The Radio Post (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1936 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Page Four
MSI
)
o
0
Aw
(A
N
=ru
W.N.U. SERVICE
L
I
la
is
6
Fredericksburg,
Phone No. 22
Keidel’s Drug Store
Stonewall 4-H Club
herself with the prayer that it
that
met with
the City
Demonstration club.
the 3rd day of
Burleson fixed several nice
en-
522222220428282222222422222522229252257278022132152855
DOCTORS KNOWN
TO BELEVING
f
i ELBERT c. HAHNE
CHAPTER IX
UEBMMMBMMMSHMMTMBHIMHMMHIIMDMMMMMB•DIMEEIHEMMMMEIMM
STAR BLADES
COTTON
iheir keenness
WOOL
never varies
for-
news-
We sell feeds of all kinds!
I
A
i
6
1
Miss
vege-
THE . . .
Radiator Shop
of
of
PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS
ROOMS 15 AND 5, STRIEGLER BLDG.
was
of
Mothers reqd this:
THREE STEPS
i
■
m
lai
SSI
■
id
#
E
E
3
E
8
E
a
agent.
Girls’
and show other women how
tunate she was.
Lawrence had continued in
late Tony was quoting Larry Bell-
amy with a new significance: that
Larry was managing to be at home
when Tony was there.
The Bellamys rented an apart-
ment in the smartest of the Cali-
fornia street places; a roof apart-
ry, and a handsome coat from “her
attached old friend Harriet Patter-
son.”
table salads which were later
joyed by the members.
Miss Elenora Wallendorf
elected garden demonstrator,
there was no other business,
*%
N
DAY PHONE 131
OCOcO.
esqnessekaragerearmgneosnaxaa."aarosaewesmoenamzonaeseenmaenazaxaznemnanvanunczneamys-nmanaaneosasscmzzsammau-comcaa-nmaa-sanmam-ausaassmaaaasancam-a--ncxnas-saasamsmnaasaaamaanam
EEEazammHMaMMaEMEEEMMMMMmaEMmEEMNEEmSasmame
fig
TINNERS - ROOFERS ■
Galvanized Tanks, Well Casing,
Dipping Vats, Sheet Metal, etc. .
Prompt and Efficient workmanship
guaranteed. Reasonable prices.
OTTO KOLMEIER & 00. i
jemoemoemomommo=moeocoemoasoea »&.
Either buy or store for later sale!
OATS AND EAR CORN
»
I
(LOCATED AT
LOYAL MUSIC STORE)
PHONE 64.
ALEX JUNG
—Attorney - at - Law—
A cleansing dose today; a smaller
quantity tomorrow; less each time,
until howels need no help at all.
E
IB
M
NOTICE OF CITY
ELECTION
H. WELGE LEWIS
INDEPENDENT
Gasoline, Kerosene, Oils, and Greases.
BEN HAGEL, Proprietor
Good Clean Rooms. Excellent Home
Cooked Meals!
THE STATE OF TEXAS )
COUNTY OF GILLESPIE )
I, Bodo Habenicht, City Clerk of
the City of Fredericksburg, Texas,
hereby certify that the foregoing is
a true and correct copy of an or-
O MADE SINCE 1880
Du., by the inventors of
Hy the original safety
Fy razor, Star Blades
r have 56 years of pre-
cision experience stropped
into their keen, long-lasting
edges. If your dealer cannot
supply you, mail 10c to
Dept. AX-2, Star Blade Divi-
sion, 88 Johnson Street,
Brooklyn, New York.
FITGEMANDEVER-READY
RAZORS
\
E
5
I
a
m
I
I
I
I
g
"P0- oeoemococ0eo“e0=o=oee
Friday, March 13th, 1936.
71..... I I II.....HIMI III IJ 1111......Ill.............. |
Why do people come home from a
hospital with bowels working like a
well-regulated watch?
The answer is simple, and it’s the
answer to all your bowel worries if
you will only realize it: many doctors
and hospitals use a liquid laxative.
If you knew what a doctor knows,
you would use only the liquid form.
A liquid can always be taken in
gradually reduced doses. Reduced
dosage is the secret of any real relief
from constipation.
