The Radio Post (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, February 28, 1936 Page: 2 of 6
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The Radio Post, Fredericksburg, Texas,
Page Two
Friday, February 28th, 1936
BIG SCHREINER RANCH SOLD
I
/
By
Russell
Lord
Telephone No. 9
5
A;
(By Willie Filter)
F
)
TEAM STANDING
one.
A20
NOVEMBER ELECTION
GANN CITY NEWS
$
8
IL
DOSS ITEMS
* •
Friday Night, Feb. 21st
%
ill
"91,
d)
Monday Night, Feb. 24th
DARGE
appreciated the call and the plea- ing of the new Alamo Plumbing
place of business.
sant hour rehearsing past events.
FOR SALE
Look at these
Seeks World Title
BARGAINS
A -
5 Room House.......
.........$2200.00
9:18253 024
.... $2700.00
2
.......$7000.00
(Three acres of land, on two streets.)
5 Room House............
... $1800.00
3
3
8
Saturday, March 14th
1
1
Benefit Boy Scouts, Troop 1
HUNDREDS OF FREE SEATS
The Cleanest Show In America’
PHONE 64.
*
MW
a C,,DKNMco 7
High game—Mar. Oestreich—185
Low game—Louis Zenner—98.
Wednesday Night, Feb. 26th
SHOWS DAILY
2:00&8:00P.M.
Subject to the action of the Demo-
cratic Primaries in July:
High game-Dr. H. F. Bolding-192
Low game—Law. Krauskopf-114
Mount
names.
Roman Peter
Ralph' Gold ..
841 834 864"
917 903 877
Kearsarge — self-sufficient
The people who came to
Elias Klaerner
Louis Knoche
Alois Wehmeyer ... 15
Wm. Schroeder Jr 18
870 833 909
837 917 916
Elton Jordan .
Hugo Klaerner
869 890 938
832 908 879
17,000-Acre Private Deer Preserve
Purchased by Beaumont Man
aoamoa=omoaoao«ocpocmoamom.
915 945 970
874 944 868
For DISTRICT JUDGE:
33rd. Judicial District
WHY RENT A HOUSE, and pay $10 and $15 rent a month,
when you can purchase a Home for $1200 at 6 per cent interest,
save one half of rent, and be your own Boss with a Home!
All conveniences on these properties and centrally located:
I
15
18
15
1
c
Elias Klaerner ..
Leo Petsch .............
Henry Hirsch ....
Ralph Gold ..........
Alfons Klaerner
Roman Peter .....
Louis Knoche .....
Carl Kott ..............
Elton Jordan .....
Hugo Klaerner .
/ TURNER
‘ TEN-PIN
— LEAGUE
Leo Petsch ..........
Alfons Klaerner
.722
.722
.666
.555
.555
.555
.555 .
.533
.444
.400
.266
.222
THE RADIO POST
Fredericksburg, Texas
5
5
6
8
8
8
8
7
988
RADIOTRICIAN
Prompt and Efficient Repair
KEEPERS OF GROVES
AND GARDENS
(Everything on the place.)
7 Room House........................................
(Everything on the place.)
9 Room House........................................
F. H. HAMMOND
of Burnet
* “0o“o=eomomo=oeo6moeo=eo-c2
(LOCATED AT
LOYAL MUSIC STORE)
helping hand to every one,
we hold malice towards no
Subscriptions payable in advance
$1.50 per year
F. RAYMOND GRAY
of San Saba.
'.'I
BUY TICKETS NOW—
From Boy Scouts and From
Local Merchants
ELBERT C. HAHNE I
1
I
%
JUDGE LAMAR THAXTON
of Mason
(Re-election)
32
POLITICAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS-
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.... 18 13
... 15 9
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Ernst Wilke,Sr.
FREDERICKSBURG, TEXAS.
