The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
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THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN
WHITEWRIGHT, GRAYSON COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1951.
5c a Copy, $1.50 and $2.00 a Year
VOLUME 66, NUMBER 13.
1
•< DEATHS >■
South
tire
“SLAVE FOR LIFE”
Phone 76 when you have news.
I
_
___
Funeral Services
This Afternoon
For Mrs. Tom Barbee
Full Insurance
Coverage Clause
Explained Here
Summers and Cates
Attending Water
School at Sherman
Pysician Warns
Of Sly Pneumonia
To Observe 103rd
Birthday March 31
Fewer Farmers Are
Producing More
OPS Fixes System
Of Price Markups
For Food Stores
Auto Makers Tooling
Up for War Contracts
ineer
Cagle Consults
With Local Group
Sen. George Says
War Threat Easing
Mrs. F. D. R. Cool
Toward 2-Term Limit
U.S. TO RATION
THREE METALS
STARTING JULY
TOBEY TV IDEA
FOR CONGRESS
SHOW IS NIXED
one son, John Philip Barbee of Mo-
bile, Ala.; and t _ '
Robert Benish of Houston and Mrs.
Charles Keliehor of Agua Dulce.
of
nieces
Funeral
24 and
SENSE OF COLOR
WAS OUTRAGED
DALLAS.—Chronic users of min-
eral oil or oily nosedrops are flirting
SALT LAKE CITY.—As Utah mo-
torists well know, Utah’s 1951 auto
license plates are green and white.
However, police found a set which
were black and white.
The motorist had repainted the
plates to match the color of his car.
The licenses were confiscated.
Total public
month set a new
900,000.
NEW DELHI, India.—The world’s
highest radio station has been set up
in Southern Tibet, 22,000 feet above
sea level. It’s in the Himalayas and
is flanked by a mountain that reaches
.another 5,000 feet above it.
Phone 76 when you have news.
F. G. Hoover Elected Highway Engi
Rotary President
STATE DRYS LOSE Check for $500.85 Mrs. M. A. Mangrum
CHANCE OF VOTE Sent to Red Cross
From Whitewright
38 of Every 1,000
Texans On Public Pay
Production Authority’s
tailment of rubber for
tubes.
First to announce the action were
General Motors, Chrysler, Ford and
Kaiser-Frazer expects to dp
L
DETROIT, Mich.—It takes some-
thing like eighteen months to design
a new automobile and get it on the
assembly lines.
Production of tanks and other mil-
itary vehicles similarly take time. In
the present instance, however, blue
prints already have been drawn and
most of the delay is in plant tooling.
It’s the preparatory work now under
way that’s holding back a huge flow
of armament from the auto industry.
Peak output on the orders now
placed with the car makers will not
be reached until some time in 1952.
In World War II the automobile
industry earned for itself the title of
“arsenal of democracy.”. It built
$29,000,000,000 worth of arms from
1941 through 1945.
Probably it again will be the
heaviest arms producer of any single
industry in the present defense pro-
gram. Orders for tanks, aircraft en-
gines, finished planes, fire power and
other military devices expected from
the car makers now are pressing the
$5,000,000,000 mark.
But aside from a relatively small
volume of trucks, transport vehicles,
passenger automobiles and other
items that require no special retool-
ing, the armament orders still are
largely in the paper stage. Some de-
liveries may start on the larger or-
ders by this year’s end, but peak pro-
duction isn’t expected on any con-
tract before next year.
For the most part the arms task'
given the auto makers so far calls
for volume production of units al-
ready tested in actual use. This is
particularly true of tanks and tank
engines, aircraft engines and cargo
planes.
Having made these in tremendous
volume in the last war the car mak-
ers know they can do it again. They
know, too, that reaching volume out-
put will not take nearly as long as it
did starting from scratch in World
War II.
The defense work so far assigned
»to the auto makers will take only a
small part of the car makers’ normal
manufacturing facilities. If the ma-
terial and manpower are available all
of them will be able to build civilian
vehicles as well as heavy armament
on a large scale.
K. C. VOTERS ’DEFEAT
PENDERGAST SLATE
MINNEAPOLIS.—American farm-
ers now are worth 91 billion dollars
in land, buildings, livestock and
equipment. That’s the report which
follows a survey by the Family Eco-
nomics Bureau of Northwestern Na-
tional Life Insurance Company of
Minneapolis.