Ask a doctor about this. Ask your
druggist how very popular liquid
laxatives have become. They give the
right kind of help, and right amount
of help. The liquid laxative generally
used is Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin.
It contains senna and cascara — both
natural laxatives that can form no
habit, even in children. So, try Syrup
Pepsin. You just take regulated
doses till Nature restores regularity.
was
As
the
“// anted:
o
Ok
gun to fall. First there had been
money loss, a great deal of it, and
the sale of Merrivale Hills; and
then failing health. Through them
Ruth had clung all the more tena-
demonstration
the Stonewall
ways miles too big for Brenda, so I
wear it.”
Tony put her feet on the floor,
went to the dressing table, and
picked up a brush. She looked at
RADIOTRICIAN
Prompt and Efficient Repair
Work on all makes of
RADIOS
and all electrical
appliances.
said that Frank Fitch was cooling. ‘purely her imagination
She could sell her diamonds, maybe.” -
“The Fitches came to our house
pier Christmases that a noisy little
boy had made complete, went to
Havana. But they left their gifts
behind them; there were flowers
4—- TION, ACID DYSPEPSIA,
C . SOUR STOMACH, GASSI-
W NESS, HEARTBURN, CONST-
VT PATION, BAD BREATH, SLEEP-
LESSNESS OR HEADACHES, DUE
TO EXCESS ACID. •
Ask for a free copy of Willard's Message.
dinance passed by the Board
paper work, refusing to give up the
career that interested him to be-
come a rich woman’s husband, and
‘gWo weeks later the Bellamys
- came over to the city for a few
weeks to stay at the Fairmont hotel,
and Tony was almost immediately
asked by her new friend to come up
and have tea with her. She had a
thoroughly pleasant hour with the
•mother and daughter, enjoying the
luxury of the big corner suite, and
the hot tea, and the sense that she
was liked and admired. After that
she went in two or three times a
1 week.
Once Brenda went with her, and
Ruth and Mrs. Patterson liked
Brenda, too; they both made it a
point to go into Younger’s and buy
books from Tony’s charming sis-
ter. And at Christmas time Tony
had beautiful presents.
“He’s—how old?”
“About thirty-one or -two,
think.”
“Ten years. You three run
neat decades,” said Brenda.
“That’s true.- Good gracious,
On Friday, Feb. 24, Miss Iva
RDt
Commissioners of
Fredericksburg on
Explains the marvelous Willard
Treatment which is bringing
amazing relief. Sold on ironclad
money-back guarantee.
PRICELESS ENFORMATION
—for those suffering from
STOMACH OR DUODENAL
i ULCERS, DUE TO HYPER-
ACIDITY—POOR DIGES-
LOHTE STORAGE &
COMMISSION CO.
PHONE 34
She went up to thank them as
soon as they came back, and found
Ruth alone. It was a dark, foggy
January afternoon, and Tony was
glad to get warm and to give all her
Christmas news over her teacup,
and get all of Ruth’s in return.
Sl
k
The Radio Post, Fredericksburg, Texas,
Help Kidneys
e If poorly functioning Kidneys and
® Bladder make you suffer from Getting
Up Nights, Nervousness, Rheumatic
e Pains, Stiffness, Burning. Smarting,
6 Itching, or Acidity try the guaranteed
j Doctor’s Prescription Cystex (Sles-tex)
@nscon —Must fix you up or money
-3== back. Only 155 at druggista.
REASONABLE RATES BY THE DAY, WEEK OR MONTH! g
EMMHEESMEEMMBEMMMMMMHHMMEHMMIMMZHHMMHHHMSEMHMMEAML
she twenty years older than I am!”
Tony murmured, under her breath.
“You really like her, don’t you?”
Brenda questioned, in the tone of
one thinking aloud.
“I like her liking me,” Tony an-
swered, after a. moment’s thought,
in honesty that surprised even her-
self. “I don’t mean that!” she said
laughing. “I do like her—you have
to like Ruth, she's so generous and
kind and all that. But of course
she’s not the personality that Larry
is.”