£278.9
-05
§
l~*‘ ‘".'I
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_AT
FAIRYLAND
COMFORT, TEXAS
Saturday Nite, Mar. 7
—Music by—
"‘Home Orchestra5’
Admission: 25c.
BEER in Bottles 10c.
EVERYBODY WELCOME!
—Pete Spenrath.
25 Acres on State Highway,
18 acres in farm, 7 acres in pasture, fair improvements, 2 miles
out. $1500.00 cash or trade automobile.
1—1931 Ford Coupe, Motor A-1,
new paint and rubber.
1—1930 Ford Tudor, Motor over- ‘
hauled and nw rubber.
1—1930 Chevrolet Sedan, a clean
car throughout.
1—1930 Buick Standard Coupe,
new paint, a bargain.
Get my price list first!
ALFRED RARE,
Fredericksburg, Texas
POLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
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------ooo------
Mr and Mrs. Martin Spenrath
of Comfort visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Moellering and Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Crenwelge on Sat-
urday.
Work on all makes of
RADIOS
and all electrical
appliances.
440 acrs, farm and ranch,
(15 acres in farm, balance pasture. Extra well improved and |
watered at less than $10.00 per acre.) |
All above ranches and farms have goat-proof fences!
A poor man’s chance and a rich man’s bargain!
Will Consider Trade on Several Listings! g
For information on above properties and many other bargains, i
SEE OR WRITE ... |
settle here faced west. They had
turned their backs on the crown.
Says Robert Gould of Gould Hill
wryly: “This soil has always been
natural to two things—apples and
rebellion.
“I like it up here. I can think
as I’ve a mind to and do as I’ve a
mind to. I don’t have to take my
opinions off that. . . .”
He jerks a thumb sidewise to-
ward a radio in the corner.
Gould Hill is near Contoocook,
in the sharply semi-mountainous
country of central New Hampshire.
Farms here are so steep that to
plow is often impossible. The only
field crops that a man can count on
as a rule are sod crops—grass and
trees.
Robert Gould’s maternal grand-
father fought in the Revolution. He
is the fifth of his surname to have
farmed Gould Hill. Take any full-
length picture of General Pershing
in a sack suit, count out the tight-
ness at the eyes and mouth, and
you’ll have a fair likeness of Rob-
ert Gould. •
The turning point in the for-
tunes of his family came in 1901.
Then, on the basis of some old ap-
ple trees growing along his fence
rows, he decided to change over
from dairying to fruit farming and
*
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ms
-----000------
C. J. Niederauer of Austin was
a pleasant caller at the office Tues-
day evening. Had not seen Carl
since 1908 when he was student at
the University of Texas. At that
time he was a boy of perhaps 17.
Grown in years but the same lov-
able chap that he was years ago, I
Fredericksburg, Texas
------ooo---
As new members to the Freder-
icksburg Benevolent Association
were admitted Mrs. Adolf Wunder-
lich, Mrs. Charles Kammlah, and
Adolf Kammlah.
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Mr. and Mrs. Henry Baethge, Sr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Baethge
made a trip to San Antonio Thurs-
day.
The Doss Home Demonstration
Club met Thursday at the home of
Mrs. J. J. Dittmar. Quite a number
were present. After the business
meeting Mrs. Dittmar showed the
ladies through her pantry, which
was quite interesting.
The Doss Goat Roping Club
practiced Saturday, the first time
this season. Henry Welge captured
first prize and Archie Geitweidt,
second prize.
Arnold Ellebracht and family
from San Antonio visited relatives
here Sunday.
Misses Dora Sauer and Edna
Strackbein and Hilmar Dittmar,
students at the Lutheran College,
Seguin, spent the week end with
their parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenz Wendel, Sr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wendel
from Harper visited Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Sauer Sunday.