The survey shows that America’s
farm population has dropped from
32,000,000 to 28,000,000 in less than
50 years. But this 12 percent small-
er force now produces twice as much
food and other products as in 1900.
And it has boosted its output per
man-hour 35 percent since 1940.
The average United States farm is
one-third larger today. It comprises
195 acres compared to 146 acres in
1900. And in that 50-year span the
average annual net income per farm
has risen from $350 to $2,225.
KANSAS CITY. — Complete re-
turns from Kansas City’s municipal
election Wednesday showed that
Mayor William E. Kemp and his
Nonpartisan Citizens Association had
scored a decisive victory over the
Pendergast ticket.
Mrs. Mandy A. Mangrum will ob-
serve her 103rd birthday anniversary
at her home here Saturday, some-
thing no other Whitewright person
has ever done, for not more than one
person in several hundred thousand
ever lives that long.
Mrs. Mangrum was born March 31,
1848, in Dyer County, Tennessee. She
was married to Robert Isom Man-
grum on November 17, 1867, in Ten-
nessee. They moved from Tennes-
see to Missouri, and moved to Texas
74 years ago, settling three miles
south of Pilot Grove. Mr. Mangrum
died seven years later, leaving her
with six children. She moved to
Whitewright 57 years ago and has
lived here ever since.
Mrs. Mangrum has four children
living, J. C. Mangrum, 81 years old,
of Grand Prairie; J. E. Magnrum and
A. T. Mangrum of Whitewright, and
Mrs. Ida Graves of Long Beach, Cal.
Nash. ]
likewise next Monday. Meanwhile
Packard and other companies were
studying the situation.
Need Month To
Clean Up, Paint Up,
FixUp? It’s Yours
VIENNA, Ga.—A third world war
is becoming “more and more remote”
daily, Sen. Walter George (Dem.) of
Georgia said Saturday.
“War is not in the offing or immi-
nent unless we stumble intoy it,” he
emphasized in an Atlanta Journal in-
Mayor R. R. Summers and Water
Superintendent Ray Cates are at-
tending a water school being held in
Sherman March 19 through April 6,
with meetings three times a week. C.
A. Sanders, field instructor for the
Texas Engineering Extension Serv-
ice, a part of Texas A. and M. Col-
lege system, is conducting the school.
Forty-two operators from Denison,
Bonham, Gainesville, Sherman, Gun-
ter, Bells, McKinney, Savoy, Leon-
ard, Celina, Tioga, Pilot Point, Fort
Forth, and Howe are enrolled also.
The operators are studying Unit I
of the Service’s Water Works Opera-
tion and Maintenance course which
has seven units. An operator com-
pleting any four of the seven units
is awarded a diploma by the service.
This diploma is recognized by the
Texas State Health Department as
meeting the training requirements in,
preparation for licensing examina-’
tions for certificates of competency.
These certificates are required by
law for all water plant operators.
WASHINGTON.—If you’re itching
to see your favorite lawmaker in ac-
tion on the Senate floor via televis-
ion, forget it.
Members just aren’t buying Sen.
Charles W. Tobey’s idea that the fuss
and tumult of Senate debate should
be piped into American homes.
It may come some day. But chil-
dren now in kneepants will be wear-
ing them long when living rooms ring
with the well-rounded phrases of
senatorial debate.
Sen. Edwin C. Johnson, D., Colo.,
who was chairman of the Commerce
Committee, keeps a well-peeled eye
on the new industry, said “nuts” to
Tobey’s suggestion.
F. Grant Hoover, local manager of
Community Public Service Company,
was elected president of the Rotary
Club at Friday’s meeting. He is
serving as vice-president of the club
now, and will succeed Nuell Skaggs
as president when the new officers
are installed.
Other officers elected were R. A.
Gillett, vice-president, and W. E.
LaRoe, treasurer. Jack Meador and
Byron Caraway were Elected to the
board of directors. Mr. LaRoe was
also elected to serve out the unex-
pired term of C. J. Meador as treas-
urer. Mr. Meador has been unable
to attend any of the club meetings
since suffering a stroke some two
months ago.
Friday’s program was presented by
S. T. Montgomery Jr., who had trad-
ed places with Jack Meador. Mr.
