The Daily Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 111, Ed. 1 Monday, October 18, 1948 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Buyer Market On Way
ODtM^un
Sun Slanfs
Page 4 — Th© Daily Sun — Monday, October 18, 1948
Hie Daily Sun Company at 119 West Pearce,
Published each week-day afternoon by,
Baytown, Texas
Robert Mathernc ...............pu^'8.^
Fred Hartman .................lw,Itor
Syd S. Gould ..............Advertising Manager
Beulah Mae Jackson ......,— Office Manager
Subscription Rates:
NICE CHOICE—SAUNDERS
Month, 90c; 3-mos, I2.M; 6-mos., $5, year, J10
To subscribers in armed service, 75c month
All mail subscriptions are payable in advance.
National Representative: Texas Daily Press League
* Entered as second-class matter at the
Baytown, Texas, postoffice under the
Act of Congress of Mfirch 3, 1879.
SELECTION of Jack Saunders as chamber of com-
merce president was certainly a most happy choice
for Jack will make the chamber of commerce an
energetic and unselfish leader.
If you don’t think Jack is all-out for Bfiytown, just
ask him, or wgteh him.——_- - —- ■ ——
We wish that the new president would take it
upon himself to get that pecke^ Dnye^ar^ment
uDon himself to get mat ueavti "
between the railroads and Ifarrls County.finished so
we could get that street opened to traffic.
'jsttt-rai» s’jsri ws
road
Of course, that isn’t true, but nevertheless the
Ul course, «»»»■ . " 7
^road isn’t open, and it should be.
jjBk- We hope that the year of Saunders
^Hdlbbe as successful and as fruitful as
ih,d. w. -»
as president
the past year
into a buyer’s market. was done.
buyer’s market. • . y was done.
We read in tiur newspaper, and in others . x£W U(. CASE
from various sections of the state which WE Were’T so indolent we would sign up for
reach us, that the merchant is getting more the Lec Junior college course on world affairs- »«
hnver .T;>st the ,____ , nieht for 27 weeks and besides
^d° more Conscious of <Ae buyer. J?st the ^£*£
■ ■ ’ ■ tsvsrss?Tl
tsgsj&EZZ, * -
A perfume company introduces a new w,didn't let us in if we tried. But it’s a nice though ,
Unbeaten Crosby, Grab Bag
Liberty To Clash
Friday In 30-B
The HuU-Daisetta Bobcats- of
Faulkner At Funeral!
Easy Knowledge ^ H°U$t°n Brother
He*Tsten^oday"to
1. What presidential ticket in cral of his broth,. "d thJ
The Answer, Quick!
e back in the running after lands was a princess of Orange.
»•»< »*«* *»
MISI
EDMONDS RITES
Fufteral services for j
nmm mm
gHSSgaS •arr’" “ |SSH
*Thc Darton Broncos added a IS- ^o^Ort'pf 194VNazi ringleaders .horn. 1 ' ^ '11s
were indicted as war criminals.!
imc This date is the Feast of St. LUke,!—-------
,lch Greek physician and evangelist.|
-ec" NTaah tcnlled Beau Nash* . *be n
13 tie to their record of three wins w{.re indicted
and two defeats after the game This date t, th
with Cedar Bayou last week which Greek physic!
wmimw*..
feats. Modern Manners - I
When you ask a favor of a
District '30-BJfeMM; frSd^a 6f intSuon, a
W6 0 0 50 20 {m reference, etc., don’t forget to let
Crosby
Liberty.
..5 0 0
samples. A typewriter company ior a lew om NOvember prediction
days offers a machine free-^—just to see it don’t think that he win cut the mustard, u hhall of mirrors
SSSiSftfi«v - A - . -.