Mrs. Oscar Schmidt and children
and Miss Theresa Nefendorf from
Llano visited with Theo. Neffen-
T ERE in pre-revolutionary
—— times the West began. You
i 1 may trace in the names on
the map, almost, the line
of America’s first frontier. Here no
longer are village after village,
town upon town, with names that
sigh for England, Epsom, Dover,
Ridge, Canterbury—all those lie to
the east, toward the seacoast.
Here instead are Mast Yard, Fish-
erville, Melvin’s Mill, Gould Hill,
We welcome news at all times
if fit to print. We extend a
2%p
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San Angelo Times, Feb. 23—
The nation’s greatest private deer
hunting preserve, the 17,000-acre
Paint Creek ranch of the Schrein-
ers of Kerrville located 17 miles
out of Junction, was sold last week
according to information from the
Hill Country yesterday. The price
was reported all the way from $10
to $11 an acre.
The buyer was Marrs McLean,
Beaumont oil man, who thus ran
his investment in riverside ranch
country in Kimble County to more
than a quarter of a million dollars.
The great preserve has fish dams,
hunting lodges, deer so thick that
it is hard to estimate the number,
and wide areas cut through the
cedar to facilitate the progress of
hunters. But it was as a breeder
of game that is served the country
the best. From it went hundreds of
deer and wild turkey to all parts of
the section until the ranches of
Gordon Stewart and W. L. Miers
and others to the west have now a
number of the game, and wild tur-
keys are found in the draws where
before they did not exist.
The first preemptions on this
ranch with the painted bluffs and
the nine-foot high cedar fence were
taken out in 1854. The last Captain
Charles Schreiner acquired it along
about the turn of the century. Joe
Taylor of Goldiad, first owned it
and died a wealthy man. Then the
late Noah Corder, father of Theo-
dore and R. E. Corder of the Trans-
Pecos bought the cattle from the
Taylor heirs, range delivery, and
he, too, died wealthy. In the open
range days it had the water, some-
thing always in demand, and the
creek supplied it. Every one who
has touched the ranch has prosper-
ed. At the time of the sale to Mc-
Lean, it bad some 4,000 sheep and
about 200 cattle it was estimated,
and was owned by about six of the
Schreiners. They used it as a play-
thing inviting their friends to the
annual fishing and hunting trips.
Deer of less than six ppoints could
not be killed.
Mr. McLean, the new purchaser,
dresses like a driller and lives on
the old Hunger place on the South
Llano. He, too, is a lover of game.
•He has bought the 1,000-acre Ram-
sey place an acreage from Judge
J. B. Randolph, and the old Hunger
place. Everywhere his dollars have
rested they have bought scenery
and good ranch lands. He spends
about two months a year here and
has made several trips to Europe
since his arrival. In spite of his
wealth he still uses a party tele-
phoneline on his home place. W. R.
Nicholson is another oil man who
has invested here and rich outside
capital is dealing on other property
in that section. McLean is buyinv
mineral royalties over the Hill
Country.
6,2
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600 acres, 4 miles out, in three pastures.
(Good improvements. 30 acres in farm. 'Terms or cash $7500.)
clothes, and am proud of it. Sit-
ting here at my desk in a comfort-
able house on a farm near enough
to the village to enjoy the benefit
of social life and activities, I feel
that I could have made no better
choice than to stay here and farm.
“My land is clear of debt. It is
returning an income sufficient for
all necessary requirements. With
a love of outdoor life, a farmer may
lead a good life, and may read and
ponder on all theories, all doctrines,
without the haste, the trials, the
prejudices that surround and mold
the commercial and industrial life
of America today.”
Third, perhaps, of the stereo-
types by which the farmer is rep-
resented to his fellow citizens in
this republic, the United States De.
partment of Agriculture lately un
dertook a cure. The extension divi-
sion sent out Ackerman, its best
photographer, to bring in pictures
of the most “representative” Amer-
ican farmers and their homes.
