The Daily Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 53, Ed. 1 Friday, August 6, 1948 Page: 4 of 8
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Sun Slants
Page 4 — The Daily Sun — Friday, August 6; 1948
Grab Bag
week-day afternoon by
company at 119 Weat Pearce,
Baytown, Texai
.............Publisher
................Editor
Advertising Manager
Jackson ..........Office Manager
Subscription Rates:
Month, 90c; S-months, 12.60; 6-months, $5; year, $10
To subscribers in armed service, 75c month.
II mail subscriptions are payable in advance.
By Fred Hartman
All mail subscriptions are payable
National Representatives; Texas Daily Press League
Entered -as second-class matter at the
Entered-at second-class
Baytown, Texas, post office under the
Act of Congress of March 3, 1897.
Htt Weather Headin’
If Thomas E. Dewey is elected in Novem-
ber and doesn’t heed the recent request of
a Southern admirer to shave off his mus-
(JOOn DIXIE YARN
WITH ALL OF this Dlxlecrat business going on, wo
may as well record for the archives one of the sharp-
est stories we ever heard.
It was told about a sight-seeing trip south out of
Washington, D. C., over into Virgiina.
En route to Mount Vernon and the other his-
torical sites, the speeler on the bus continued to
point out significant spots where a “handful of
Confederate soldiers captured a regiment of Union
aoldiers," and where six southern spldlers held a
bridge for three days that hundreds of Union sol-
diers were trying to take. At every turn he related
heroic events in which the south always had thcfp.
batter of the going.
In the back end'sat a slight and elderly woman.
"Didn’t the North ever win a batUe?" she asked.
“No ma’am, not as long as I am on this bus," this
speeler speeled, and, of course, in a southern drawl.
°°
Easy Knowledge
tache, he will be the first president in 36
The last pre-
years not to be clean-shaven,
vious mustached chief executive was Taft.
His predecessor, Theodore Roosevelt, also
sported a hirsute adornment on the upper
lip.
Before him was the clean-shaven McKin-
ley, but his predecessor, Cleveland,.was an-
other with mustachios. The Cleveland-T.
Roosevelt-Taft period might be called the
Mustached Era of the Presidency.
It should be noted that in those days the
ghost-cropped decoration on Governor Dew-
ey’s face would have been ridiculed by all
two-fisted,, red-blooded, right-ipinded he-
men. A mustache was a mustache then; it
was expected tt> wave in the breeze. The
bearer was proud to have it called "handle-
bars,” and to the ultra fastidious the Mus-
' tache. Cup was 'a real boon.
The first five presidents were clean-shay*
en. John Quincy Adams displayed to the
public what are generally called “side-
Tbe Answer, Quick!
1. What famous novelist wrote
the words of his brother’s popular
song celebrating one of Indiana's
points of interest? . «
2. What is the nickname of the
state of Alabama?
3. What Instrument is used for
finding the latitude a ship is in?
4. How many beats are there
to a measure of waltz time?
6; In What part of Spain is
Salamanca?
It’s Been Said
The light of the understanding
humility kindleth, and pride cov-
ereth.—Quarles.
/,
jus
•STAND UP AND BE COUNTED’
WE HAVE BEEN reading statement after state-
ment by Congressman Lyndon Johnson in which he
challenges his opponent, Former Governor Coke
Steyenson, tp “stand up and be counted." Both are
candidates for senator.
We would like to ask Congressman Johnson or
any of his supporters to stand up arid be counted
on this question:
"Where was Congressman Lyndon Johnson that
hot 1940 summer night in Chicago when President
Franklin D. Roosevelt forced the Democratic Party
to nominate Henry A. Wallace for vice president?’’
And this other’question for Congressman John-
son:
“Did Wallace ever get any of those eggs you used
to scramble over there in the White House kitchen
for those New Dealers’ Sunday morning breakfasts?"
Congressman Johnson will learn on August 28 „
that it takes more than more or less forced votes “AND PASS THE AMMUNITION.
on the floor of congress to change a congressman's .........
classification by TSjcas voters.
■^0^3vVt
L.
Your Future *
This is a good time to transact
private financial agreements;
check your budget and expense*
and also have a good time. Love,
domestic and social affairs appeal
to loom large upon the horizon
at your next year; They promise
happiness and success. Go ahead
with confidence.
