary of state to-: ® am, but it was still
long before most state employes
punched the clock.
Marshall
^Delayed by
Bad Weather
oath as secretary of state to-
Oiorrow at the White House. The
tvact hour will depend upon the
tinie of his arrival here.
T Marshall origina.ly was sched-
.o. Bled to be sworn in at 10 a m.
(( ST' today But bad weather
forced his plane to land at Chi-
cago on a flight from the west
#03 St.
, In Chicago, Marshall told news '
Bleu he probably would continue
bis trip by train.
A crowded schedule has been
lined up today for Marshall who
will retire from the army as
soon as he takes the oath as
secretary from Chief Justice
• Fred N. Vinson.
i Included was an afternoon con-
ference with President Truman
mud retiring Secretary of State
Byrnes The latter had expected
ti leave the capital for his Spar-
tanburg, S. C., home tonight.
I There is plenty of work ahead
for Marshall including prepera-
tion for the Big Four foreign min-
isters conference at Moscow in
March on German amt Austrian
Coke Stevenson, known to po-
litical and personal friends and
toet alike as a hard-working
methodical and consistent oper-
ator in whatever he was doing,
got on the job much earlier than
most men would have tor his
laat full day as governor ot
Texas.
Eight Die
In Polish
Election
WARSAW. Jan. 20— (AP)—
Vice-Premier Stanislaw Miko-
lajctyk. leader of the oppo-
sition Polish Peasant party
(PSL), hinted today that he
might seek supreme-court
nullification of yesterday's
parliamentary election, in
which officials forecast vic-
tory for the communist-dom-
inated government bloc.
The voting was marked by
scattered violence resulting in the
death of eight persons, all appar-
ently slain in raids by the anti-
Byrnes Signs
Four Treaties as
Last Official Act
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20—(/Pi-
Secretary of State Byrnes, as a
final official act, signed the World
War II peace treaties with Italy,
Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria.
Chairman Vandenberg <R-Mich>
of the Senate Foreign Relations
committee and Senator Connally
• D-Texi, who took part in the 16
months of negotiations on the
compacts, were at Byrnes' side in
the ceremony at the state depart-
ment.
There will be a second signing
of th, treaties at Paris Feb. 10
when Representative: of the en-
emy satellite states will affix their
signatures
Othei Allies Will sign the treat-
ies at the same time Ambassador
Jefferson Caffery will act then for
the United States.
Today’s ceremony was arranged
Joins Fight
After all. there wasn’t an awful
lot of work left to do.
Stevenson will half a day In,.. , . ... . . ,
office tomorrow before the honor|
and responsibility, the tribula
government underground, which
had threatened forays during the I chiefly to permit Byrnes to sign
vote counting. I the treaties lief ore turning over
Mikola jczyk, who was booed atl^* off'1-® to General George C.
the polls, charged that a constitu- i Marshall.
Byrnes had expected to leave
liniuuur ok- uo/uia- L>t been violated and said he I for his Spartanburg, S. C. home
tions and"trials"'that go'with "the ! Prob“b|y would ask the supreme; tonight, but postponed his depart-
ofliie will be those of Beauford I c°urt to declare the election in-jure until tomorrow as a result of
H Jester valid. He expressed belief that if < the delay in Marshall's arrival.
tv, wi „i the votes were counted fairly his He explained that he wanted to
reLy delfvered to the state “ a : “ ™,)ority th" ' £ "" hand in the event he could
final report on the accomplish-^4’4.. c<at\ u‘Ho'and * one-house be of assistance to ha successor,
merits of his administration He ! P^'ament, which is to draw up
will leav. esk fo. Beau- a "f* «1 ■ " « : ’ 1 * „ u » ,
ford jester No Charae Made by
In Ins lust address to tin- 1,-gis- Lr■■*-**-! nl the government ' • ’ *
lature Stevenson emphasized hi 11 the other hand, were reprt ChlllGSG Hirl Wjipn
0ffirials Refuse Comment
Survey Completed On Rumors That Vessel
-......- a
Was Victim of Sabotage
tion of a dam on the Canadian W
river in the vicinity of Sanford, ] — '
today was advised that the engi-j ATHENS. Jan. 20—(AP)—The merchant marine ministry
neers’ survey report on the Son- today increasod to 437 the list of persons missing and be-
p’leunfaT^Emdfedthe di- “®ved dead >n the sinking of the 1.800-ton Greek steamer
vision office of the U S engineers I Lhimarra, which went down 20 miles east of Athens ywater-
in Dallas.
