Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. [30], No. 98, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 23, 1939 Page: 2 of 18
pages : ill. ; page 31 x 23 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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t
Sunday, July 23, 1939
fALLEY SUNDAY STAR—MONITOR—HERALD
Pare 2
Necessity Of State School Increase In Funds Is Studied
♦
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9
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Carelessness -
(Staff Photon.)
Watts Returns
OBITUARY
Harlingen Man Develops
New Buzzer-Spot For Use
On National Guard Guns
500 inches away, and saved follow-
CHALLES-
HAMILTON
INSURANCE AGENCY
Phone 139
WILLIAM T. DAVIS
Reese Wil-Mond Bldg.
Harlingen
The body will be
will
SOUTHWESTERN
>
UNIVERSITY
Congratulations
vho were
Co-Educational Four-Year "A" Grade College,
Rins
Thoroughly Accredited, Beautiful Buildinga
and Grounds
Outstanding In
ate. Interment will be in the Rose-
• SCHOLARSHIP
• ART
• MUSIC
Valley Gin Co.
• DRAMATIC ART
• SPEECH
• PRE-MEDICAL
• PRE-LAW
McAllen
ATHLETICS
• BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
To Open
niver
f
Crnieiininl Session
MILLER’S COFFEE SHOP
SAX BEXITO
Special Sunday Dinner
w
»
IJL
I
-♦
I
I
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING
Library
la
I1MM0
in
An
ideal four-year college
A
<
of
construction.
amid ideal surroundings. The
A
course
$58,000 Gymnasium w ill
fall semester will open Sep-
be
50c
begun In sixty days.
tember 18. 1939.
THE SCHOOL FOR YOUR BOY
For Descriptive Literature
Address
YOU WILL ENJOY EATING AT
Southwestern University
MILLER S COFFEE SHOP
SAX’ BEXITO
V
GEORGETOWN. TEXAS
. KEttltlLL TEX.
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Ml*
Schreiner Institute
. MiWt A
♦
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cMalog anj tutorial bulletin. aJJreta
I L KLAKY, Frsnhst . KNKIREI IHTITITE . Bn
Reliefer Is Fined
For Tot Cruelty
Group Will Discuss
Problem Monday
HARLINGEN MAN DEVELOPS AID FOR BEGINNING MACHINE GUNNERS
Ako a mighty appetizing Special Plate Lunch includ-
ing Lamb, Fish, Steak, or Pork Chops, at only 30c
OPEN LETTER
IS SENT TO
BOARD HEAD
Shr.mp or Crabmeat Cocktail. Fruit. Tomato er Grapefruit Juice
Special Cottage Cheese Salad Con«umme a la Royale
■r.
O’Brien Augratin Potatoes, Fresh Braised String Beans
Choice of Fresh Apple Roll. Vanilla Sauce, Fruit Jello.
Pineapple Sherbet, Stewed Prunes. Sliced Peaches, or Pie
Tea, Coffee, or Milk
Choice of
Roast Young Chicken. Dressing, Cranberry Sauce
Stewed Chicken with Butter Dumplings
Fried Spring Chicken, Country Gravy
Roast Leg of Lamb. Dressing, or
Smothered Steak. Country Style
The deceased, a native of Middle-
ton Missouri, had been a resident
of the Valley for the past 15 years
He is survived by his wife; four
sons. E. R and Marian of McAllen.
Stacey of Rawlston. la., and Harry
of Glidden. la; three sisters and
one brother.
MRS.
PORT
for
Cotton and CoHon Seed .
Al All Times
n
it
to
W'.'TgTM HB « I
U K I'BB ■ |
touched off when the trigger is touched. The machine gunner, sits behind his gun 42 feet and and five
inches from the target, knows immediately how far his fire is off the target, learns much faster the
manipulation of a gun. The aid was developed by Harry Mima, Harlingen, member of the guard unit.
EASY BUDGET TERMS
Wroten Motor Co.
424 W. Harrison
Sanders Motor Co.
Raymondville, Texas
San Benito Motor Co.