But re-. t£LTe1'SwSoS at Five Years Ago Today
.A ni-winra - nnn KfO01/ f'Ro lUo Pnnaovnlt-T.rillTlfin tlCkfit 1U 19**• ■ti
from Doily Sun Files
oBKfs back, and to us this indicates that ; . .*............"-V11!'-1-■' ,,,
production AS catching up a bit,, in. some lines* ^ow to vote anything but a Democratic ticket-on No- TOJpAy-s HEADLINES: Yanks changes
assr*
7 i non the friend know—by .note or tele-
4{ gQQ phone-the result of his efforts to
44- .600 helP-
62 51 .500 your Future ,1
,0 5. 0 0 197 ;000 At this time ^ win be well to do
Games Last Week (Thursday) work that needs seclusion and a
Liberty 19, Sout^Lake 0. ' * quidk mind: Older persons will
Dayton 13; Cedar Bayou 13. both help and binder your progress
. ‘ - in the next year. Avoid quarrels.
Friday miinn lw forth.
H
Slre„g s«*»«»isrsS?5(S2s- ,
’i 'Retreat Line From Pvt. Dalton Baker, prominent Games This Week (Frite)
mieoer Bend .......... La Porte youth who was at home Liberty at Crosby.
marKet. . ing”fhe only predictioni We will toake «».«»“« .'Heal estate deals involving *61,- for. the weekend on furlqugh from Hardinat Hull-Dai«^a.
Thib liew buyer’s market, wheil it cpmes D^ocrat* will NOT get more votes than the Dixie- m were disclosed, today, in 'a sur- Sheppard Field, was killed in an
about, will force-a change in. a.' lot Of- sales- crate and Republicans put together. yey- made for tte Daily Sun, half automobile •wL^aion- near the. Snell
It’s Been Said
-What man know# should find
vest. And it will get more so soon.
Importance Of Service
Sd longer are people gXPLANAtfON INSUFFICfiENT of^the sum embracing property Refinery,. Sunday.
More1"^more^oUte and fcffiient service to’^o^Dm^IaV Of? BridC|6
isfy you will be the ones that reap the har- ^here are too many people who believe that Mr.
—a u «#4ii rrof tnrtro ca cnnn Truman wanted to gain poiiticaHy from the m •
Of course, the president of the United States wants
peace, and nobody could deny mat face, but there is
a general belief that Mr. Truman thought he might
fnject himself into the international picture so
V':-
School Heads Of
Texas In Partey
is' that it lead# ’to a performing
manhood—Bovee.
Mow’d You Make Out?
1. The States Rights or ‘'Dixic-
erats.
2. North Carolina.
3. William of Orange who be-.
Td teach the “dignity and importance of
.service,” the. George Washington Carver
College at Aslleboro, North Carolina, has
been opened.
Students will come from the negro popu-
lation in that area “who want to learn.” Nn
rigid requirements, as to age will be, required.
Some subjects will carry a tuition charge,
some won’t.
LU W1C ----- r
strongly that he could appeal to .the voters at the
last minute on the age-old “don’t change horses in
the middle of the stream’’ philosophy.
But there will ba*a„ncw custodian of the White
House next year. That seems to be certain now.
Everything Mr. Truman is doing is detracting from
his cifia^icefiLrathcr than adding to them. ,* .
It looks like I>f*wey all the way to the professional
poll men. And to make it unanimous, we will agree.
NEW LAWS WELCOMED
WHERE players have follows, d .....................I_____ _____
.he new Laws of Contract Bridge, regularities, next occurrences dur-
which came into'- force all over ing the .auction, followed by those
the civilized world on the first of during the play, and ultimately
this month, they have applauded the scoring, after .which comes a
the work of the formulating com- section on the proprieties of con-
mittees. Never have n.ew Laws duct and one on rules for club
been so warmly welcomed. This procedure. Relative brevity
ec achieved, the new Laws cover-
stnvura nuunn ui —«j.v
in Austin came WiSiiam HI of England,
4. Rhode Island.
5. Tin- British empire.
The courses offered will be as home-
makers, maids, cooks, hotel workers, typists,
and nurses’ aides.
According to C. A. Barrett, negro educa-
tor and social worker, the school was named
after the distinguished Carver because of
jpg ability to serve humanity through his
‘many useful discoveries that serve people
/Without regard to their color or economic
status.
* This seems an interesting experiment in
education, arid will be watched closely by all
people. It should find a place in this world
for the work it has set out to accomplish.