It is expected that the division
office will finish reviewing the
report by March 1 and that notice
of its findings will then be mailed
to interested parties
"This means,” said Thompson,
“that we will receive a resume of
the division office’s findings and
also recommendations made 1/
the district and division offices of
the U. S. Engineers. These find-
ings can then be transmitted to
the rivers and harbors committee
for transmittal to the congress for
action.”
day after an explosion officially blamed on a mine.
The latest figures radioed here from shipping offices
in Salonika indicated the doomed vessel was carrying 548
passengers and a crew of 87 when she left there yesterday.
Otficials of the ministry, which i ————-•
said last night that the former m . m I i
Aufo-Truck Crash
Funeral Riles for
Mrs. Zena Russell
Held in California
belief that the holder of any pub-1 rented as regarding victory as al
in- office should regard it as a j reads theirs Before the eli Marino A rrrcfpil
jp peace settlement;, The Ameru an sacred stewardship He urged the : they had freely predi-td triumph:**®****” «* iCalCU
5* legation will leave in about a legislators to stick to the business for the bloc, dominant in Poland’s:
0i* nth for the Soviet capital.
E Diplomatic autorities said at \
past three problem.-, seem cer
tain to claim Marshall’s early at-
tention: (li American policy to
Ward yesterday’s national elec
faBons in Poland (2’ The future
American attitude toward China,!
•nd t3 A study ot the Argent,ni-
Situation.
; y ,M Strong American disapproval of
niilb* Polish fovommetiV cmuksM
^ til the eli, lion and , • tin turn!
campaigning was considered cer ,
tain tiecause of the protests al-
ready voiced here. They took
Waip exception to the reported
Oppression of the Polish Peasant
party, which opposed the com-
0iunist-dommated bloc support-
big the government.
Exactly what form lha United
States disapproval would take,
however, is not expected to be
determined until atter raceipt
of raports from Ambassador Ar-
thur Bliss Lane at Warsaw.
These were expected to bear
out oificially yesterday’s press
dispatches telling ot methods by
which the Polish government
•ought to assure itself of a
•weeping majority at the polls.
i The China and Argentine situ-
ations appeared little less urgent
than thai revolving around the
Mfi'iish elections.
™ With the return of Marshal! from j
China, American policy is ex-;
Bected still to be directed toward
•verting full scale civil war be-
tween the nationalists and the
Hommunists. But Marshall himself
•i 'pears to have laid the basis for
Stronger support of Chiang Kai-
Shek's central government at
Nanking provided that govern
0U'ii> is reorganized to include a
greater number of "liberals," as
• Mai shall called them, in respmis
™ lblc positions
w _
Secretary of Rotary
To Conduct Luncheon
For Oui-Of-Towners
of lawmaking and not spend their Motco w-sponsored provisional ’
time running errands for conatit-j government since the nazis were1 PEIPING. Jan. 20—(/Pi-—Sec-
uents before the various state: chased out. j orid Lt. Richard C. O’Doud of
boards and bureaus.
When Stevenson leaves the
state government he will close u
career that set a number of prec-
edents, many of them coincident
to the fact that he moved up from
the lieutenant governorship into
the office of governor when W.
I —a O’Dantel went to the United
States senate less than a year
after his second term started
Outstanding among the ef-
fects of this circumstance was
the fact that Stevenson now has
more appointees on the govern-
ing boards of state agencies than
any other man who sarved as
governor. The significance of
this is obvious: Perhaps the
greatest power of the governor
is his appointing power. Stev-
enson's influence will thus be
lelt for many years in many
phases of Texas government.