San Benito. Texas
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i
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7
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SOMEBODY rise’s careless-
■ •
». I i.,x
’^11
1.425 and Santa Maria 130
Willacv: Raymondville 2.921; Se-
hartian 2.493; Lyford 2 431: San Per-
lita 1 031; Lasara 918; Porfirio 265;
i 140; and Wdlamar
GINS REPORT
33,258 BALES
(Continued from Page 1)
ford Gin Association at Lyford led
The spot light and buzzer aid for beginning machine gun operators of Company M. 141st Infantry.
Texas National Guard stationed at San Benito, is seen in the above photograph, demonstrated by J.
Davis, company artificer, with the 500-inch target used in conjunction. The hox belled to the barrel of
the J2 caliber target machine gun has a lens in the front end. and a light and buzzer in the rear,
---------------------------------------------------—------------------------------------------gt
STEVE PARISH. Mgr.
"Backed by 25 years experience
In the Valley Cotton Deal."
MWL'v ♦
■T
■
ILj »
Jubcncio J. Garcia, Oscar J del
Castillo and Romeo Gonzalez
ly
r -
F • ♦
To Mr and Mrs George Meadows.
Corpus Christi, on birth of a son
weighing eight pounds. July 19 at
Corpus Christi. Mrs Meadows is
the former Vivien Card, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. T E Card. Mission
4*
/ w
r *• W
I----------------------------------
TOP PRICES PAID
. 1
er.
All of the young men and women
who live in the dormitories have
their meals together in a large din-
ing room.
Southwestern University is not
only outstanding as a college of
liberal arts, but is becoming more
and more famous as a college of
fine arts. The chorus this year
under the direction of Madame
Margarita Slaviansky was one of
eight choruses in America invited
to appear before the Bienn al Con-
vention of the National Federation
of Music Clubs in Baltimore
I '
ness can involve you in
a serious automobile accident
which mav lead to vour fi-
W V
bankruptcy. Don’t
risk your present prosperity
and happiness by driving
without adequate Automo-
bile Insurance. See to it today
that you are fully protected.
I
The program will be extended
to these countries, he said, as soon
import quotas can be estab-
FOR 100 YEARS ...
Increase Vie- ed
McNeny. adding that it is well
known that the state of Texas is
now spending as much money on
all forms of public education as any
state in the Union except New
York, which has two and one half
times the population of Texas, tells
Blair that he of course is aware of
the fact the per capita allotment
in Texas has risen from an all-time
high of $17.50 three years ago to
the current $22 apportionment be-
cause of the demands of school of-
ficials I
In conclusion, McNeny tells Blair raies'" Jw"L.'”PutegnaL
that with the wealth of informa- valela Rarnin, Munoz>
tion and extensive research on our
school system now before them, it
was the hope of Texas taxpayers
that the members of the state board
of education would inaugurate a
constructive downward revision of
the per capita apportionment so as
to relieve the tax burden now on
the homes, farms and anches of the
state, keeping in mind that the
ad valorem tax presently provides
more than 60 per cent of the cost
of all government in Toxas, ac-
cording to the state comptrollers
report.
\ *
A iully tq*<ppcd, modtrn, endowed. Junior Colleje end
AcoJemy. locked «• the Hill Country of T«im. Colleje end
Preperetory d>«>t<o«t member! of Southern Aisocietion oi Colleje!
end Secondary Schoell; fully accredited. Enfineermj, But neil
Admioiitretion, Teacher -Training, PreLaw, Pre-Medicel, and
Academic Covrtei.
Brownsville Elks
To Plan For Falf
BROWNSVILLE Plans for fail
activities will be made at the Tue«-
day night meeting of the Browns-
ville Elks club, according to Sam
Perl, exalted ruler.
F.obin Pate will speak on Amer-
icanism and F T Graham will use.
citizenship as his topic. These
talks are in line with the national
organizations citizenship move-
ment.
The meeting, which begins at I
p m at the lodge, situated above
the Western Union, is open to all
visiting Elks.
j
way. by repeatedly playing longitude
with its sights and range finder ludr Roughly jpeaking.
lines extend to Costa Rica, North-
1 on
near the mid-Atlantic
f.aK
>
• •
*
Au;.
and four brothers, John Davis.