“Oh, Tony, you’re so beautiful,
so firm and young and glowing and
happy—have mercy on her!” Brenda
thought. But aloud she dared say
nothing. She could only console
Q
O
A
Burleson, li o m e
KATHLEEN
NORRIS-e
COPYRIGHT, KATHLEEN NORRIS
Tony was half asleep when there i
LCGNSTIPATIDH
7 I
4=
EWEEMMEHHEEEHEMMEEEEEMEMMHMHMEMMMEMMEIBETMEMEMMMIEE
CENTRAL Hotel
aidev
Ruth looked better than Tony had
ever seen her; she had a good color,
and seemed in fine spirits, and she
quite simply laid some of the im-
provements to Tony herself.
“You’ve been extremely good for
me, my dear. Both Mother and Lar-
ry see it. A daughter couldn’t have
been sweeter.”
“I’ve done nothing; you make me
ashamed!” Tony protested.
“I’m fond of you. I don’t get fond
of many persons,” Ruth said with
her pathetic smile.
Lawrence Bellamy was not al-
ways at the hotel for the tea parties
rence growing handsomer and clev-
ered and more successful every day,
and the Journal promising to be a
success. Ruth had been forty-two
then, to his eager, vital thirty.
But nothing had been really dis-
turbing, nothing had forced upon
her the realization of their changing
positions until little Peter’s death.
That had brought her house of
cards down about her ears with a
shattering crash; there could be no
more illusions, no more hopes. She
had sunk, within a few short weeks,
into the shrinking, nervous condi-
tion in which Tony first had seen
her. She had felt herself the elder-
ly, childless wife of a rising and
brilliant man, and not all his kind-
ly matter-of-fact affection, and not
all her mother’s anxious spoiling
and loving could seem to sav her.
“Happiness is absolutely relative,
Bendy,” the more thoughtful Tony
once said to her sister. “I see it
more and more every day. There’s
no use trying to estimate whether
persons are happy or not; you can’t
tell until you know what they’re
comparing it to. Ruth has so much
less than she used to have that
she’s almost in melancholia. We
have so much more than we ever
thought we’d have that we can
hardly keep our feet on the ground.
And yet even now we haven’t one-
tenth—I mean in actual income and
position and possessions—of what
the Bellamys have.”
“Poor thing!” It’s the little boy’s
death, I suppose. She can’t forget
it.”
“And feeling so much older than
he. If she were thirty-two instead
of forty-two I suppose there might
be another child; as it is I don’t
think there’s any hope of it.”
Basse Express
OVER-NIGHT TRUCK SERVICE
SAN ANTONIO HEADQUARTERS:
1311 SOUTH FLORES STREET
Union Truck & Transportation Terminal
PHONE G-9391
Fredericksburg Phone No. 109
NO PASSENGERS.
oyage4
and gett. A warm, and talking it
over!” Tony broke off to say.
“Pleasant is right!”
“No, but the thing is,” she re-
sumed, .“that I hope some day to do
signed stuff, and get into real spe-
cial article work, and he says this
is my chance.”
“You’ll have plenty of chances,”
Lawrence said, rubbing his long
hands together, looking into the
fire, “you don’t have to worry about
that. I wouldn’t go in for that sen-
sational stuff; in the first place it
isn’t good journalism. That’s the
worst of that crowd down there—
Fitch and Allen—all of them. It’s
outdated, that stuff.”
“Still, a job’s a job, Larry.”
“Yes, but you’re a good deal surer
of a job than you were six months
ago. No, I’d tell Greeny to roll his
hoop—”
Tony’s eyes were dark with a
sort of dancing light.
“I’m not going to do it!” she
said. “And thanks for putting me
straight. I knew you’d know just
about what it all meant.”
“Whatever you do, you’ll go
straight ahead, Tony. Get your
stuff, and write it the best you can
and turn it in, and that’s all they
want. You’re perfectly safe.”
“I didn’t know that anyone could
be so happy about work.”
“I don’t believe you can do it
decently until you are happy about
it.”
Tony, looking into the fire with
smiling eyes, asked idly, “Larry, is
there any chance of your ever ex-
panding the Journal, putting regu-
lar woman’s stuff in?” she added
idly. “Remember I talked to you
about it that first day?”
“Not that—” he answered readily,
and paused.