One of the men so photographed
was Eugene Elkins, Route 1, Wake-
field, Kan., and this is his reply
to a questionnaire that the depart-
ment, seeking further information,
sent out:
1. How long have you lived in
Clay county? How much land do
you farm? “Was born here October
28, 1868. Have owned this farm
since 1903 and lived on it since
1914. It contains 140 acres. Have
other farm and pasture land. Never
paid more than $115 an acre and
never sold more than a foot of
land in my life.”
2. When did you start farming
for yourself? Where? “I started in
1892, the year of the panic, when I
was twenty-four. On a farm near
here, which I still own.”
3. What are your outstanding, up-
to-date farm practices? “I just do
a good thorough job of mixed farm-
ing, and try to do things at the
right time.”
4. What outstanding farm and
community improvements? “I would
rather that my Improvements, both
indoors and out, speak for them-
selves.”
Entered as second-class matter
September 20, 1922, at the Post
Office at Fredericksburg, Texas,
under the Act of March 3, 1879.
WM. DIETEI, Editor & Publisher
Mrs. Wm. Dietel, Advertising Mgr.
Center Point. Uncle Johnnie was
prospecting and visiting old
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Price and
daughter, Burnell and Mr. and Mrs.
Will Hoge spent Saturday night
and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Billings on the head of the
Blanco river.
Mrs. L. F. Price was called to
her daughter’s, Mrs. Ross Billing’s,
home Tuesday evening as they
were very sick with influenza.
School closed for two days here
on account of influenza.
Mrs. J. N. Permenter has been
confined to bed for several days
with influenza, but we are glad to
see her able to be out again.
Miss Bettie B. Bird visited Fred-
ericksburg and other points the
week end.
Glad to see R. R. Brehmer out of
the hospital and able to be around
again.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Patton and
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Page of Blanco City visited with
Mrs. Katie Patton and daughter,
Miss Nellie, Sunday.
A nice shower fell this Wednes-
day morning, Feb. 26. Fine for
planting corn and other spring
crops.
(300 feet street front.)
Garage, Blacksmith Shop and Implement
Business on Main Street..................$6500.00
County Commissioner, Precinct 1
EUGEN H. KRAMER
to make the cows support the
change.
He was forty years old when he
determined to do this and over fifty
when he was able to turn from his
cows and start full-time orcharding.
In the eighteen years since his
fiftieth birthday he has doubled the
size of his farm and increased his
income tenfold. His apples have
frequently topped the Liverpool-
more recently the New York—mar-
ket. His farm is electrified; even
his apple grader is motor driven
His people came to this country
from England in 1650. They settled
at Amesbury, Mass. A Joseph Gould
was living there in 1735: “My great-
great-grandfather. He decided to
come out here with his whole fam-
ily. He was one of the original in-
corporators of this township. But
he never lived to make the move.
“His son, Moses Gould, my great-
grandfather, came here to the town
of Hopkinton in 1760, and moved
to this farm in 1775. My grandfa-
ther and then my father succeeded
to the property.
“By the time I was twenty-one I
was the only son available to carry
on the farm. My father had a
breakdown. He took typhoid and
insisted, typhoid or not, on settling
some estates that he’d promised to
attend to. He was ill for seven
years, practically helpless; and my
mother wasn’t able to do much,
either, at her age. So whether I
wanted to or not, I had to stay
here and manage things, and take
care of my parents.
“They, both died the same year,
1899. I was thirty-eight.
“By this time I had some cows,
fifteen head, and was selling butter
direct into Concord.
“I like cows—still keep a dozen
head around just because I like ’em
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Jack Oats and Hubert Fiedler of
San Antonio spent the week end
with the A. A. Fiedler family. Mrs.
Jack Oats returned to San Antonio
with her husband. She had spent
several days with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A. A. Fiedler.
Alvin Moldenhauer of San An-
tonio, with Uncle Sam’s fighting
department, spent Sunday with his •
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mold-
enhauer.
Earnst Page and Uncle Johnnie
Gates spent Saturday night at
MARKET SQUARE
the panic.