Hardly a governor has ever
served Texas in its long and tur-
bulent history without many a
raging controversy.
See Number ONE Page 3
Salesman Booked
On Suspicion in
Butcher-Slaying
LOS ANGELES, Jan 20—(/PI—
A red-haired former army mu-
sician was booked on suspicion
of murder t 'day in the bloody
mutilation slaying of attractive
Elizabeth Short, 22-year-old Hol-
lywood hopeful
But C'apt. Jack Donahoe of the
police homicide bureau, wearily
winding up hours of questioning,
announced:
"Most of the evidence seems to
be on Manley's side."
Robert Manley, 25, salesman
for a pipe clamp concern, was
taken in custody last night as he
returned from a trip to San Fran-
cisco. Grilled for hours by homi-
<In London last night, the Soviet
radio monitor distributed a War-
raw dispatch of Tass, Russian
news agency, reporting that bal-|
loting in "perfect order and , , .
Peace" gave the government bloc j ]
100 percent support in three elec-
tion districts!
The official tally will not be
announced untii Jan. 31. Elec-
tion commissions in 6.726 pre-
cincts, guarded by the army, se-
curity police and militia, began
counting ballots yesterday.
Kinston, N C., today told a naval
tribunal trying Marine Corp.
William G. Pierson on a rape
charge that neither the alleged
victim nor Chinese police com-
to marine military police
the night of Pierson’s arrest.
O’Doud, who was MP officer of
the day, testified the marine corps
was not informed until the fol-
lowing day that Miss Shen Chung,
19-vear old National Peking (Pei-
ping) university co-ed, had
charged she had been raped. The
charge set off a series of anti-
American demonstrations by Chi-
The underground wus reported nMe students
to have killed seven soldiers at: The lieutenant, who speaks Chi
v'amosc, near Lublin, and a mem-
ber of the communist-backed
workers’ party in southeastern Po- j f.n
land during election hours. Five!*'.c' , „
soldiers also were reported slain £nd. Ple|?on were brought to! .. ‘ Brooks of Bunavista A O
in the Bialvstok area in ore-elec- Mp headquarters. I 'ey, “rooks or uunacisia, A. u.
The lieutenant
I nese, told the court that no men-
| tion of rape had been made bv
either Miss Shen or Chinese po- 1
e on Christmas Eve when the i
Full cooperation and support is
pledged by President Truman to
the 1947 March of Dimes, Jan. 15-
30, of the National Foundation for
Infantile Paralysis. "The fight
against disease," the President
said, "is no less important than
the fight against war."
Salvation Army
Board to Select
Officers Wednesday
Officers of the newly organized
Hutchinson county Salvation
Army advisory board will bv se-
lected at a meeting to be held in
legion hall at 7 p. m. Wednesday
it wps announced today.
The board will also discuss mat-
ters concerning a corps or a unit
proposed for this area by the Sal-
vation Army.
Members of the advisory board
Last rites for Mrs. Zena Rus-
sell, mother of Mrs. Helen Mose,
117 W. Adams street, were con-
ducted Monday in Los Alamos,
California.
Ties Un Traffic
Or Stinnr.lt *oad
1 he collision of a 1940 Chevro-
German passenger ship had struck
a mine, declined to comment on
a report that the vessel was a vic-
tim of sabotage. There was no in-
dication. however, that they gave
any credence to the report.