Lockney; Lee Davis. Plainview;
John Davis, Eastland: and James
Davis, San Benito.
Active pallbearers include Gay-
lord Kenney. Paul R. Lane. Claude
Lamberth. Joe Penry. Jack King,
and Myrlin O. Johnson.
Honorary pallbearers include R
A. Pittman. J. M Mothcrshead. O.
W Coleman, S. C. Stringer. C. W.
Sherman, A. L. Brooks. Dr. A I
•F**.
designated black spot it is.
Inventor Mims simply stuck a
lens in one end of a two-foot wood-
en box. a little light bulb and buzz-
er in the other, put a transformer
between the buzzer and light and
the gun. and hooked the contrap-
tion mtn the nearest light switch
When the trigger is touched the
buzzer buzzes, the spc>t flashes on
the target somewhere in the neigh-
borhood cf the black spot aimed
at. and the instructor or observer
says “two rights, two up," to put
you on.
The machine gunner’s manipula-
tory aid. as Mims and Captain Will-
iams call it, saves all the ammuni-
t on a tyro gunner would waste,
all the corresponding time he might
consume in spotting his hits, and
teaches him quickly and easily
how to handle the screws and ac-
quire the feather trigger touch in
much less time and w’ith much less
effort than in ordinary target prac-
tice.
Harlingen
i fl
His
him
inven-
They saw one
** »
Mortuary in charge.
The pallb. arers were Marshall
Ch'sset Jack Fe’ , Pete Etewart.
and Dale M .uldin. Surviving be-
side the parents. Mr. and Mrs Clif-
ford Gilliam arc grandparents. Mr.
and Mrs W T Gilliam, of Donna,
and Mr and Mrs. F. A. Stevenson
I of Sweetwater. Tcxa8.
here for the funeral.
the husband,
mother. Mis.
brothers. Clarence Harrod, Char-
les Blackman and Willirm Black-
man, all of Batesville.
8
z
Oakville cemetery.
Survivors include
is survived by his mother, a sister. Felton Rhodes; the
Mrs Leon Senter of Tulsa, and a Ella Craw-ford; three sisters. Doro-
brother. Harry, of Okmulgee.
GEORGETOWN — Southwestern • and put in order for the fall semest-
University w ill enter upon her 100th
year September 18 One hundred
years of touching the lives of ap-
proximately 50.000 youths among
whom have been many of the
leading citizens in almost every
vocation m the stale and nation
Southwestern University has
never striven to be large in num-
bers. but outstanding in the quality
of the faculty and of the student
body, not in mass production but
in individual education.
The fortunos of Southwestern
were never fairer, according to of-
ficials. In the last four years a
debt of $430,000 has been liquidat-
ed. nearly a quarter of a million
dollars has been added to the en-
dowment, a .00.000 library build-
ing is in course of construction,
ground will be broken for a $550 -
000 gymnasium before many days
These will be attractive features
for Southwestern as she enters up-
on her second century of construc-
tive education. Southwestern has
as beautiful, complete, adequate
and fire-proof Woman’s Building
as can be found in the South. This
attractive dormitory u-as built
seven vesrs ago at « cost of more
than $300,000.
Mood Hall, where many of the
men of leadership in the world to-
day were oused ia being renovated
interment in the family vault in who died Friday afternoon will be tor do
the old city cemetery held at 4 p. m f _
Survivors include the wife. Si- Baptist Church Rev. J. Cal Me- they thought was unwieldy
* “ ~ ‘ “ three sections,
returned to ..
burial the -”!ms put the three sections in
one. h'x>kcd up a buzzer and a
little spot light synchronously,
belted it onto the machine gun
barrel, turned it on a paper target
Church.
Davis leaves six sons,
Davis. Somerton, Ariz. T 1
ford Davis. Hart. Tex ; William J.
Davis. Ranger; Floyd Davis. Goose 626: Donna 715; La Villa 102; San
Creek; Alver and Elvis Davis, both Juan 80; McAllen 1.375; Mercedes
* eld at the Christian church of Harlingen: three daughters. Mrs
Donna at four o'clock Saturday Bertie Cornell. San Antonio; Mrs
Mrs.