CD
Modern Manners
If yob have to call one of your
office co-workers at his or her
home and do not know who will
answer the telephone, the correct
thing is to ask for Mr. (or Miss)
Jones, not by the first i*me. This
rule of etiquette may be relaxed,
however, if you .know the whole
family very well and are in the
habit of' calling all members by
their first names.
Johnson was' an ultra-liberal whom we say ebang- p|Y0 YCOTS ACJO TOClQV
ed to conservative when he felt such a change was
political expediency.
Happy Birthday
Lucille bSH and Ella Raines,
cinema actresses, football's Ken.
_ ... Strong and tennis stars Pauline
From Dally Sun Fite* Betz and, Helen Hull Jacobs, get
The joke was that many true liberals admire and .... t—-rnr-r-—-
St TODAY'S HE.DL.NES:; % .lo„ -Molly ttU Day- ^
SH-SS^mTSSS ** « iSteip ' ' ■ ’ r*T......Day in
dorsement of Governor Stevenson. Smash Ahead in Sicily As Bombs Hance Busch spent a long siege Bo]ivja South America the repub-
Li,*rnrr **'' Tnrlrnnn ^,1 oho And hence too Governor Stevenson's,, statement Batter MeSsiao Port. in the hospital lost his billfold lic haJlnK severed its’connection
burns. Jackson carried out the clean-sha- ln his runQ/f apener the other day. that* He would Mr*. Nancy Almeda Myers, 60, containtni $300 fell off his horse with Pern on that date in 1828.
veil tradition, then came more side-burns, rather not be elected senator than to gain the post of 809 Schilling, Morrell Park, died . ’ .. . , Alfred Ixjrd Tennyson English
, , SSS5JSSaHS i.a?2£Sl
ered in the Whiskered Era of the presidency.
Johnson was clean-shaven, but his three
successors, Grant, Hayes, and Garfield, were
be-whiskered. Arthur wore side-burns plus Baytown will have two sail Jacinto Schools. the memory of Molly Pitcher by navigator in the United States Ar- Dresser (Dreiser),
mustache. After the mustache on Cleveland s*n Jacinto School No. l is located m Baytown selling war bonds and stamps, Mrs. my Air Force jand was cpmmis- 2. The Cotton State.
"came whiskers again, on B. Harrison, the - £nd ia. *n ot ^ 00086 Creek Independent Wyatt Busch, president, was in stoned a second lieutenant in cere-
, . -", -... • . . — School District. charge of the sale held in connec- monies j.t Hondo Air Field.
we say or write San Jacinto School, you won’t know lations,” C. E. Rodecape, chairman' “could make it through 1943, if It
whether we mean San Jacinto School or'San Ja- of the board, announced today. ’, doesn’t get any worse.”
How’d You Make Out?
cinto School, _ Members of the Woman’s Aux- Ben Dumas, son of Mrs. Blanche j/Theodore Dreiser. On the Banks
By now you have probably guessed it. Greater iHary American Legion, honored Dumas,, received the wings of a of — - • *
the Wabash,; composed by Paul
!■ <*'
=
Daily Sun — Friday, August
)Cl
By AN!
Rodecape,
>ne Lovering
Improve the situation with
T M Ft ATI 0 N#by^ofm|i
, - abra. Fig
Honors
were on th«j
rangenient
crystal coril|
the piano. 1
was centerel
"good luok’’|
heart-shape
Annelle Rodecape and Eu- guest’s plac
1 ,r|ng were honored Thurs- Cecjl Sut{|
■sing “t a P“rty *five" by Mrs. C. R. |
i E. Sutphin and Mrs: Sam- aang brldal
* lett at the Sutphin home, evening.
.The wedding of Miss t„ were Mrgl
’ and Mr. Lovering will tbe cftk{, a
, Jent of August 14. McMaster, _
& i»tin streamers descending wbo presidwdl
. light fixtures, and form- and Mrs DrJ
, at the table corners, were at tb# r(,gjsll
above the dining taBte... Games of .1
Janter of the lace-coveted Sherry BramF
PLj tn arrangement of coral Mi s Rod(,caJ
i s -rvstal container with ate<i in pink d
1 garden sprinkler, hung by. Brtde and]
. ggtin streamer from the figuring forl
'over it. White candles in thc regiHtrat1
candelabra flanked the proxlmately
At one end of the terad
If nature slighted you-do your own figuring with Lu
tion, a Form fit Creation. It endows its wearer with the f
high, rounded bustline of youth. No parts to dip-no d
for embarrassment Adjusts to' the individual figure *
Put your best figure forward-with Infktion. Be fitted t
Sizes 32, 34. 36
- B Cup
EXCLUSIVELY AT
mirror plaque, were two
,t*e-tiered shower cakes em- nil
Blacks
fdi chosen pink, green and
*1 color scheme. The crystal IN I
hservico was placed on a sep-
^fmhirrorftpl^uee,flantod Mr. and Mr;
candies in crystal candel- were hosts Tt
n-. :' 'dinner, follow!