“I batched it two and a half
years. In 1895, the year I got mar-
ried, I sold a load of cattle at $3.85
a hundredweight on the Kansas
City market. I’d paid $15 a head
for them. The price I got was 15
cents above the market that day;
they were small cattle. That deal
put me out of debt, and I haven’t
had what you could call any real
trouble since.”
On the questionnaire sent him by
the Department of Agriculture, a
space was left for “Anything Else
You Consider Important.” In this
space Elkins wrote:
“My family, my home, my neigh-
bors. The enjoyment I get from
watching my crops and live stock
develop. Our orchard, kitchen gar-
den, vineyard, shade trees, flowers,
rose garden, etc.
“I was married December 25,
1895. We have four children, three
girls and a boy. The two eldest are
married. The two youngest are at-
tending Kansas State Agricultural
college. (The other two went to
college, too.)
“I have prospered beyond my
wildest dreams. I have accumu-
lated a million. But only a small
part of this can be counted in dol-
lars and cents. The rest of it comes
from the satisfaction of seeing an
unbroken country, dotted only here
and there with the homesteaders’
dug-outs, develop into a prosperous,
settled country with beautiful mod-
ern homes. And the feeling that I
have been a part of it.”
WNU Servoe
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—and I even won some cups, one of
them at the Chicago World’s fair.
Well, between my cows and a sort
of coal business I’d started down
in Contoocook I managed to scrape
together a few hundred dollars and
built a house and got married.
“The next winter the best farm-
hand in the town came to work
for me. I don’t know what gave
me the notion, but we had about
two hundred old apple trees along
the fence rows—a cider mill once
stood on this site; anyhow, I told
my new man to trim those trees.
“He hated trees. He just waded
in and trimmed the devil out of
them. Exactly what they needed;
fine job! Then I told him to take
the dump cart and fertilize them.
That made him so mad he tried to
smother them at the roots, I guess.
Anyway, those old neglected trees
went ahead and yielded, the next
year, $750 worth of aples.
“Seven hundred and fifty dollars!
It was like striking gold. I. start-
ed planting. McIntosh and Bald-
wins, mostly. I have 2,500 trees
now.”
Before I left I asked him to write
me a letter, adding anything that
he might wish. “I wish,” he wrote,
“that more people would accept the
conditions of agriculture as we find
them today. It offers advantages
not to be found in any other indus-
try. The duties are, on the whole,
less exacting and if you follow mod-
ern methods you make a fair re-
turn.
“Such goods and reputation as I
have I have gained in working
3-08622299-
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He is a powerful, rugged man.
He has done in his lifetime an im-
mense amount of hard work. His
! hands are thick, heavy; the fingers,
i blunt. Yet when he parts the leaves
to show you his best fruit, those
hands move deftly, and there is
something about them, too, which
suggests a devout person handling
the Bible.
“If you don’t like farming,” he
says cheerfully, “there’s nothing to
it. I always did like to take care
of things around a farm. My boy
and I ship a load of cattle a year,
as a rule, and two carlots of hogs.
We sell some wheat, too, most years.
But my main pleasure always has
been in my lawn and house and gar-
den, and in raising a hundred ’n
one different little things, just to
see what a fellow can do.”
He led me to a loft room in one
of the barns, where he was assem-
bling his exhibit for the coming
county fair. One year he showed
eighty-three distinct varieties of
plants, all raised on the place. He
carries the key to that private shop
and exhibit room in his own pocket,
and leads you there with the delight
of a boy.
“What’s this?” he asked me, smil-
ing. It was a bunch of thrifty cot-
ton plants. “And these?” A serv-
iceable maul and a pair of stout
double-trees, made by his own hands
from osage-orange trees grown on
the place.
“It’s just a sort of hobbv," he
said. “I always like to have some-
thing new.