Aristides Mytakis, a 44-year-old
‘-vhool teacher who survived the
disaster, estimated that almoit 200
of the casualties were women and
children
■■t # j u u u j coupe with a Nashgas com-
I am afraid everv child aboard . . _ *
was lost and 95 per cent of the pany truck on the Canadian river
women,” he said. hill north -of the river bridge at
Mvtakis said the ship sank so 11:45 o’clock this morning badly
quickly that only two of her life- damaged the Chevrolet, sent its
boats could be launched. He de- driver to North Plains hospital for
scribed the vessels decks as a ____ , , . , ,
“solid wall of cursing, flighting I emergency treatment and tied up
men” struggling frantically to traffic on the steep incline for
save their lives. over half an hour.
ivfm% h.ir5ancl ♦ 'v.Wch K sai!l!d Driver of the coupe gave his
lrom Salonika Saturday, hit the . ,
mine a few miles off shore from ,na™e a* Larry Luther, according
Mrs. Russell, active in Tulsa! Rafina. Mytakis said the ship’s ,0 deputy Sheriff Jess Love, who
......... * iniroerKrainii Inn nn/ilHnni
club work, was in California to
visit relatives and to organize
: White Shrine chapters of which
: she was a member. She had j trol.
spent about a month there before:
I her death in the home of her son, j Survivors said that scores of
Ernest Russell. panic-stricken passengers leaped
She was a past high priestess *n*° frigid waters of the
of the Ladies Oriental Shrine of: ?u!f as *he ship lurched about
j America, a member of the Order
nl Eastern Star, the Rebekah lodge
and of the Veterans of Foreign
j Wars auxiliary.
master attempted to beach the tnvestlKated the accident,
vessel, but was prevented from Luther gave his age as 31, Love
doinR so by a broken rudder con- said. and reported that he is em-
ployed by a commercial photo-
grapher of Amarillo. He received
before sinking. Others, trapped
Action Delayed In
Lewis Contempt Case
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20—(/PI—
By not acting today, the supreme
! court delayed at least until Feb-
At Joint Legion,
j consists of the Reverend Alan Har-
tion
Bialvstok area in pre-elec-
violence. The militia was]
laid to have repulsed some 40 un-
derground guerillas who tried toi
attack polls.
Elsewhere balloting in generally'
mild weather, was reported for
the most part orderly and a heavy 1
turnout among Poland’s 12.000,000 i
eligible voters—those over 21, in-‘
ducting newly enfranchised sol-'
diers—was indicated.
BLAZE IN AUTO CALLS
OUT BORGER FIREMEN
The city fire department yes-
terday afternoon answered a call
to the corner of 12th and Main
streets where an earlv model
Hudson had caught fire. Fire Chief
J. D. Miller today said that the
fire had been located under the
dash board of the car and that
damage was negligible.
Chinese police explained only p'<'k®ns of Phillips, and J. A. Rob-
that Pierson "had been caught lllson’ S,kl Morgenstern, Benny
with the girl on the polo field”, *icrdam*n’ W’ Ma/Leld, and
O’Doud related 15°b Wideman all of Borger.
treatment for slight lacerations on
a knee and then was placed in c’ty
jail, the deputy said.
Love said that according to his
investigation, Luther was driving
below decks, screamed in terror toward Stinnett and met the
as the vessel settled beneath the empty-tanked gas truck near the
surface. top of the hill. His auto swerved
| into the left fender of the truck’s
1 Wireless Operator George Fer-: rear wneefS arid pulled tne oump-
ris said the fear-maddened pass-, or sharply out of place,
engf rs fought so madly to get in- j The left glde anfj part of t h e
to one life boat that it capsized: front of the coupe was ripped off,
and 1 believe all aboard were bend ng both doors, cracking the
| drowned. windshield and leaving the steer-
j ing wheel a 'wisted mass of steel.
Stinnett-bound traffic was tied
j up all the way to the bridge for
j over half an hour and Borger
j bound traffic was stalled for sev-
j eral hundred yards north of the
j scene of the accident as a local
! wrecking unit worked to remove
the wreckage from the highway.
Ror.ayne To Speak
Easi Ward P-TA
Called Meeting
Wednesday, 2:30 p. m.
East Ward P-TA will have a
called meeting at 230 p. m. Wed-
nesday for the purpose of ap-
pointing committees on arrange-
ments for a school carnival, it
was announced today. Proceeds
of the carnival will be used for
the purpose of buying play-
ground eguipment. the an-
nouncement said. Members are
urged to attend.