„■ » ’ ey um company gms ac-
j.- counted for 2.011 bales of the Val-
ManharL T. S Herren. John My-
’nck. N. C. Walker, A. J. Mays, and
Mr. Wilhelm.
* *............................■—.........-—*----
BOUNTY RATE
IS SCHEDULED
(Continued from Page 1)
cipitati g mutually injurious price
competition tn the world cutton
market."
The United States has invited
major cotton exporting countries to
pai ticipate in a conference here
September 5, to discuss such an
agreement
Wallace said that until action was
taken to prevent the re-entry into
the United States of cotton ex-
pay-
ments would not be made on ex-
ports to Canada. Mexico, British
Honduras. Colombia, Costa Rica.
Cuba, Dominican Republic. Guate-
mala, Haiti, Honduras, Newfound-
land, Nicaragua, Panama. Salvador,
and Venezuela, west of 40 degrees
j and east of 12 west lati-
Roughly speaking, these
WCo 8 Vk Sa i a*. . » a
They don t have to stare at a crn Colombia and Venezuela
bank of mud across the parade to I the south
find out where bullets are strik- Ocean on’the cast and along the
mg the targets, because the spot pacific coast on the west,
of light travels the 42 inches in
nothing flat, and it isn't tough to '
sec how far the light is off the as
, hshed to prevent re-entry of the
export goods. OAicials san'
would take about four weeks
put the quotas into operation.
ATTENDS CONVENTION
HARLINGEN — Laney Rodgers,
assistant postmaster, is attending
a three-day convention of the state
Postoffice Supervisors Association
at Austin. He is expected to re-
turn Monday.
MARTIN G. COPENHAVER
McALLEN- Funeral sendees for
Martin G. Copenhaver. 77. who died
Friday night at his home in Mc-
Allen after a lingering illness, will
be held Sunday at 10 a m at the ry z zr* 13 C \37TI I
Martin-Nelson Funeral Chapel here v*InOW t,f\^ WILL
Rev. Le Grande Pace will offici- MEET FRIDAY
(Continued from Page 1) lows:
bers and alternates also are shown:
I. Mission city hall. F. B. Hol-
land. member. E. Marvin Goodwin,
alternate.
2 Sharyland. J Q Henry, mem-
ber; W. H Kilgore, alternate.
3 McAllen chamber of com-
merce. Chrest Thompson, member;
L. T. Leonard, member.
■4. Edinburg courthouse. H C. 2.610.
Adcrhold. member; John Wells, al-
ternate.
5 Pharr-San Juan-Alamo school.
W G. Rice, member; Paul Freeman,
alternate.
6. Donna-Weslaco city hall. E
B Ballard, member; George E. Bell,
alternate
7. Mercedes city hall. I>ee Kid-
der. member.
8 I .a Fcria community house. J.
R Adams, member; J. W. Sanders,
alternate
9. Harlingen city hall. B F
Barnes, member; Stanley Crockett,
alternate.
10. San Benito high school music
room. E I. Bucklin, member; Ed
Alter, alternate
II. Brownsville chamber of com-
merce. Harry Banker, member; E
W Shuler alternate.
12. Raymondville courhouse, F
‘ L. Bernard, member.
We guarantee y ou the maxi-
mum amount cf lint per bale
of seed cotton.
; /I
1 incnes away, ana savea follow-
ing gunners a heck of a lot of am-
munition and prevented untold sun-
bu^n ca8es- *<!>!. ported under the program.