“And I’ve always taken pride in
having a nice home. We had our
eye on this place a long time be-
fore we were anything like fixed to
buy it. What caught my eye was
the lawn and the white house with
maple trees around it, and the green
shutters. It looked to us just about
the best place to live in the county,
and we think so still. That foun-
tain wasn’t in when we got it, and
the rose garden—we did that, too.
“Curious, isn’t it, how many farm-
ers never get around to making
themselves a home? Just scraping
to buy the piece of land next to
them. Driving themselves and de-
nying themselves, and telling them-
selves that some time, way off in
the future, they’re going way off
somewhere—maybe to the coast—
and have an awful good time!
“My father was a miller in Ver-
mont. He fought in the Civil war;
five years. When it was over, he
came out here, homesteading—I
often think about it. Then came *74
and the grasshoppers drove us out.
It drove out a quarter of the set-
tlers, that year. Not many came
back. But we did.
“There were eight of us children,
all born in a log house. We rode
bareback to school—a frame build-
ing, about fourteen by twenty, set
up on the rocks; all open under.
There would be as many as sixty-
one scholars sometimes in winter.
All the way from five to twenty-five
years old. Three long benches; a
low one in front for the little tack-
ers; then a high one, for the older
ones to write on, then another one
for them to sit on. And a stove.
And one teacher—but a good one.
Sarah McNaughton was the first
teacher I went to school to; she
was fine. But the one I remember
best was Jacob J. Jackson. He
boarded with us, and got me to go
on, more or less, with my books.
There wasn’t any high school In
the county when I got through
school. . . .
“We used to go barefoot all win-
ter. Never had head colds, either.
The only thing that seemed to get
us was contagious diseases, like
diptheria. When I was thirteen it
went through the family and the
three youngest died.
“I herded cattle from the time I
was eight. Then I worked out quite
a little. I worked for Henry Elias,
the best farmer that ever farmed
outdoors. When I was twenty-four,
I bought my first farm; 160 acres,
$14 an acre, $900 down. It was
good river bottom, but I got hit by
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NEW YORK . . . Miss Ruth
Aarons (above), of Stamford, Conn,
American women's table tennis
champion, is now on the high seas
enroute to Prague, Austria, where /
she will compete for the world
championship.
High game—Jake Knopp—198.
ow game—IH. Kallenberg—102.
Wm. Schroeder Jr....... 871 936 818
Ralph Gold ........................ 852 965 934
High game—Wm. Schroeder Jr. ,
—221.
Low game—E. H. Riley—93.
Thursday Night, Feb. 20th
Elias Klaerner ............... 886 884 858
Wm. Schroeder Jr....... 795 873 792
High game—V. Schoenewolf—172 ‛
Low game—C. Anderson—100.
6 Room House................................................$1500.00 j
(Everything on the place.) |
---------------- ......
MEN OF EARTH
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,186, 232
,2236,4*,
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High game—Felix Hahn—198.
Low game—Norman Dietel—187
Elton Jordan .................. 857 897 905
Wm. Schroeder Jr....... 865 859 842
High game—Elton Jordan—184. ,
Low game—Alex Jung—110.
--nno--
In a coup d etat by young army
officers the Japanese premier and
two of his aids were slain.
P-
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B P.A.S.
dorf, Sr. Sunday.
Mrs. John Strackbein and sons
from Harper spent Sunday here
with relatives.
Miss Erna Sauer, who is teach-
ing school at Pilot Knob, spent the
week end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Sauer.
J. W. Hasse, the mutton buyer
from Art, was in our community
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ad. Kothe from
Cherry Spring visited Mrs. Kothe’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sauer,
Saturday.
Monroe Hagn from Luling was
a visitor at Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Sauer’s on Sunday.
-------ooo------- -
August Voelkel and Albert Jost
made a business trip to San Anton-
io on Monday to attend the open-
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Dietel, William. The Radio Post (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, February 28, 1936, newspaper, February 28, 1936; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510190/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gillespie County Historical Society.