(To be continued)
-------o 0 0-------
for dinner one night,” Ruth said.
“And she’s a sweet little thing.”
When Larry went to dress for
some business dinner, Ruth said
thoughtfully:
“One wonders that Larry doesn’t
see some attractive woman; they all
like him! And after all, I’m twelve
years older than he is.”
Tony had not known them very
long before she had heard and di-
vined much of the story of Ruth’s
life. Ruth had been an heiress; her
Patterson grandfather had been a
banker, a financial genius, one of
the big figures in New York imme-
diately after the close of the Civil
war, and he had left her, or rather
had left his son, Ruth’s father, a
considerable fortune. In the Pied-
mont house, which Tony gathered
belonged to Mrs. Patterson, were
paintings of Ruth as a little girl of
ten, and one of her with her horse;
photographs of Ruth in a school
graduation dress, in a ball gown, on
shipboard, at the Deauville races.
Tony gathered that the thing lack-
ing to Ruth in those years had been
normal companionship with her own
kind; any interested young man
had been naturally considered a for-
tune hunter. She had not married.
Then, when Ruth had been thirty,
a New York financial paper had
wanted to see Grandfather Patter-
son’s letters and diaries, to use in
a series of articles about the New
York of his time, and the promis-
ing young journalist, little more
than a year out of Harvard, who
had been sent out to Patterson
manor farm on Long Island had
been Lawrence Bellamy. Lawrence
had been young and gay; Ruth im-
pressive in her wealth and position
at thirty-one. He had imagined that
many suitors were interested; pres-
ently he had found himself installed
as the only one, her squire when
she went into town to the opera,
and incidentally to the Patterson
box; her authority on the problems
presented by managing the manor
farm; there were splendid dairies,
calves, bulls, stallions, hunters, and
racers. Lawrence grew interested.
They were married, and Ruth had a
few years of flawless happiness,
had a small square son to stamp
about “Merrivale Hills,” could drive
about to other estates like theirs,
For Real Results Advertise In The Radio Post
THE STATE OF TEXAS )
COUNTY OF GILLESPIE )
AN ORDINANCE ORDERING
AN ELECTION TO BE HELD
FOR THE PURPPOSE OF EL-
ECTING A MAYOR AND COM-
MISSIONERS FOR THE CITY
OF FREDERICKSBURG, TEXAS.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
OF THE CITY OF FREDERICKS-
BURG, TEXAS:
Sec. 1. That an election be and
the same is hereby ordered to be
held within the corporate limits of
the City of Fredericksburg, Texas,
on the first Tuesday in April, A.
D., 1936, the same being the 7th
day of said month, for the purpose
of electing a Mayor and two Com-
missioners for said city.
Sec. 2. That said election shall
be held under the provisions of the
laws of the State of Texas govern-
ing the holding of general elections.
Sec. 3. That Adolph Hopf, Adolph
Meckel and Lawrence Knopp are
hereby named and appointed as
election judges to hold said elec-
tion, and that they, and each of
them are hereby authorized and
empowered to name and appoint
such other election officers, either
judges or clerks, as may be neces-
sary and requisite to hold said ele-
tion in proper and orderly manner.
Sec. 4. That the West room on
the first floor of the Max Blum
building, owned by J. B. Wieser et
al, situated on the West corner of
Lot No. 163, in said City of Fred-
ericksburg, Texas, is hereby de-
signated as the election poll at
which such election shall be held.
Sec. 5. That the Clerk of the City
of Fredericksburg be and he is
hereby directed to give at least
thirty days notice of the holding
of said election by publishing and
posting notices thereof in the man-
ner and form as required by law.
PASSED AND APPROVED this
the 3rd day of March, A. D. 1936.
was a tap at her door.
“Come in!” she said, rousing. It
was Ruth Bellamy who came in,
hesitantly, with a somewhat doubt-
ful smile on her face.
“It’s after half-past seven, and
you asked to be reminded?”
“Oh, yes. Oh, come in, Mrs. Bel-
lamy ! I believe I was dozing.”
Ruth came in and sat on the bed.
“I had the most delicious bath,
and then all these books, and I think
I was nearly asleep.—Oh, how won-
derful your hair is!”
“My wig?” Mrs. Bellamy’s face
had been artfully rouged and paint-
ed; with the silver curls above it,
and the earrings of brilliants quiv-
ering when she moved her head, she
looked ten years younger—fifteen
years younger than the woman Tony
had met downstairs a few hours
ago. “Ridiculous what they can
do!” she smiled deprecatingly.
“It’s very becoming!”
“It’s too becoming. I don’t look
this way any more,” the other wom-
an said, shaking her head. “But
this is what I came in about,” she
went on: “Mother and I were say-
ing that—that since you’re young,
and this is a dance, would you like
us to hunt you up a costume?”
Tony pointed, and Ruth turned
her head to see the gay full skirt
of the Portuguese costume, the em-
broidered blouse and bright head-
dress dangling on hangers at the
dressing table.
“It’s the real thing; my brother
had a friend who had to go to Rio,”
Tony explained, as the other woman
admired it. “And he brought it
home for Brenda. But it was al-
ment with a wonderful view of
the city, and determined to remain
in San Francisco.
On a certain rainy March after-
noon, with the freedom of a fa-
vored friend, she went up there un-
announced, gave Chevalier her wet
mackintosh and dripping umbrella,
and entered the living room to find
a fire blazing and Lawrence read-
ing galley proofs in a deep chair
beside it.
“Oh, delicious fire—I’m freez-
ing!” Tony exclaimed joyfully
“Hello, Larry. Cold?”
“No-o-o. I had some work to do,
and I thought I might as well do
it here.”
“Ruth?”
“At a bridge lunch somewhere.
She’ll be in. She said to be sure
to keep you if you came in.”
“Oh-h-h-h!” Tony shuddered lux-
uriously. “I’m on a story, but the
woman is right up the street here
at the Fairmont, and she won’t be
home until six.”
“Then you’re here until six?”
Larry said, with a glance at the
clock.
“The truth is,” Tony said, her
cheeks bright from the windy climb
up the hill, “the truth is, I’m glad to
see you alone for a minute, for
I’m in a tight corner.”
“All right, go ahead and tell me
about it.”
Tony settled herself in a chair,
her brown slim hands extended on
the arms, her glowing blue eyes
sometimes turning to his, sometimes
to the fire.
"Well, it’s Greenwood, our city
editor,” she said.
"What’s Greeny want now? Mak-
ing love to you?”
“Making love to me? Hear him!
He wants me to do a sensational
story for him about the Emergency
hospital. He wants me to walk out
into Market street, with no money
in my purse, and no cards of identi-
fication on me, and faint.”
Lawrence was shaking his head
slowly.
“Greeny’s old-fashioned,” he said.
“That sort of thing isn’t journal-
ism.”
“I’m to stay in the Emergency
hospital overnight and then come
in and write a big story.”
"Greeny thinks they don’t treat
people right there?”
"That’s the idea, I believe.”
“Well, but then—” Lawrence
slow smile showed in his brown
face. "Then whatever was wrong,
you’d get,” he said.
“Exactly!”
“Why, I don’t think he has any
right to ask you to do a thing like
that,” the man decided slowly. "I
think I’d decline.”
"The thing is, Larry— This is
very pleasant, having a fire here,
FftEE f \ d
book!
WF
-
Mu»” a
AEI$
Th Bellamys, remembering hap- , as his star had begun to rise, some-
how—Tony sensed—Ruth’s had be-
motion was made for the meeting
to adjourn.
Tuesday, March 3, Miss Burles-
on met again with the girls. Miss
Mary Jenschke opened the meeting. i
Secretary Mary Lou Weinheimer l
read the minutes which were ap-1
proved.
Miss Burleson discussed the im-
portance of the bedroom and how
the members should fix their bed-
rooms.—Miss Tillie Ahrens, Re-
porter.
---ooo------
At Montrose, Colo, a school bus
dropped off a 75 foot cliff, spilled
25 children and the driver, none
of whom were seriously hurt.
March A. D. 1936, as the same ap-
pears of record in Vol. 1, page 213
et seq. of the Ordinance Record of
said Board.
GIVEN UNDER MY HAND
AND SEAL OF SAID CITY this
the 5th. day of March, 1936.
BODO HABENICHT
Clerk, City of Fredericksburg,
Texas.
eezecmossezos=mnsmmnesessarceszesnemnaremmrezeesrwese=z-uemsemses-
6 Schaetter’s Funeral Home P
Dependable Funeral Service At Moderate Cost.
SUPERIOR AMBULANCE SERVICE
NIGHT PHONE 400J or 191 1
D O C o C o — o — o cS
her hostess in the mirror.
“You’re not going to have much
fun, are you?” she asked soberly, in
sudden understanding.
Mrs. Bellamy, lingering, seated
herself beside the almost dead fire.
“No,” she answered, smiling nerv-
ously, and yet, Tony saw, glad to
talk too.
“You’re a good sport!” Tony
smilingly repeated the husband’s
phrase.
“I try to be.”
“Was the little boy—was Peter—
sick very long?” Tony was stand-
ing opposite her hostess now,
brushing her thick dark hair.
“He was killed.”
“Ah-h-h!”
“He was at a friend’s house, play-
ing with little Dick Sykes. They
were at the garage—”
“Terrible for you!’
“It was terrible for my husband,
too. We never talk of Peter.”
“Perhaps,” Tony said timidly, “it
would be better if you did.”
“Peter was the only one. You
see, I was thirty-three and Larry
only twenty-one when we married,”
Mrs. Bellamy said suddenly.
"You look twenty-one tonight,”
Tony commented readily.
The older woman got to her feet,
laid a hand on Tony’s shoulder.
"Come and see me again,” she
said wistfully, shyly. “When you
are over on this side of the bay, or
any time, I’d be so glad of it. I’ve
been living very quietly — too
quietly.”
“I will!” Tony promised, touched.
But as she got herself into the be-
coming stripes and colors, she won-
dered if she would. Life was brim-
ful without the Bellamys!
E. KRAUSKOPF
Mayor, City of Fredericksburg,
Texas
BODO HABENICHT
Clerk, City of Fredericksburg,
Texas.
_ I
(DDOCOCOGOGOCOCOCOCO<
for Aunt Meggy, there was a lovely
scarf for Brenda, and for Tony her-
eelf there were frail delicate under- ciously to her wonderful husband
Lungs from Ruth, a book from Lar- and son. Then had come the San
Francisco venture, and the beauti-
ful house in Piedmont, with Law.
that his wife so much enjoyed, but
he came in once or twice, and was
always glad to find Tony there.
Sometimes they discussed the per-
sonnel of the Call office; he knew
। all the important men there, and
was inexhaustibly interested ’ in
what went on.
“Boo, that horrible Fitch! He
came to dinner one night. I hate
him!” Ruth said. "Do you know
him, Tony?”
“Oh, yes.” She smiled dreamily.
“And Bessie Cutter, too,” she said.
“I suppose every one in the of-
fice is on to that," Ruth observed.
“She did a column called ‘Bessie
Saw It,’ for a while. Now they say
she’s going to do some work for the
Sunday issue."
“Can she do anything?’
“Not really. She’s been tried out
almost everywhere.” Tony had a
moment of pity for Bessie. Not
much fun ahead of her. Every one
CITY CAFE
BEST EXCLUSIVELY
BEER ALWAYS ON TAP.
CHICKEN DINNER 50c
Felix Klaerner, Prop.
Fredericksburg Mutual Aid Fund
ASSOCIATION. (A Local Mutual Aid Society)
Membership Fee..................$2.50 Annual Dues..................$1.00
Assessment...........$1.00 only upon death.
J. B. WIESER, President; MAX JOSEPH, Vice-President;
OTTO M. HAHNE, Secret ary-Treasurer
BBKE
MpE
S8MEEEEMEMEZEMEEEEMMEEEEEELB
DURST GROCERY AND MARKET
(ON UPPER MAIN STREET)
- Marvin Durst, Prop.
Country Produce Bought and Sold
Fresh Meats — Country Sausage
Groceries — Gas and Oil
Fresh Fruits and V egetables.
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 three 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.
Dietel, William. The Radio Post (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1936, newspaper, March 13, 1936; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510192/m1/4/?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.