Soldiers of Company M 141st •
Infantry regiment. Texas National
Guard, don’t have to get out of
the immaculate armory 'which was
rated ’excellent’* m the last in-
spector's report! to learn all about
the 22 caliber machine gun the
best
L. C. GILLIAM
DONNA Funeral services for
L. C. Gilliam, five-year-old son of
Mr and Mrs Clifford Gilliam
were
in
afternoon w.th the Rev. M. M. Moss T J. Crotchett and Mrs. N. H.
in charge c ' the services Chenault, both of Harlingen; a sis-
Interment followed with Stotler ter. Mrs. Evan Poteet, Hanley, Tex ; | coyotes
----------- .... .......... -
Cameron La Fcria 853; Browns-
ville 922; Olmito 238; T‘ ‘
I.'I4: San Benito 3.005; Los Fres-
cos 498; Combes 253; Rangerville
585; Santa Rosa 700 and Rio Hondo
.396
Starr: Rio Grande City 466 and
Roma 130
ViHley Gin Company
k' ..V -
HOk;.
. ■■■
ANTONIO CRUZ
BROWNSVILLE — Funeral ser-
vices for Antonio Cruz. 64. long
time resident and former merchant
of Brownsville, who died Friday
morning at his home on Jefferson
between Second and Third streets.
MOUNDSVILLE. W VA ,-OPi-
A relief client accused of ’’starv-
ing' his two small children while lawn cemetery,
he spent his meager earnings for
chewing tobacco drew a fine of
S25 in magistrate court after prom-
ising “to do better ”
Louis White. 25. was convicted
Friday night of ’ wilfully abusing
and neglecting necessary treatment
of two minor children "
I
By TOM W. STARKEY
SAN BELTTO -Th.s city not only
has developed the best Texas Na-
tional Guard unit in the state, but
one of its enlisted men, Harry
both of Batesville, and Mrs Mims of Harlingen, has developed
manipu-
f^-^5
a-Ol‘.
Aransas Compress at Harlingen
received 20 000 bales and pressed
about 8.500
Aransas Compress at Brownsville
received 4.000 bales with more than
3.000 pressed out.
Brownsville Port Compress and
Bonded Warehouse had received
4 604 bales and had pressed out
DR. H. PETER OSH MAN
ORTHODONTIST
Brownsville
Announces
the opening of an office tn
McAllen on Thursdays
1301*2 Beaumont Phone 102
’• J
.....................•.....
Dodge is the only
■ truck with 100*
Rustproofing on
cobs, bodies, fendere, hoods, ra-
diator shells, etc. Preserves the
finish, protects trade-in valua.
■ Dodge uses 7differ-
rnt truck fnfinn
for the different
track capacities from W-ton to
3-ton. so each Dodge Truck is
powered just right for maxi mum
p*rfortntnc9 und tconotnjfl
The Amola Steel in
'■’> Dodge Truck azle
shafts and springe
combines hardness and strength
far in excess of ordinary steels.
One of the reasons why Dodge
Trucks last longer, save on re-
pairs!
thy Blackman and Mrr. Eva Cole-
man
S. Mathcuy of Benav.dcs: andjhrce iht best spot light-buzzer
latory aid for beginning machine
gunners ever reported.
Mims didn’t invent the idea, or
the original, and he didn t work
HARLINGEN— Funeral services it out entirely by himself,
were held at 5 p. m. Saturday in for William Thomas Davis. 78-year- captain, ’.e.v Williams, got
Immaculate Concepcion church with old pioneer resident of Harlingen, started and let the reticent 1
the rest.
Sunday jn. at El Pa » guard unit, one which
in its
He was a member of the W O W ford Gin Association at Lyford led
G. Lodge and Harlingen First Baptist individual gins with 1.410 bales
Hidalgo city totals were: Mission
Truman 373; McCook 380 Edinburg 2044;
Ray- Linn 542; Edcouch 1,108; Weslaco
1 867; Pharr 1.210; Elsa 680; Alamo
z
■k
as fol-
brownsville E w 'Bill) nancial
Watts. Jr. Donna, newspaperman
who suffered a fractured back in
an automobile accident near Mex-
ico City recently, arrived here Sat-
urday afternoon by Pan Ameri-
can plane, and was taken to his
Donna home by ambulance
He was accompanied on the re-
turn flight by his father, who went
to Mexico City by plane to arrange
for the return.
Mexico City physicians estimat-
ed that his back would have to re-
main in a cast six weeks or two
months. Two vertebrae were frac-
tured in the mishap which e'eur-
red near Taxco.