last' president Of the Whiskered Era. _ Schs°a°‘ ^So School No. 2 (now under construction
$>. McKinley was the, first president in 28 out at Four Corners or thereabouts) is an integral
years to have no hair on either lip or cheek. adjunct of the Deer Park Independent School Dis-
dents have been clean-shaven, five-wore juts out into tbat great domain east of the San ja-
whsikers, three had side-burns, and three cinto River.
SO far have had mustaches. have as much right to name theirs San Ja-
•_ cinto as we have, and we can only claim that we
!L'.'.Tr'T..... . . ‘ fifliwuil Ymrc v
Hay fever Sufferers are warned that Of! course, we can claim’ they named their school
some drugs taken to combat it may have for the river and that ours was named for, the
an alcoholic effect. Grandpappy Jenkins, battlegrounds. ■
- - V couldn’t really say "them” and “us”, because
3. The sextant.
4. Three.
6. Western Spain.
Barclay Oil Bridge
Bjr Shephard Barclay |n AutO Death
*
WHICH GUESS IS YOURST
A. PARTICULAR defender has
doubled your suit ^contract and,
when the dummy goes down, you
see that there was just barely
"enough stuff” out tp justify a
thin gambling double. Included in
the defenders’ assets is the png
of the trump suit. Now, if it terns
for the French today.
Looking At Life
Jt sneeze victim; says he'll try any remedy. too. „ ™,p „ .,
m Paris changes premiers so often you have 4n^L!CrPhlVe t0 wrLte Kan Jacinto DP and out that the success or faiiu
;to consult the.papers to see who’s pitching at the .contract depend* «»
• “ SEVEN-CENT NICKEL ,
THE WORLD IS sure changing. When this coiintry
was in its i infancy, some great supreme court jus-
tice, maybe it was Justice Marshall, said that what
this country needed was a good five-cent cigar.
Now years. later Representative John W. Mc-
Cormick, Mississippi Democrat, vows that what this
country needs most is V seven-cent .nickel,
y He reasons that nothing can be bought for a
nickel so why“cliitter up your pockets with them.
I am reminded of a story I heard the other day.
A generous grandmother gave her grandson a
dime in front of a dime store. , »
The lad very courteously gave the money back
to his elder relative.
“Here, you take it back, grandma,” he'said. “It
won’t buy anything.”.
”My first impulse was to hand the young man
noticed it.” . # slap, but after going in the dime store with him.
You may now ask why she should expect me to * ^ *ille apologizing,” she said. "He was right."
returned hi* spade 7 to the sec-
ond trick.
Right there East was up
against what' proved to be'the
crisis of the hand. Who had the
spade K ? East decided that
North probably had it, as part
of the basis for his double, so
played tow tb finesse against it.
HOUSTON. Aug. «.—(UJ!>—W.
Hopkins, 25, today is free
charges of death by automobile
which .resulted from an accident
last December 1 in which Donald
Thibodaux, 11, was killed.
A district court jury declared
him not guilty Thursday. The
boy’s mother/ Mrs. Gladys Thibo-
■ By Erich Brandels
AS FAR AS I know, I hadn’t done anything wrong,
but I did notice that my wife wasn’t her own sweet
self (she is going to read this) at breakfast this
morning.
It .was nothing definite, but she seemed to be a
little on the pouty side.
So finally I asked her what was wrong.
"WELL, I spent more than three hours cleaning out
the refrigerator,” she replied. "And you haven’t even
•noticed it ” ■
question of whether or not Die
king i* shut out from taking a
trick, what will you do? Will you
consider that a smart competitor,
who doubled, is trying to make
you think he has the king, where-
as his partner has it, or that he
holds it and wants you to think
he is trying to mislead you?