Looking At Life
By Erich Branded
YOU MAY remember that last week I told you about
the invitation to the Cranberry Festival, and I prom-
ised you that I would go, and tell you all about it
Inside New York
By Mel Heimer
NEW YORK—In my young manhood, during the
transition from sports writer to observer of and com-
, tics as a reporter for one year in a small city.
'Even since, by choice, the world of statepmanship.-
has been a dark and mysterious one to me.
: During that disillusioning year, a steady stream of
charlatans, grafters and three-card monte men pass-7
|' ed before my young eyes, and the only conclusion I
could possibly draw was that such swindling and hi-
jacking went on throughout the nation on all levels.
Nothing in the intervening-15 years-has happened
to malje me change my mind, hut there have been
b disturbing developments of late that now force me'
f ■ to re-enter-the political briefly. I just want to de-
liver wits nenry
Oh please, leave me in peace.
This is a town, where, for an reason or another,
koM i« mom than tho ttsiifll infinifosmtil smfltfprinp'
ised you that I would go, and tell you----- -
I had never seen a big red cranberry and a little
white hen getting married and having seen many,
many things in my years as, a newspaperman, natur-
ally I was anxious to see something new.
But it really wasn't anything new, -
It was just another version of p stunt I pulled
twenty years ago when I was doing press agent
work for the Yosemite National Park people!
For some reason or other, people are always
interested in weddings, so I thought it would be
good publicity for the Yosemite if I staged a wedding
at the foot of Bridal Veil Falls.
I got a couple of the vacationers to_act as bride
and groom and another one to pose as a justice.
We announced the,event with great fanfare, we
made bridal bouquets out of Sierra Mountain wild
flowers, we took pictures and-we had stones, about
this unique wedding all over the country.
WE&L. SO FAR sp good. It just happened, however,
that The fellow who had been my groom-for-a-day
wasaiready-mar4ed--!wW.i^^ ftS2£_
She read the story and saw the pictftreiir her pwst <
and,! thinking that her husband had been trifling
on his vacation,, promptly went hi^ine to mother
and started a divorce suit "" L
Then he gof mad and started to sue the Yosemite
Park people. The girl I had used for a bride for
The occasion was a school teacher and when her
home authorities saw her picture and the story m
their paper they fired-her and she brought suit
a”The \hing is sort of hazy in my_ memory no.w,
it ir r ^uri nbf mistaken, everybody brought suit
against the. Yosemite people and the one thing I
remember -very distinctly is that I got fired.
'None of the suits ever came to trial and I presume
that after full explanations were made ail around
time the wishes of the overwhelm-
ing majority of all players have
been followed. The game Itself
has not- been changed in the
slightest degree,/in the scoring or
other fundamental. The Sole al-
terations arc in regulations who h
apply when someone happens to
commit an irregularity.
•Penalties for irregularities—
which are for the purpose of pre-
venting undue damage to the non-
offending side— haVe been so mod-
erated that they cause no dis-
proportionate harm to the of-
fenders. And they have been so
simplified 'that a large percentage
of all players may learn and re-
member them, or at • least the
most important and most fre-
. 9y Shephard Barclay Jg? L* M
• today, attending the annual meet-
order—what happens prior t-o the “ j of the Texas Association of
auction, then general laws on ir- ^ A<lmlnUtratora . . - . , „____ ’ „
Some 275 members of the asso- 1.60101) VUTCIl 1/1111161
ciation were present for the day- .. .m i ii
long session of discussion and qt |\CJT1di1 lOniyllT
by Worth A “Dutch treat’’ supper at 7:30 j
________ ..’ashington, p.m .today a^, tjhe Riverside Inn in
executive secretary of'the Ameri- Kemah will begin a membership
CKAMHOm I
y) ,(g«3
Save your
old furniturej
it/
Ghreita“newl
with colorful)
SHtnwm.WjuMd
ENAMELO
Give old furniture sptrJ
kling new hie. ids child J
talks.