Montgomery presented a sound
movie showing the production and
processing of vegetables for human
consumption, with Herman Bedford
operating the movie projector.
Jack Meador is supposed to present
the program this week, but having
already traded places twice, he may
do so again.
Mrs. Lanius Kincaid
Seriously Injured
When Struck By Car
Curiosity—
Curious Lady—“Little boy, how is
it that your mother’s name is Jones
and yours is Smith?”
Boy—“She got married again gnd
I didn’t.”
wholesome surroundings i
from good, clean living conditions/
he said.
WASHINGTON.—The Census Bu-
reau reported Monday that 38 out of
every 1,000 Texans were on the pub-
lic pay roll in October 1950, a 7.3 per
cent increase over the level in Oc-
tober 1949.
The bureau added that state and
local government pay rolls during the
same period increased by 10 percent
from $37,469,000 to $41,199,900.
Of the 291,609 Texans publicly em-
ployed, 93,622 were federal civilian
workers and 197,987 vwere employed
by the state and local governments.
Over the nation as a whole, the
federal, state and local governments
combined employed a total of 6,402,-
000 workers in October 1950, or about
42 out of each 1,000 citizens—a new
high for any .period since 1945.
Total public pay rolls for the
record of $1,527,-
TOKYO.—An unemployed peddler
threatened to kill himself, wife and
four children if the Tokyo Yomiuri
turned down his advertisement. So
the newspaper Wednesday carried
this ad, free:
“Will be slave for life for 5,000 yen
(less than $140 cash).”
NEW YORK. — Mrs. Franklin D.
Roosevelt said Wednesday she didn’t
“feel right about” the recently
adopted 22nd Amendment limiting
the president to two terms.
“I hate the admission that you have
to pass a law to restrict the rights of
the people to decide for themselves,”
the former First Lady said on her
National Broadcasting company radio
program.
Referring to the election of her late
husband for a third and fourth term,
Mrs. Roosevelt1 said she felt it a nor-
mal procedure to retain as president
a man in close association with this
country’s wartime operations.
1
JOHN W. NASH
News of the death on March 21 of
John W. Nash, Glendale, Calif., was
received here this week. —
services were held March
burial was at Glendale.
Mr. Nash lived in Whitewright as
a boy and young man, and operated
a shoe repair shop here about 1912.
His wife is the former Jessie Brad-
ford, also a Whitewright resident
many years ago.
HIGHEST RAIDO STATION
Mrs. Lanius Kincaid remains in a
critical condition in a Bonham hos-
pital as the result of injuries sus-
tained when she was struck by an
automobile here Sunday night. Her
condition is such that attending phy-
sicians had been unable up to yester-
day to make X-ray pictures to deter-
mine the extent of her injuries. It is
known that she has a badly crushed
leg, as well as internal injuries.
The accident happened as Mrs.
Kincaid was crossing West Main
street on her way to church about
7:30 p. m. The car which struck her
and dragged her for some distance
was driven by Robert England, who
said he didn’t see her because of the
lights of an approaching car.
AUSTIN.—Chances for a statewide
prohibition vote in the next two
years died Wednesday in a House
committee that didn’t bother to de-
bate it.
Members voted fifteen to five
against putting the liquor question up
to the people for their first vote since
repeal sixteen years ago.
Committee action knocked to zero
what little chance there had been of
getting two-thirds of each House to
vote to submit it. But dry leaders,
surprised their march on the capitol
was outnumbered by anti-prohibi-
tionists, clung to hope.
Rep. Milton Wilkinson of Patroon,
prohibition sponsor, failed to give no-
tice in the committee of an appeal to
the House from its action. That is
the usual way an attempt is made to
revive a committee-killed bill.
But he announced he would ask
the House to jerk the bill away from
the committee on constitutional
amendments and send it to a friendly
one. That will require two-thirds
majority, House rules experts said,
which have to be raised to send it
over to the Senate.
JOHN J. CULLY
John J. Cully, 5342 Ridgedale, Dal-
las, died Friday in a Dallas hospital.
He was stricken with a heart attack
while in New York and was flown
back to Dallas the day before he
died. Funeral services were held in
Dallas Saturday and burial was in
Restland Memorial Park.