GOES SHOPPING-
MAKES A SALE
FARGO, N. D„ Jan. 20—i/Pl—
A student at North Dakota State
j college found that his G.l. allow-
ance wasn't quite enough, so he
j went "window shopping" for a
! part-time job.
Last week after looking in the
! windows of Fargo department
j stores, he introduced himself to
the manager of one concern, and
said:
| "Your store has the poorest look-
ing windows in town "
Now the student has a job—in-
i strutting the store personnel in
‘window decorating.
ment’s contempt case against John
L. Lewis. % -l* ,•
A ruling today would have been AUXllIBTy WCBllIig
exceptional since argument on the _
case was heard only last Tuesday. ___________
February 3 is the next Monday! Mrs. Emory Smith will furnish!
"ii which the court hands down the musical portion of the pro- *» . « . «
"Pinions. There is no certainty, gram tonight with her accordiar xlUiCIlinSOn wOUHiy
1 owever, that the case against the when the Hutchinson county _ __ 1
United Mine Workers’ president American Legion post and Auxil- R6S6FVGS 90 Pl3C6S
will be decided at that time. iary hold a joint meeting at 7:45
Lewis was held in contempt by ,><do' k n t,le Legion hall. A J SrniliBrS DlIHlGr
Federal District Judge T Alan Pimcipal speaker for the oc-
Goldsborough for not calling offj<'as*cln be L. J. Ronayne, past-’
la3t fall's coal strike at his order. >'res:ident of th® Borger Toast-
____I master’s club, who will speak on!
legislative matters.
Mexican Ranchers Hit
By Cattle Quarantine
!served.
A round-table luncheon at the
■Hel Black will be conducted to-
*!^;°Wof Te B^^fRoU? Oub | c‘d" d«^ves working in relays
•^rlhose * ou, -ofr t o w n ° Rota nans ,e!1 aslee*J *nswerin«
m§k) will come in to make up their ^ . . ... .
attendance, it was announced to- ^ow,cv,er’ ,h<: ?,lh"f‘y
/tav submitted to a lie detector test,
Regular luncheon of the club sal?’ c'as,slf>',n8 lts re’
has been suspended in favor of the s ',,a.s,, tonfused.
inter-city dinner which will be , ,V’el1 try again later," the de-
hel" at the Triangle Motel, east of U'c.t ;„e caftaln added-
Am.,nllo at 7 p m Tuesday. Clubs He « tlred out’ now- And s0
from Amarillo, Pa,npa, Borger, and Ix>nahue M th#se
cleat:
Governor-Claimants Agree
To Accept Court's Decision
MEXICO CITY, Jan. 20—(/PI—
j Col. Jose Garcia Valseca, publish-
er of the Sports Daily Esto and D__J• ,„J f _ p-.
1 wner of a chain of newspapers, * reulCICu I0T Lily
said today cattle ranchers in the i _ 1
j northern state of Chihuahua hard
jbit by the U. S. cattle quarantine
I against hoof and mouth disease,
j were turning to other industry for
j a livelihood.
j The publisher, in an interview
with Governor Fernando Foglio
j Miramontes of Chihuahua, said
Foglic told him the state govern-
j ment would help finance con-
j struction of a ‘huge paper mill”
to give ranchers a quick market
| lor their timber.
Approximately 90 reservations
t w _ have been made by Hutchinson
"-fee an., WhS? £“S2
j Pumpa senior high school cafeter-
, la at 7:30 o’clock this evening Tom
: Cochran, field scout executive for
1 this oistrict, announced today.
Hutchinson county scouts, in-
j eluding Harold Brisbin, Dale
j Fisher, and Jack Fields of Buna-
1 vista’s troop three and Oth Miller
That chill gripping north wind of Burger’s troop seven, directed
that swept through Borger last by Cochran, will install new
night will mean colder weather 'council officers for 1947.
here today and tonight and there -
Colder Weather Is
is a slight possibility of snow fiur-
ri, failing b<: r, tomorrow. Rnrnpr Prnmntinnal
The mercury fell from a high uu*ycl * 1 UUlUIiUlldl
50 yesterday to a low P«lnl»ra*iA» T« fi.
of 30 "egret lt-t night, according vtl“Drdfl0n 10 De
the local weatherman. Reading n- ______j w j
th mo ing at t 30 a m. was 31 DlSCUSSefl IllGSUaV
degrees. ___ 1
PaM andle will participate
Borger Rotary club will be host
(gpfo: the aft.or, with the Amarillo
chi' , .willing the pmgrum. All
tec., Rotarians are urged to meet
at the Bluck Hotel at 6 p. m to-
l»u uw when rides will be pooled
Three Possenger Cart
Derailed in Arl<oniot
¥ FI. KFNii <
fi., Rock IsL
apld (hie* i'i
1 00141 (i Ho, k*
« hiokrn i all
No bloodstains were found in
j Manley’s car.
His alibi for the time she died,
! early last Wednesday, "is a fam-
ily affair" but "doe* not appear
to hue,- been put together " Man
| ley said he was at home asleep.
| He ha« u wife and a foui months
I < ld baby
The officer added:
Manley acknowledged meeting
in Hun 1 in*go in
a telegram that tie w
i again Jan 8. meeting
ATLANTA, Jan. 20—(AP)— Herman Talmadqe, in a brief
face-to-face encounter in the executive chambers, today re-
fused to recognize Lieut. Governor M. E. Thompson as acting
governor of Georgia, but reiterated a promise to abide by a
court decision in the controversy.
Thompson then set up an acting governor's office in the
suite on the floor above normally occupied by the president
of the state senate.
Meanwhile there
agreed to such a bill.
Talmadge, at a prc. ( (inference,
said that meetings being held in
protest to hi- assumption of the
executive |
crowd whe
county uni
lar to the
Citizens Urged To * Birlhs
Poy Poll Tax Soon
At North PI a
ound 7 ounce
were these
other developments in the dual
control of the state’* government:
1. Students of five Atlanta col-
leges and the University of Geor-
gia ut Atnen, 7n miles away, plan-
ned a march on the capitol tomor-
row to pi "test Talmadge’* as-
fcumpt'on of the executive office.
2. The legislature voted l,
vile Talmadge to address a
nor at mail
occupation of the governor's of
fice.
4 Thompson, before the state
senate, retook the oath as beuten
ant governor and added the words
I will faithfully exercise the exe-
cutive power of the state of Geor-
lOwers were "the
i tried to destroj
system which is
U S. electoral s
having units
lation.
wme
the
ami-
stem
Of Hutchinson county’* 10.006 | a«.<t Mr
eligible voter*. 836 had paid im Jami
their 1947 poll tax up to noon A (J )
today. Another 130 had been M . '
granted exemption*, making a la. m. J.
total ot 966 voter* qualified. An
Cilitent were reminded again 5' .-in,
today that Ihay hava only unth 3 35 p
January 31 to pay thair poll tax A
and secure their right to vote Mi
a* ciiisen* ot the state. jl> n Su
hospital: A 7
1 girl bom to Mr.
. Griffin at 4:30 a
ounce girl born to
L. Walker at 9 50
18.
Muficc girl born to
L. C. Robert* at
IS
4
b<
Jess Alexander, chairman of the
retail merchants’ activities commit-
tee of the chamber of commerce,
announced this morning that the
committee would meet tomorrow
morning at 9:30 in the chamber of
commerce offices to discuss the
possibility of holding a promo-
tional celebration for the city of
Borger.
Also to be discussed Is a pro-
posed city ordinance which would
iefin* and regulate itinerant mer-
hants, venders, peddlers, and
ither person* taking order* for
utur* delivery.
Meal Ticket* for Locol
Student* Now Avoilablt
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Phillips, J. C. Borger News-Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 47, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1947, newspaper, January 20, 1947; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth736315/m1/1/: accessed May 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.