A banquet and talk
also McClure "of Seattle, Washington, p m today at, the Riverside Inn in
executive secretary of'the Ameri- Kemah will begin a membership j
mg only 45 pages of large type as can Association of School Adminis- drive by Post No. 323, American
play with Enameioidl
One coat cjuicklv dritJ
2’
mg only 45 pages of large type as w./ubmw," ““"Vf*"?"” ------
against 62 for their immedixte -tutors, formally opened the meet- Legion. Members, wive# and prps-
predecessors, and there are only ing last night - pertive members are fifmtnd.
H small-type-footnotes as com- ' McClure said the “basic defense'’ .Tmkct.; ^»t ;.uati may
pared with 30 in the superseded of the country rests on education, obtained from uarrei Tuiw, a b.
code. and identified the school super in ’ Pigeonne, or Ratph Walker.
Any player may make himself tendent as “becoming more and
popular in his'cirtle of friends by pw a social engineering posi-
having a copy of the Laws for
reference, or familiarizing him-
self with the mq3t essential ones,
so he may be an authority among
his associates, thus contributing
to their enjoyment of the game.
It will be the, purpose of this se-
ries ; aid those who wish to
render such service.
*
to a .stunning
finish that
lmighs.it rough
treatment!
BKITTON -CRAVEi
LI MliH! COJ
t'hflue sw
Let’s today give the main pros
.Gentry was expected to return
to Baytown in time for a special
meeting of the board of trustees of
the Goose Creek Independent
School District, called for 7 p.m.
today in Robert E, Lee High
School.
The trustees are meeting one-
half hour earlier than usual to
discuss district building problems
most important and most fre- visions regarding a new deal, dr*, "'scuss i _
quently applied penalties. Such dinaWy called a re-deal. Summed of pr ' 1 *'r9 *
tanifv anH Hapifv nnw mninfflin ___ _____a ______j..i P«U"S STI
sanity and clarity now maintain
that any male player who con-
siders himself a gentleman or any
feminind player who considers
liersejf a lady should be eager to
pay one of .the prescribed 'penal-
ties. in fact insist upon it, whefi-
ever inadvertence or any other
factor has caused a)J infraction.
* When the new regulations, of
which all players may be proud,
arc cheerfully observed, the words
of the preanibie'lo''tRe,Laws Will
be true--“arguments are avoided
up. there must be a new deal with
the correct pack by jhe. right
dealer, with him alone shuffling,
whenever it is learned before the
last card is dealt that the deal
Was by the wrong dealer, or with
the wrong pack, or that a card
has been faced anywhere, or if
it is ascertained before the first
call of the auction that a player
hfis picked up the wrong hand
plana and the continued increase
of building costs.
170 Attend K-C
Coltiriibus Dinner
About .170 members and guests
of the San Jacinto Council, Knights
DON'T MISS
IRENE'S
MONTH END
CLEARANCE
TUESDAY-OCT. 19
and the pleasure which the game
offers is materially enhanced.”
The new Laws, published by
eo-operation of the John C. Wins-
ton, Company of Philadelphia and
available through any bookstore,
begin with definitions of terms,
Speakers were Pat Tynan of
Nederland, district K. of C. insur-
ance representative; E. W. Bruce,
Baytown attorney; Father Dennis
Kennedy, council chaplain: Ted
Nabors. KTRH program director;
TOMOBftOW—’The jtew Jaw*, and Dr. J. R. Venza of Beaumont.
» irregularities in general, *"a issrw nia.w ma 7
and another too few cards, or
that the pack itdfWf is incomplete
or otherwise incorrect.
• * *
ga, ■*. Hie rest is departmental
li3ed ii’- more or legs chronological
1 ms is a town, wneru, ior an h bswh ui aiiuvu««
there is more than the usual infinitesmal smattering inai hhvi iuu rafjwmi™-, — --------
of Wallace backers. The most annoying .aspect of »everybody lived happily forever after.
this situation is that they ail concentrate th«»fr drunj- But I stayed fired, and, in all my newspaper years
fire oii me. ... .7 ,te to come, I never-monkeyed with weddingsagam.
ing' a call and insufficient bids.