Watts and several friends were
going from Mexico City to Cuer-
navaca when a tire on his car blew
out. and the vehicle plunged down
a 40-foot incline. Watts was the
only one injured.
He had been vacationing in Sal-
tillo. Monterrey, and Mexico City,
recoverin'* from a recent leg oper-
ation.
mona B de Cruz, four sons. An- Gahey will officiate.
tonio. Eduardo. Francisco and Er-j The body w’ill be returned to
nesto; three daughters. Rosa. Ma- Eastland. Texas, for burial, the
ria del Pilar and Delfina. and two t home of Davis before coming to
brothers. Martin T. Cruz and Ma- the Valley 21 years ago. Rev. E.
tario Cruz Douglas Carver. Baptist Church
Active pallbearers were; Miguel pastor, will conduct burial ser-
Gomcz. Nabor Torres. I. Zarate, Sr., vices at Eastland
Davis was owner of the Rialto
Theater building and developed the
Honorary pallbearers were: H D Davis addition north of Harlingen
Seago. Eusebio Ortiz, Miguel Mo- He also owned the building oc-
. ~ . ran-?. ui>v ruirxiini. Raul Za- cupied by the Lamberths Grocery,
that with the wealth of informa- va|eta Ramiro Munoz. Praxedis and other property.
Cavazos. G. C. Kerr, Ezequiel Ca-
vazos. Sr„ Pablo Guerra. R C
Hall and Genaro Martinez.
GUY’ HOUGHTON ' MRS. OPAL RHODES
BROWNSVILLE- Word was re- PORT ISABEL Mrs Opal
ccived here Saturday of the death Rhodes. 25. of Port Isabel, died at
of Guy Houghton. 51. brother of 1 a. m Saturday in Mercy Hospital
Mrs. Nina Scthman. former Browns- in Brownsville after an illness of
ville resident now living in Austin 10 days The body was taken over-
Mr. Houghton, who has numerous land by Clay Hall Funeral Home
friends here, di°d in a veterans' of San Benito to Oakville. Tex.
hospital at Little Rock and was where services will be held at 5
buried in Okmulgee with Amcri- p. m. Sunday with interment in the
can Legion rites.
In addition to Mrs. Sethman. he
HARLINGEN—In an open letter
to Dr J. C. Blair, chairman of the
state board of education. Frank L
McNeny. president of the Dallar
county property owners association,
has asked whether an increase in
state school funds is really neces-
sary' to the efficient operation of
Texas school systems, taking into
consideration both educational needs
and governmental economy.
The state hoard of education is
to meet Monday to tackle the prob-
lem of determining the 1939-4C
state per capita aid apportionment
Indications arc the figure will be
established at $22 or $22 50. and if
so. important developments will
follow.
Rate To Be Fixed
The automatic tax board pmbablv
will meet several days later and
fix the state ad valorem tax rate
currently 49 cents for all purposes
Should the education board choose
the maximum or even a $22 ap-
portionment the current ad valorem
tax rate for school purposes, seven
cents on the $100 valuation, would
have to be raised, possiblv to its
constitutional maximum of 35 cents
In his open letter. McNeny re-
minds Blair that the property own-
ers have always been generous
friends of public education During
the school years 1932 through 1937.
when the state school apnortion-
ment increased $5 408 000 local ad
valorem tax collections from all
school districts increased $1,534,000.
and this in spite nf the fact that
the primary appeal for increased
state funds was based on the pro-
position that it would decrease the
load on local property taxpayers
The available school fund. Me-1
Neny adds, has enjoyed the bene-
fits of normal increases in yield
of such levies as the gasoline tax.
gross receipts tax. cigarette tax and
other occupation taxes in which it
participates, besides receiving some
$5,000,000 annually in excess of its
constitutional one-fourth of these
levies.
ley total of 208 bales in Cameron.
928 m Willacy, and 875 in Hidal-
go county.
The Valley's three compresses
had received approximately 28.604
bales of cotton Saturday afternoon
■ nd had pressed out about 14.110 of
them.
Compress report* were
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Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. [30], No. 98, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 23, 1939, newspaper, July 23, 1939; Harlingen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327223/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .