The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 54, Ed. 1 Monday, August 26, 1940 Page: 4 of 6
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TNI DAILY SUN-GOOSE CRIB* HXM
i
MONDAY, *UftUtT ltM
The Dally Sun
Published nrh WMkdsy •fl»rnoi>n, h> Ptoplf* Printtn*
r<MD<nY. Il» *. f**rn Str*H, Gonw Ctwk. T«»»
SUN SLANTS
By W. L. Ptndcrgroft
W. I PlNDERORArT, Editor «nd PuDIWwl
ROUKHT MATHERNE, BuiIomi M»b»|M
. StlPtfRlPTION RATES.
!•„ 11.90 Vwr. fS?6 Ew « Montln, lOi Month
' Mail SubtrripliMM P«y»bl» ih Adv.AWt*
VUILL TEXAN Jmm H. Jom* accept the
’ commerce portfolio in the prealdent'i cab-
inet?'
Mr. Jones, by hit handling of RPC the paat country
levernl year* and other government lending . ..
agehclO* more recently, ha* earrted nation-
gatrrtd «t wind (hit mlltrr »t G“*»* Cmk, \tm
yetMiar under the act el Ci.n*rM» Mirch ft IH»t.
President vs. Candida
siblc thnt Mr. Jones would be retained a*
head of the RFC and other agenciei.
If he remain* In hi* preient position the
probably would, continue to*benefit
htl services regardless of the outoomo
of the election. As a cabinet member, the
government might not have him after the
ehtctlon.
It Is a high honor that Mr. Roosevelt has
bestowed upon this great cltlsen of the lone
star state in offering him the post. The ques-
Y . _J’rosidooi- -Ruom’dt- unit- Candidate
Roosevelt are two different persons and
the world crisis has placed them in con-
i' fueling positions.
s—. There are two vital move* that need
to be made immediately to further our
national defense program.
One is the transfer of a fleet of de-
stroyers to the British ta he used in
' 'defending themselves against Hitler’s
war machine. The other is enactment
of the conscription 4>ill in order to free
our military leaders to train an ade-
quate army for the defense of our coun-
try. - ,
As president, Mr. Rooseyelt knows
both should be done without further
delay, but as a candidate he hesitates
to express himself forcibly upon the
matters and, thus run the risk of alien-
ating those voters who oppose one or
both of these defense measures.
Already President Roosevelt hqs ex-
pressed himself with regard to conscrip-
tion, but he has not been as forcible as
he is capable of being. ’
Although there has been no direct
statement on the matter of transfer-
ring the destroyers, there is strong
indication that he also believes this
should be done.
Cbnfronted with a close election, as
he is, it is a difficult thing for him to
do, but he should overcome the candi-
date's natural hesitancy to take a clear-
cut stand on controversial issues, and
express his desire in these matters with
to bear upon $hem.
jOESzszs.**
quickly. He should relegate Candidate
Roosevelt to the, background and de-
mand that congress take the necessary
action quickly.
If he will dq this he probably will find
next November that it was sound poli-
tics as well and sound public policy.
itbr,
wide respect and Admiration
The RFC under hi* guidance has loaned bil-
lion* ot dollar* and in doing *o ha* saved
thousand* of buaineas firm* from bankruptcy,
bM permitted needed expansion and ha* ore-
fated jobs In unknown number*. While doing
All this be made the agency earn a profit for
ytc government.......... -■ Uoa Mf* Jone. roust decide t* Ih Which ca.
country. This ,1* the basis upoh which his
~ HdiiF'rtftc87Sf't?4Ktoll^ "lieiiion will be made, .... .4.™.
him to aecept the position now offered to him?
A place in the cabinet is one of great hqndr
amynfluence, but it U doubtful,whether Mr.
JonW could greatly Increase the oervlce hb
aroatlv ID _____
now T» rendering his country by becoming
secretory of commerce and he certainly would
not wield any greater influence in the new
position than he does now as head of gov-
ernment lending agencies.
"THERE IS a possibility that Mr. Roosevelt
I U.III ...
With the nation preparing to train hundreds
of thousands of men for the army, there will
be ♦ifiore and more news about army peats
and camps.
How many of these are there in Texas and
where are they located?
Some of them are well known. Others are
very little known. Realising this, Slants de-
cided to give this infaymatiqn.
will not be. reelected. Any informed Demo-
crat will admit that such a possibility exists.
If he should be defeated, it Is not likely
Mr. Wtllklo Will retain the present cabinet,
However, It Is more than likely It Is pos-
Strength For Today
-Beg. IT. H. Pat. Off."
H(RI)EN BEARING
Somehow, somewhere, sometime, we all have
cast our burdens upon the Lord, for they are
too much for our shoulders.
We can carry them but, we
cannot carry them alone.
We may go on year after
year with a heart that daily
bleeds with sorrow, trying to
forget it in a beautiful serv-
ice to others, but Unless* we
can look up to heaven and
say "Thy will'be done,” the
wound will never heal.
If some disappointment
has struck you down and all
through life you look back Douglass
on a circumstance that
marred your fihest ambitions and made you
put aside everything in which you had Hftpe,
you will have to have something more than a
wodld COrne to the end of the day without
rancor and bitterness. You must,be able to
Sny day by day/ through tBLthe. long, weary,
' years, ’.’My
Fort Sam Houston, probably the best known
of all army posts in the state, is located hear
San Antonio and Is headquarters of the Eighth
corps area.' The area includes Texfcs, Okla-
homa, Colorado and New Mexico, Fort Fran-
cis E. Warren in Wyoming, and the eastern-
portion of Arizona. It also has technical con-
trol of the border control.
Other army posts in the state are:
Fort Bliss, El Paso.
Brooks Field, San Antonio.
Fort Brown, Brownsville.
Castolon, On border, Brewster county.
Fort Clark, Bracketville.
Dryden, on border in Terrell county.
Henslfcy Field, Grand Prairie.
Camp Bullis, near Del Rio.
Fort McIntosh, Laredo.
Midlahd, Texas (airdrome).
Normoyle Quartermaster Depot, San An-
tonio. Texas.
Fort Ringgold, Rio Grande City, Texas.
Fort D. A. Russell, Marfa, Tekas.
Fori Crockett, Galveston Texas.
Fort Ran Jacinto, Galveston, Texas.
Fort Travis, Galveston, Texas.
Bolivar Lighthouse, Bolivar, Texas.
Ellington Field, ndar Houston.
Randolph Field, San Antonio, Texas.
Kelly Field, San Antonio, Texas.
Randolph and Kfilly Fields are not under
control of the Eighth Corps Area commanders
except for supplies to troops stationed there.
Before the Blitzkrieg
•y Rupert Qr
%
fice. For the first
tlm* sine* I
had entered the.bulld!„t 77
ental not* had vanlihtd *
CHAPTER THREE
JUST AS Gun enter«d It, the
door-at the’end of the passage
inline Ray-Baths opened, and
another client, robed similarly
to himself, came through it and
walked down toward the elevator lavenftgr (tHpid tj^uSL®
\f that it was the man he a plnk-and-whiu '
Gun sayf that
had followed in, and who evi-
dently took no longer to undress
. -T. tfcw 1id dMb' ■
As he entered 'the elevatofhe
The man who stood b«u.
desk was short and f»t J?
clad In faultless mornlhj C
UlCf*1 ***
pink-and-white little
it hardly needed th» u™
WJ® W|ft\ nr ^ /jl
shUt a qultk glhnce at GUh from —?, n,rt®! ’
below - half-Iowefed lids
■ffiiiirslw“ sosSr*1
Gun, adopting a casual, easy he would haw
little
solfiei
rather extraordinary process be-
fore?”
It might have been imagination
but it seemed to Gun that the man
THE MARKrMAN!
Barclay On Bridge
started slightly when addressed,
and then seemed to stiffen. It
struck Gun that he was expecting
something to come, and was wary
for it.
“Process? Oh, the ray-bath!
Yes, I haVe been herd before!1
“It’s my first experience,” Gun
confided. “Tell me, are they any
ggod—these ray-baths?”
"Good? Oh, yes, they are very
good. Very refreshing and—Invig-
orating indeed."
It’s my first time here"
hardly TgardXselfT
tient'—nor did I e<phct * JL,
consultation was part of twT
formance!" 1
The doctor gave
shrug.
“Ah,
an elo<
'patient' is
By Shepard Barclay
The man spoke perfect English,
yet from a certain gutturalness
FIRST TYPE OF HAND
PLAY OF suit contracts may
be' divided Wtd four principal
classifications. First comes that
in wliich trumps arc drawh. as
soon as possible by the declarer,
so that the opponents may get ho
tricks with their trumps ekeept
high ones which cannot be head-
ed off. Following the drawing 01
trumps, the various tricks in the
side suits are developed, especial-
ly in any long suit, so that dis-
cards of losers in other spits may
be obtained.
in the voice, and a stiffness in
the phraseology, Gun deduced
that he was a foreigner, Also he
had paused perceptibly before hewt ''
using the word "Invigorating." bath mif!ht provP dan«rb,i' |
The elevator had hardly started
before it stopped again. Gun
might prove dangeroiia J
we lige to make sure tbit
pat—our CLIENTS-obtain
day by day feeling at times that, you can never
endure it to the end, then above alfjthings you
need God’s grace in your heart.
God may have given you some thorn in the
flesh, some weakness that he wtl not remove,
but He will say unto you as He said unto
Paul: “My grace is sufficient unto thee, for
my strength is made perfect in weakness."
All rights reserved—BNS
Washington Letter
By Charles P. Stewart
EX-REPRESENTATIVE SAMUEL B. PET- —Jess of his objection to ifs present candidate
TENGILL of Indiana is a Democrat. Also a
democrat. Note the distinction. As a demo-
crat he believes in democracy. He’s a vehe-
ment supporter of it, in fact. As a Democrat
he belongs to the Democratic
party.
He’s been an ex-represent-
ative since the last congress
ended. At that juncture he
retired from politics. Any-
way. that’s the way he puts
it. I’d say he’s still in politics
up to his neck, so far as his
activity’s concerned: Official-
ly, he’s an “ex," however.
He’s against President
Roosevelt’s re-etectlon. Possi-
bly he’s in sympathy With
8. B. Pettengtfl certain of F. D. R.’s politico-
socio-economic objectives, but he objects em-
phatically to the fashion in which F. D. R.
has been trying to arrive at them. He also
is an anti-third termer.
Quite a few D-democrats arc like that. A
considerable number of them have bolted the
Democratic party and are plugging for Wen-
dell WJllkie. Ex-Congressman Petteftgii! re-
fuses to bolt. He’s going to work like fury
against Roosevelt, but’ he Isn’t going to cam-
paign for Wendell. , * j-.
-..... ..... - •------ 5 i
and the latter’s methods of going after his
Objectives. *
D-democratic leaders in some of the south-
ern states are puzzled as to the bolting propo-
sition, I notice it in Virginia. There are .no-
tabilities there who oppose Rooseveltlanism
vigorously, but if they bolt they’re afraid
they’ll lose a good bit of their D-democratic
representation In congress. * ■
They’re anxious to eat their cake—that is,
to 'defeat F, D. R. But they want to have it,
too—said cake, in the latter classification,
being just as many legislators in Washlhgtoh
as they’ve ever had. Ex-Congressman Petten-
gill may or may not prove to have -done
something toward solving their problem for
them.
Write* a Book . *
He’s done his best, in any event. He’s writ-
ten a book for their guidance. He calls it
“Smoke Screen.” His thesis Is that no “sudden
coup d’etat" will spring totalitarianism on us
—that, If it’s done at all. it will be done
“under a smoke screen of laudable objectives.”
That’s why the book’s called “Smoke
Screen.” A few of its sub-titles are, “Kart
Marx -immigrant,” “Socialism Through the
Back Door,” “Taxation Sucks the Eggs,” "fi**
When the state department (Secretary -of
State Cordell Hull) refused to permit the body
of Leon Trotsfky to be brbUght tb thfe United
for display purposes it rendered a de-
7 • * j,pf,#!l;,’right'
American Consul George P. Shaw at Mexico
City already had refused the permit and the
state department’s ruling merely sustained
the position. .........- —-.....-—4-......-
Our country had refused to permit Trotsky -
to enter While alive. There certainly cohld
be no reason to permit his body to be brought
here. To have done so would only have pro-
vided a Roman holiday for ail the reds rfnd
radicals in the country and we have no ttine'
*for such foolishneSe at this critical period- in
trar national history.
If the Communists and their fellow travel-
ers are so anxious to look upon the remains
of their hero let them go to Mexico for that
purpose—If Mexico will permit them to enter
that country.
And while they are down there, if they de-
cide to take up permanent residence that Will
be all right, too.
1. + * 10 7 0
- »852 v*
♦AKQ5'
+ 6 2
3. A A 10 7 5
' f rrtT
Q J 10
+ 3
tm*s:
4 AK 87 5 <
+ 7*
is to lead to the diamond A, ruff
a diamohd with an honor, lead a
spade honor to the A, ruff a sec-
ond diamond with a spade honor,
win two more trumps, the last in .. . . . „ - - -----------.-
dummy with the 10, then run dia- t^ugh>t, ll a .stopf at an' flt {tom treatment,
mends for three heart discards, othcr f!oor’ but the elevator b°y
losing two clubs only.
With No. 3 for dummy, after
the heart trick, lead out trumps,
take the diamond A and lead the
diamond Q. If it is covered, ruff
ahd return to dummy with the
last trump to get two heart dis-
cards oh diamonds; if not cov-
ered, discard a heart, or in other
slid open the door and stood aside The cold rim of the stctl,
and the other man hurried out. He .impinged on the flesh over
did not seem to be at all eager heart and lungs. The soft
to continue the conversation. It 0f the doctor—Gun founu
struck Gun that the descent wps rather repellent-closed light
such a short one that the* elevator his pulse,
might well have been dispensed
with in favor of a flight of stairs.
Then he realized that the use of
.'And the to:
♦ A ,10 7
4 8 7 5 2
4K q
+ KQ J6
South’s Hand
4KQJ9 6
4 A 6 4 3
49
+ A 8 5
We do not condone the brutal assassination
of thiS old man, and feel that it is Mexico’s
duty to See that the murder and all those Who
helped to plot tt are properly punished. *
Five Years Ago
If the defending side had done
no bidding, and the heart K is led
by Westi ybu holding South’s
hand with any of the four others
as dummy would plan your play
for 4-Spades on the basis of the
first type of hand—trumps first,
then long suit.
With No. 1 as dummy, after
Winning with the heart A, you
would reckon on having to take
three rounds of trumps, where-
upon you would run diamonds,
discarding two hearts, ruffing one
club and so making an overtrick,
With the loss of just one trick in
fiehrts; ohe in clubs.
With NO. 2 as dummy, your
best play, after winning the heart
the heart trick add dropping
trumps, take four club tricks, dis-
carding your diamond, tflen lead
the diamond K. If II iS not cov-
ered, discard a heart, so yo« rosy
steal a trick if East, with the A,
is making a bad play.
.....4........ * f __*_ .
Tomorrow’s Problem
4 K 10 8
4 J 9 5 3
47 5 4
+ J 9 4
46 5
4AK 86
49 6 2 ,
+ 8 5 3 2
2 *
s.
4Q J943
410 4 2
.8
, K Q 10 6
4 A 7 2
4Q7
4 A K Q J 10 3
+ A7
(Dealer: East. Neither side vul-
nerable.)
If South opens the bidding
here with 1-Dlamond, West bids
1-Heart and East 1-Spade, what
should South, do with an expert
Opposite him, with a fair player,
and with a virtual beginner, and
why in each case? -*-------------
In The Tri-Cities
Crossword Puzzle
enteiv—without
the* cognizance of the manage-
ment.
A useful precaution in certain
circumstances! ...>**sees
Gun wondered what the, cir-
cumstances might, be ... Dope?’
‘ Opium smoking? The convention-
al’ suggestions rah' through his
mind which he immediately told
himself was unduly suspicious.
After all, the precaution of the
elevator—if it WAS a precaution
—might well be to keep undesir-
able people out, rather than to
safeguard them In coming In. A
place like this in the West End
would be bound to attract such
people, and if the place were be-
ing run on sound lines, it would
be very necessary to guard
against them.
Meanwhile Gun followed the
other man along a short passage
and into a large room, which
seemed to be a sort of waiting
room. The oriental note was sus-
tained, and there were divans
scattered about all over the room,
Which possessed a polished par-
quet floor, with thick oriental
rugs here and there. There were
about half, a dozen men in
room, all clad In the white
robes. Two or three were' talking
tdgethcr, but the majority were HOT SPRINGS,
“ITm, yes,,
if you please.’
Gun obtruded, if.( :
"Thank ,v- iuwv „ • **
wrong with you—but yod
been Overdoing it slightly of 1
A little overwork — ovjri
n was., just thinking tfie.i
thing,” interrupted Gun,
meaning which escaped' the'1
tor.....................y
“Yes. The ray-baths will do ]
a lot'of good, you Will find,
you must also sleep. If you'
favor me with your name.
“Dogsbody,” answered Gun,
hesitatingly.' “Arthur Dogjb
Just a Visitor to London.'
“I see!”
The doctor scribbled In his <
book. Gun had a sudden idek,|
took a quick glance ovelf
shdulder. The doctor wrote »I
and—unusual for a man af i
profession—plain hand The 1
preceding Gun’s assumed one 1
“Pullinger."
(To Be Continued)
New Mexico
vS Vein Uncovered
From the Daily Sun, Aug. 26, 1935
Henry Rushwahm, Sr„ 81, of Pelly, is in
critical condition as the result of an acci-
dent at his home today, fie Was using a sharp
slipped,
Blight of Bureaucracy," "The New peanotism*”
arid "Balance Sheet"—our 40-odd billion In-
<lnkta<4tiA*N .‘'I
lot of
It’s a political commonplace that
•elections are decided, not by the voters’ pref-
erence for the winning candidate btit by their
hostility to his opponent. This seems to be
ex-Congressman PettengiH’s complex, but I
think he has it better thought out than the
voter has.
by His Party
x-congressman Is a novelty in part
while an outstanding anti-Roosevelt
srat/he isn’t' a D-democtatfe bolter.
He proposes to stay inside his party, regard-
debtedhess.
That
gives an idea of the little volume's
contents. One doesn’t have to agree with it
all to find it interesting. There are 128 pages
Of It and it’s packed full of information. The
ex-congressman’s bad a deal of experience oft
Capitol Hill and he's a clbse student.
Constitutional Committee Head ‘ ‘7"
Sam Pettengill is present head of what’s
known as the National Committee’ «> VpHoM
Constitutional’ Goverment, a non-partisan or
THE WORLD WAR
OF 25 YEARS AGO
* August 27, 1915. (By u. p.) . ..
Austrians victorious in battle of Zlota-Lipa,
Eastern Front W,
Ealtern Galicia defense by Russians began
.,to crick. • . . r’ ’’
Ru wian (or<m *va*u*tsd OlMta art the-Nie-
_ - ‘ *
bi-partisan set-up. Its original head was Frank
E. Gannett, the New York chain newspaper
publisher, but Gannett hfid to drop out, being
an aspirant for the Republican presidential
nomination, which; as we all know, he didn’t
get. . >.• «* ■
In concluding his booklet, Sam asks, for
the committee; "Are we licked?"
knife to trim shrubbery and the blade sli
cuttthg an artery in his hand; ’
Thieves last night broke into the Consum-
ers lee Company office in La Porte and stble
merchandise valued At $!5. Most of the lbot
consisted of tobacco and eigarets. Depbty
Sheriff R. R. Busch was investigating. 1
The Goose Creek school board today Was
discussing the feasibility of installing a public
addregs system dt Elms Field for use > in
broadcasting plays during football games.
A itiptt 1ft «| « ft hog was arrested
today by Deputy Sheriff If, 0. Spence wfien
the owner Of the hog and the officer foiind
the mlsifing animal 1ft the suspect’s pen. >
Supt. W. R, Smith today appealed to Tri-
Cities resident* tO list spare rooms available
fdr rent W teachers Jn the local schoOf
By defeating tKe Man^lle Texacps
the Barbers HH1 Gushers stamped the
as favorites to win the Houston Post'
tournament.
ACROSS
1. Shouts
5. Head of an
Heado
abbey
8. Letter H
12. Hard part
9. Sour
10. American
Indian
11. Notice
15. Foray
19. Rind
of bread 22. Monster
13, Bright fight
14. Material tlflcally
16. Woody 25. Owns
plant . 28'Stitphes
17. Short for 28. Detail
Edward 29, Punish
18 Cookie 30. Thrice
03®
PgB BBBg
:23G2 nSffl BUM
nsaHHia sntar
iaa@i=i aanSfll
amagmsim
Grab Bag
HI* answer (not expressed in quite these
words) is, “No, not if we send strong men
teUrknowLdg.
nub ot itr' It'a why he doesn't
bolt; he doesn't want a split that Will dis-
organise our legislative chambers. He thinks
they're the essential end of government,
One-Minute Test . 7§ ,
i: W M. on* W„h
Thine- Eyes*?'-.......~• .f .......
3. Who originated the department store?
(mus.)
32. Establishes]
35. Stupid
fellow
38. Pet dog
iO.Bows
41. Infrequent-
42. Demeanor P||j
44. Wide
46. German
< r*ver
covering 51 Vim
Mf
lags gaga
300 O0Q
20. spread grass
ftirdrying
y/
%
1
2
3
H
I
1
I
21. Achieve
23. Expires
MBs* ..
27. Portray
31. Land
%
6
7
6
7.
IO
Jl
w
1
13
* measures
33. Shaping tool
N
16
16
4t,fwt»t*d ..
38. Hindmost
n
1
16
%
20
37. Ceaie
39 Manuscript
(A t\kyt %
7
21
?2
24
ffli
I
(auDr1 -
40. A weapon
43. Slovenly
• person ;
46. Toward ^
'■'Ji
2f
2T
20
30
w
±2
E
33
3?
3£>
2
36
N. M., Aug.
sitting on the divans,'looking at Discovery of two veins]
papers. The current newspapers gold-silver ore in southwestJ
and magazines Which, lay about New Mexico which its finders 1
struck another incongruous note, would run more than $12 a ’
Gun approached the Other man has been reported to the
once more, adopting the manner Mexico Chamber of Comma
of a garrulotis, curious, not over- Managing Director M. L. Hur]
intelligent individual. announced today.
“I say, what happens now? Hurley said that Robert Bu
What +) we hang arouhd this and Harold Zumwalt, mining
place for?” he asked. sOclates, had reported to him I
He had deliberately approached blocking off of approximately I
him from behind, and bare feet 000 tons of the ore in their In
rhade no noise on the wooden hoe and Emporia properties InJ
flor. This time the fellow gave a Cuhillo mountains near the_
quite palpable start.’ Plainly he tlnental divide just west of
Was nervous, t» say the least. ton> N. M.
“Oh, first we see the doctor!” he The Emporia vein, Hurley 1
replied slowly. . he had been informed, aye'
“The devil we do!" Gun 'ex- 25 feet In width, and the Iyi
claimed. “What for?” vein 5 feet. The shaft on the j
"Oh, I don’t know. It is a rule erites is 420 feet deep and
of the place, I suppose!” . present operations consist
The man spoke impatiently, and tunhel to Connect the two pr<
now he moved away. ties, cutting the Ivanhoe velnj
Gun did not follow him, but 675 feet, Hurley saia.
Watched him. Two newcomers «n- Directing the blocking off
tered the room, and the man gave .operations were Robert P"
them a quick but comprehensive mining engineer of Victor,
glance,
All the same, It was becoming
impressed upon hint that there
Was not only something queer
about the man he was interested
Ip, but also about this place!
how there seemed to him to
and Robert UntOft. mining WJ
neer of Los Angeles.
/
68. Drench
forial Views
As Other Editors See It
pst. .— j? • MySijiiMI ’
. ■ I SttUMnSHS '■
mwmmwmmam
something secret and sinister
oriental niflMMp.
did in
m
’ down
iwr
Fall behind
4 Dregs - -
6. Highest
general
7. Yet
Jawn WiH Oust
All Missionaries
O, Aug. 26. m -A"
Canadian missionary
h Japan wlH be cu
wmmmmmmwm
bMrttmteq ty kih* Iftatum Syndicate, ^
admission
C»h*
ree min- aiBcussing ac
GunP<^ho against
oor and American
..... a medium-sized Japanese ,
up a* a doctor'* of- their families, 1,186.
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In response to this gestute M
obediently opened his butaX
and the doctor nodded his
V
lmite dui
pll
nl of the figure thus revebW^B
“There is not, 1 thlnirwfl
wrong with you!”
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1
to bc such a disappointmeht.1 '9
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r.
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 54, Ed. 1 Monday, August 26, 1940, newspaper, August 26, 1940; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022216/m1/4/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.