DAILY CROSSWORD
fire on me. . .
. The other night, having laid up the town car for
Repairs and told Francois he could use the convert-
ible, I was entraining for home in the Eighth Ave-
nt Sheehan entitled “Why 1 Will Not Vote Tor
tie" ■ ' ■■■--.
But 1 stayeo urea, «na, in an ini' -
to come, I never-monkeyed with weddingsagaiu.
WELL, THAT cranberry wedding wasn't that kind,
* Timin'! .lay tnr it It reminded me too much of
^o many cther similar affairs T liad swr! sueh as
you can also see at every county fair.
ACROSS
t Medieval
story -
5. Claw
9. Lower
44. Shallow pool 18. Arrange
r> ayaten:.
DOWN ally
1. Back of the 19 Frozen
neck water
I
Wnllaee” you can also see at every coumy mt. nfrasalt
: It was pure chance that the pages fell open that * jgfl;.^rtto<ed_qp m a^tor^e^r *
way and I was promptly going to loaf Over to Fran- and a fellow with a reasonable facsimile of a can anmo
Hs^Wallace’s f<£ttalIstoVwhen wham: “I won- cranberries as hi. bridal Wit . ' ft. ttSlj
tier," said a voice In my ear, dark and bitter, “if The whole idea was to remind tne people at the
they’ll publish another article called “Why I Will festival, aod you and you who read
jsFSfSa*jsw M
"Tile People have to be unshaven and wear dirty col- chicken being eaten so .much oftener -than t r .,
Jars? That’s a membership; badge already yet, as the cranberry
they say in Llntfy’s. <Thj# is beginning to take'an
fascist overtone*.)
■pTfaS^oTwZZSSt flSJf\ THIS W^^U^rTFerti^rl? *££
11. Stuffs
12, Soft, sweet
execution
- (mua.)
14. Belonging
I, toua
15. Incite (on)
tne cranDerrv preaa wuivp umugm —— -—-------
to.have this wedding of the little white hen and the _ 16. Typi
big red cranberry as a symbol of a perfect union. measure
This morning I 'got it fmm the paperhanger. I
fiave just moved into a new apartment, and I was
—’ emerging from the bathroom after no more
three cuts while shaving, a new track record.
[ the puperiiangrr. a srownng thrit wrin a wal-
mustoche, stood squarely in front of me and
Texas Laughs
17 Compare
(abhr.)
18. Discharge
20 Undeveloped
flower
21 Place for
transacting
business
23 Crowds _
24 Malt '
3.Area around 22. Drop ,
.itss tssr*-
(Rom.) regwet
5. Poke 26, Girl’s name
6. Astir . (poss.)
7. Sick . 27. Desert, N.
8. Literary 1 Africa
seminary 28. Grass cured
fFr.) for fodder o
U. Fruit of the 29. Die
dqco|&!m 30. Ceremony
13. Concludes 32. English
15. Before statesman
ernmeni were ajr ana sir
Darwirt. Middietop, Mr. find Mm.
David Donoghrte/and Mr. and Mrs,
DR. A. C. WALDREP,
Announces the Opening
of His Off ices for the
General Practice of Dentistryl
^.viBoghtte, and Mr. -------
H E. McKee. Middleton gave the
address of welcome to the city.
7 Guests representing civic and
■■ fraternal' groups Were Mr. and
S Mr*. W. M. Knn'.vlts chamber of
I commerce; Mr. and Mr*. Bragg
igDb uoac
3tlUS2 IdllLll!;
Yesterday’s Answer
35. Part of the
skeleton
36. Culture
medium
38. Chum
39. Trick .
(slang)
40. Poem c
“Well—he's a SINCERE man."
us attitude was so defiant, his mien so challeng-
, that I didn’t have to ask who was so sincere. All
‘ ' pakfast, I got another lecture on how
-gnier was going to lead us out of the Wil-
1 of war mto-the promised land of peace. I
’" - if not polite, and my politeness caused
I to get stone-cold
the Truman people seem
the customary man-
biased against
living and let-
1 determined to
{ By Boyce House
THE GREAT Staked Plains stretched out inter-
minably. not A sign of life, day after day. to break
the tremendous monotony of cactus, sand and
dwarfed mesquites. Then, one morning, on the east-
ern horizon appeared a tiny speck, and a similar
speck appeared on the western horizon. ^
All day the two speck* plodded toward each other, EXciamai
the only moving _objects in all, that dreary land- * 3$ Purthaas
scape. A* they drew closer and closer, it could’be sg ukely
beverage
25. Little girl
26. Small island
28. Taller
31. Any split '■
pulse (India)
32. Stripes
33. Greek letter
34. Exclamation
discerned that they T„ere 37. Flavw
dtacerxed that tney were wtm. m mm* ^
close of the day, when they were only 50 yards apart,
“fjpT, ygn —"v '■ - ■-•■■■■" :»j!
The other looked around and then said, “Do you
me*” 7 :
*». Sturdy.
T“
5-
r-
7
1
_
10
11
“
P
IS
n
t
ii
r*
*
10
7
u
_
-m
w
ir
M.
w
ii
zC
!1 tO
«
M
1
W
■
ir
&
(p
~
%
^41"
I
%
ar
WL
^commerce; Mr. and Mrs. Bragg ,
Callaway, Kiwanis; Gene Bauer,
Lions; Mr. find Mrs. Weldon Cade,
Bayshore Shrihersr Dr. and Mrs.,
Herbert Duke, Rotary;
Other guests were Howard
keown and Syd Gould.
Vlistittg council officials were B.
J, Antle, state, chairman^of council
activity, and past grand knight of
the Sgn Jacinto Council. John M.
Baranski, grand .knight of Oouncii
8M,p( Hotutan.their^ves
Song leader* wetc Frank read-
gill and Jerry Slokn. Other entjr-
tainers were Arlene and' Arien
Dunham and Phillis Rinehsirt 'of
.-Porte. Imogens and Norraagene.
1 auland of Wooster, and Claude
Fisher of Houston.
Room 216
^Temporary Phone 1211W
Kanstiles
• - 515 W.T
Witkerson Escapes As
OCTOBER
21
IS THE DAY
Car Goes Into Ditch
Jota' WlOetste, 83, of
lands, narrowly escaped death late
Saturday when his car went out
of control and plunged into Bluff
Gulley about a mile ninth of High-
lands. v:-; •- ,;.7,
He was cut and bruised and suf-
fering of Shock when brought to
fkus Jacinto Memorial Hospital by
Harrison-Logaq, Funeral.Heme,
ambulance; The
THE EVENT?
; ««
Grand Opering
I
W. M.
JEWELRY
. " 316 W. Texas
-I
HOOSt
____________________ _ ____ ius orotft *6 the
the coming election does J". Strom Faulkner, 48, who'
Thurmond head ? , at his home*!
■-4SZ
leading conference bids along with jjne 0f nobility? Home with rtev. Horaw 'rvf
Crosby and Liberty. The Bobcats 3 Qu&en juijana cf the Nether, hara off‘.ciating, : Ll*|
. , . !» 4Un xiinninff affbP InnJa urnc a nt*tllPM!5 flf OflinO'P
Us* mjnute worries?
{St if y°u heed y°ur
!ayfown merchant
jni stflft your shop-
ping today!
Be practical . . . LAY-
AWAY your gifts to-
Jay and really en|oy a
fl-free" Christmas.
Shop this page every
2 for CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING IDEAS! H
YOUR BES‘
Shop For
store wide la
MAKE XMAS SI
USE OUR-1
|»--“BLANK
72X^0 Contrasting 1
•THE FAIR DEPAI
CORNER TEXAS
SHOP and
CHRIS'
UTAWATYOU
ASK ABOUT OUR 2'/i
GOLDSW
«AI> ST.
"THE FAMILY’S CHF
FOR CONVENIENT XI
LAY-AY
that CHRIST
Our Grand
IV. M. Ho USt
316 W.' Tl
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View eight places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 111, Ed. 1 Monday, October 18, 1948, newspaper, October 18, 1948; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028725/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.