Mr. Cully will be remembered by
some of the older residents here as a
clerk in the Steinlein & Lively dry
goods store about 1915. He was one
of a group of orphan children
brought to Texas from New York, terview at his home,
and was reared at Van Alstyne.
Funeral services are to be held at
2:30 p. m. today at the First Presby-
terian Church for Mrs. Tom E. Bar-
bee, 69, conducted by Rev. Lee H.
Smith, pastor, assisted by Rev. A. D.
■Jameson, pastor of the First Metho-
dist Church. Burial in Oak Hill
Cemetery will be under direction of
Earnheart Funeral Service.
Pallbearers are Floyd Bassett,
Clyde Craig, C. B. Bryant HI, Jack
Farley, Byron Sears of Muenster and
Bob Sears.
Mrs. Barbee died at 6:30 p. m.
Tuesday at Wilson N. Jones Hospital,
Sherman, following a long illness.
Born at Myra, Texas, August 21,
1881, Mrs. Barbee was the daughter
of the late Philip and Joe Anna Lan-
nius. She was married to Tom E.
Barbee on January 22, 1902, and they
have lived here since that time.
She was a member of the First
Presbyterian Church, and was its
choir director for many years. She
was a graduate of Grayson College,
a charter member of the Whitewright
Music Club, a charter member of the
Friday Literary Club, and president
of the Oak Hill Cemetery Association,
WASHINGTON.—A new “percent-
age markup” system of food price
controls was ordered by the Govern-
ment Wednesday night and officials
predicted it will bring more price
reductions than increases.
The Office of Price Stabilization
issued three regulations applying to
about 560,000 retail food stores—in-
dependents and chains — and about
10,000 food wholesalers.
The orders affect about 60 percent
of the food on shelves of grocers and
about $20,000,000,000 of the business
they do each year.
Meanwhile, Economic Stabilizer
Eric Johnston said that he is almost
ready to announce a “tough policy”
on profits.
He also disclosed at a news con-
ference that he has been discussing
with farm groups a plan to freeze
farm price parity levels at the fig-
ures of Jan. 25 when .wages and gen-
eral prices were frozen. That could
have the effect of stopping the esca-
lator that is helping carry farm and
food price up.
But it was not brought out just
how parity levels could be frozen.
Existing law provides that no farm
product ceiling prices be set below
a level reflecting the prices of things
farmers must buy.
The new pricing method fixes spe-
cific percentages which food. sellers
can add to what they pay for food
items. The system must be put into
effect between April 5 and April 30.
After the April 30 dead line, grocers
must recalculate their prices every
Monday, based on their newest costs
of food deliveries.
Price Director Michael V. DiSalle
said that “this is our first big move in
the food field since the general freeze
order. It affects a big chunk of food
items, on which American families
spend close to $20,000,000,000 a year.”
He said the general impact of the
orders will be to reduce food prices
in most categories covered by the or-
der.
Mrs. Floyd Everheart, area chair-
man for the Red Cross fund cam-
paign, told The Sun yesterday that
she had sent a check for $500.85 to
Grayson County Red Cross head-
quarters at Sherman. The quota for
the Whitewright area, which includes
Bethel,, Pilot Grove, Kentuckytown
and Canaan, was $500. Mrs. Ever-
heart said that there would be some
additional money to send in, and that
persons who haven’t contributed can
still do so by taking their contribu-
tion to Harold Doss, at the city of-
fice.
Mrs. Everheart asked The Sun to
publicly express her thanks for the
cooperation of all who aided in the
drive, and she especially wanted to
thank Harold Doss and Mrs. Allen T.
Short.
WASHINGTON. — The Govern-
ment will begin rationing steel, cop-
per and aluminum on July 1 under a
controlled materials program aimed
at assuring supplies of the metals for
defense and essential civilian pro-
duction, it was disclosed.
The disclosure was made by Manly
Fleischmann, Administrator of the
National Production Authority, at a
hearing before the House Agriculture
Committee. The legislators are in-
vestigating agriculture’s treatment in
the defense drive.
The NPA already has said it will
put a controlled materials program
into effect later this year, but this is
the''first time the starting date and
specific materials to be controlled
have been made known publicly.
Mr. Fleischmann also said efforts
will be made to get an advance allot-
ment of steel, aluminum and copper
for farm machinery makers for June.
Before another committee, Mr.
Fleischmann spelled out his agency’s
plans for making the beer can the
first all-out casualty of the current
emergency. He said use of tin for
beer cans will be cut back 25 per-
cent during April, May and June, and
more later. The cut may go to 50
percent in July, August and Septem-
ber and 75 percent during the last
three months of 1951.
EIGHT-YEAR-OLD
Survivors include her husband; I SHOWS PO HOW
two daughters, Mrs. I TO SAVE MONEY
WASHINGTON. — A 8-year-old
down in Mobile, Ala., has brought
about a money-saving change in the
stamping of air mail.
He is Gregg Buckalaw.
He recently wrote to Postmaster
General Donaldson suggesting that
npll. the “Via” be dropped from the phrase
“Via Air Mail” which post offices
everywhere rubber-stamp on items
for plane delivery. “Via” is Latin for
“by way of.”
Donaldson has advised Gregg that
his suggestion is good and is being
promptly adopted.
The youngster wrote, with an ac-
companying illustration:
“You can save a lot of money by
doing this. You can save by taking
the via* off the air mail letters. You
can save almost a third of rubber and
it is a critical war material besides.
“Yours truly,
“Gregg Buckalaw (8).”
Spare Tire Turns
Defense Casualty
DETROIT, Mich.—The spare
Wednesday became the auto indus-
’’ try’s first major casualty of the de-
fense program.
Several car manufacturers dis-
closed they have notified their deal-
ers they no longer will be able to
furnish the spare tires with new cars
shipped from the factory. The ac-
tion was attributed to the National
recent cur-
• tires and
Full coverage windstorm, hurri-
cane and hail insurance is now op-
tional on all structures in Texas, ef-
fective April 1, capital stock com-
pany agents in Whitewright have an-
nounced.
All policies written prior to April
1 can be endorsed to eliminate the
deductible clause.
As an example, the cost of $5,000
insurance on a brick mercantile
building written for one year .with
the $100 deductible clause would be
$9. Without the deductible clause
the cost would be $28.50.
The same policy written for three
years with the deductible clause
would cost $22.50 and $71, without.
On a frame dwelling for one year
the cost with the clause would be $15
and $37.50 without it. On a three-
year policy of the same kind the
price would be $37.50 with the clause
and $93.50 without it.
For $2,000 insurance on a farm
dwelling one year with the deduct-
ible clause the cost would be $10.60.
Without the clause the cost will be
$20.70.
Grayson County Resident Engineer
C. C. Cagle, Texas Highway Depart-
ment, came to Whitewright Monday
to confer with a group of city officials
and business men about right-of-way
for Farm-to-Market Highway No.
1283 through the City of White-
wright. This highway project is -to
connect with new Highway 69 at the
south end of Bond street and run.
north through town to Oak Hill
Cemetery and the Fannin County
line.
Mr. Cagle told the group that the
only thing holding up construction,
of this road is Whitewright’s failure
to turn over to the department deeds
for the necessary right-of-way
through nine pieces of property on.
the north end of Bond street and on
toward the bridge over Bois a’Arc
Creek. He accompanied the group to
the pieces of property in question
and explained just what had to*be
done.
It is planned to straighten the
sharp turn at the Mrs. D. M. Rich
corner, and obtaining of right-of-way
from Mrs. Rich is the major obstacle
to completing the right-of-way ac-
quisition. The new road would be
some 10 feet closer to Mrs. Rich’s
home than the present road, and the
right-of-way line would be against
the corner of her house. It is the
only piece of property that would be
damaged by the road.
Mr. Cagle was asked by a member
of the group if it will be necessary to
move the water main on South Bond
street, and he said that it will. He
suggested that this work should pro-
ceed at once so that the Highway De-
partment would be able, to go ahead
with road construction as soon as
work order is-received.
There was some misunderstanding
about moving this water main, after
the Highway Department changed its
original plan for this road. Mayor
R. R. Summers told Mr. Cagle that a
19-foot road surface would not be
wide enough to put the road over the
water main, but' Mr. Cagle said a
19-foot road had a 26-foot base, and
this base would be over the water
maip, and that the'Highway Depart-
ment certainly was not going to build
the road over the water main. He
stated further that he didn’t know
just how wide this road is to be, that
there is a possibiliy that it will be
wider than 19 feet, with a corre-
sponding wider road base.
All right-of-way deeds on
Bond street were obtained more than
a year ago. \
MRS. JESSE W. BLAKEY
Funeral services for Mrs. Jesse W.
Blakey, 58, were held at the
Baptist Church at 2:30 p. m. Wednes-
day, .conducted by Rev. Baxton Bry-
ant and Rev. Grady Layman. Inter-
ment in Oak Hill Cemetery here was
under direction of Earnheart Funeral
Service. Mrs. Blakey died at 4:48
a. m. Tuesday in a Sherman hospital
after a long illness.
Pallbearers were Morton Badgett,
Thomas Sears, Floyd Booth, Hilliard
Wilson, Edwin Badgett and Doyle
Withrow.
Mrs. Blakey was born June 21,
1892, in Tennessee, a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. P. J. Russell. She was mar-
ried to Mr. Blakey on Dec. 1, 1914, in
Kentuckytown, and lived for 36 years
near Whitewright. She was a mem-
ber of the Baptist Church.
Survivors include her husband; one
son, Tom Blakey of Mesquite; one
daughter, Mrs. Roger Holcomb, also
of Mesquite; and three sisters, Mrs.
Jack Lawrence of Sherman, Mrs. J.
D. Young of Whitewright, and Mrs.
Fred Howell of Dallas.
AUSTU^.—Need a month to clean
up, paint up, fix up?
You’ve got it.
Governor Shivers Monday desig-
nated March 25-April 25 as the offi-
cial period of , a clean-up, fix-up
campaign for Texas.
He called on citizens to take an ac-
tive part in the improvement cam-
paign to insure its success.
“The general health, safety and
welfare of our citizens depend upon
arising a sneaky and often fatal kind
ifinnc ” n • t-x a _ t _ z-x tt______
of pneumonia, Dr. Aubrey O. Hamp-
ton of Washington warned here
Wednesday.
It is lipoid pneumonih, the visitor
said, interpreting the term lipoid as
“fatlike.”
Because oil is a smooth and bland
substance, Dr. Hampton explained, it
often slips into the windpipe, and
from there slides down into the
lungs.
And there it just sits, and keeps
piling up if the owner of those lungs
continues to doctor his colds with oily
nosedrops or oily sprays—or keeps
taking oily laxatives for constipation.
When enough oil accumulates in
the lungs it can be plenty serious.
Dr. Hampton is chief consultant in
radiology for the Veterans Adminis-
tration. He also heads the radiology
department of Garfield Memorial
Hospital in Washington.
A native Texan and a graduate of
Baylor College, he is back in Dallas
this week as one of twelve visiting
lecturers at the Dallas Southern Clin-
ical Society’s annual conference in
Hotel Adolphus and the Baker Hotel.
(Dr. Hampton, son of C. W. Hamp-
ton, grew up in Whitewright where
he graduated from high school.)
INFANT BURCHFIELD
The still-born infant daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Burchfield, born
Wednesday at a Dallas hospital, was
buried at Pilot Grove Cemetery this
Thursday morning.
CHARLES J. CARPENTER
Funeral services were held at 10
a. m. Friday at the Van Alstyne Bap-
tist Church for Charles J. Carpenter,
40, who lived on route 1 out of Van
Alstyne. Burial was in Pilot Grove
Cemetery. Mr. Carpenter died sud-
denly while at work for Price Con-
struction Company at Denison about
.noon March 21. It was his first day
on the job.
Mr. Carpenter was born Sept. 26,
1910, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Carpenter. *
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
*Pauline Carpenter; his mother, Mrs.
Charlie Carpenter of Whitewright;
three sons, James Carpenter, G. W.
•Carpenter and Elmer Carpenter, all
of Van Alstyne; one daughter, Ella
Mae Carpenter of Van Alstyne; three
brothers, Cleo Carpenter and Tru-
man Carpenter, both of Sherman, and
Marion Carpenter of Whitewright;
tour sisters, Mrs. Aline Schiller of
Howe, Mrs. Francis Dodson of Fort
Worth, Mrs. Florine Page and Mrs.
Lillie Carpenter, both of White-
wright; and several nieces and
nephews.
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Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1951, newspaper, March 29, 1951; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1332557/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.