Clairvoyancy is needed as a guide
in such extremities. ,,
#7 8 2
»A9«
♦ A 9 7 6 5
*52
* Q J 10 9
’That enabled South’s singleton to^tdaux, produaed four#olice office*
win, and two quick (diamond and a renorter who testified Hon-
tricks then beat the contract.
know that she cleaned out the refrigerator, and
haven’t men other things, to do besides noticing
What their wives do in the kitchen?
The answer is yes and no. y
If a man rushes off to work in the morning and
. doesn’t come home until evening, hb probably never
goes near thc kitchen unless his wife makes him
help her with the dishes. ^
But among my acquaintances, there are many
writers and artists who do their work at home and
get much of their inspiration out of the icebox.
¥2
♦ Q 8 2
*K J 8 6
* A 8 6 4
3 ..LJ-
* K 10 *
* J 4 *
*A 97
West, who looked on from the
observation post of dummy, told
East he should have considered
that a slick competitor like
North would not have doubled if
he had the king of trumps, as he
would not have wished to dis-
close its location. He said East
therefore should have played the
ace on the trump lead in the
hope of felling a singleton. East
retorted that he thought of that,
but reckoned North was tempt-
ing him to make that reading
while actually holding the king.
and a reporter who testified Hop-
kins Was drunk and Hopkins pro-
duced several witnesses who testi-
he had not had a drink that
day. _
Steeplejack Dies In
Port Arthur Plunge
Tomorrow’s Problem
Eyes Of Texas
By United Press
BY THE WAY, let me interject a little happening
her-
Last Sunday one of my writer friends, who had
just retired from a regular newspaper job, visited
us with his little seven-year-old daughter.
“How does your wife like having you home all
day?” Tasked him. - - /
"Oh, I guess all right,” he replied. "She hasn’t
complained so far." ■
"She has too,” cried little Jane. “I asked her the
other day and she just hates it.”
-My friend blushed the tutor of a beet and I
changed the subject.
NOW ON with the stow.
Like a tot of stay-at-home husbands*. I manage
to make pretty much of a nuisance of myself and
usually, select for my place to sit down the very
spot where my wife is busy with the vacuum cleaner
or the dustcloth.
Bfit the favorite excursion is to our refrigerator.
Often I jjist open, it and admire the scenery in-
THE PROBLEMS of the mechanical age are mani-
fold and multifarious. Like what to do with a cigaret
vending machine geared 'to dispense cigarets at 20
cents a pack when the price of cigarets goes up to
21 cents. ........——
Just a little matter of a penny has the owners of
some 1800 such gadgets in Dallas in a dither. The
one-cent per pack price hike literally caught^ the
operators with their levers down.
The goofy gadgetS'tfeimply won’t handle quarters^.
And even if they could, they couldn't trust ’em to
kick back four cents change.
So far, since the price hike, the vending machines
In Big D have been handing out bargains right and
left. They continue to give you a package of your
favorite smokes for 20 centj, while if you get it
across the counter, it costs you 21 cents.
The operators say that’s got to stop. It’s bad
business. Prices have got to go up. Else the conces-
sionaire's commission will have -to take a cut.
And when you start cutting commissions, you
may be killing the goose that Ibid the goldfen egg.
Tbe concessionaire can ditch the machine and gO
back to selling cigarets over the counter.
But if the operators don't take a hack at com-
missions, they may have to:.
1. Install a new mechanism thaUwill sell cigarets
for 25 cents a package,
* K
49 Q J 8 7 5 $
* K 10 3
* Q 10 4
(Dealer: North.. Neither side
vulnerable.)
North East South We*t •
Pass 1* 2f 2*
Pass 3 * Pass 4 *
Dbl. “ "
.Against that. South,., led hi*
heart Q, which North took with
the Knowing from. the . lead
that East had the heart K and
probably one or more hearts to
ruff, and not wishing te help East
play, correctly in the minor suits
through a lead, of. them. North
* A K 3
»A:*3‘
* A 10 7 8
... » ~
*Q 9 8 7
* 10 9 4 2
*Q9«
*9 8
PORT ARTHUR, Aug. 6. 0T.I?>—
William J. Faulk, 25-ybar-old
steeplejack, fell 125 feet to his
death yesterday from a smokestack
at the Gulf Oil refinery.
He was working in a bosun’s
chair when support ropes snapped
and let him plunge, to the paving
below. •
Faulk and his British warbride
ware working in Port Arthur to
save enough money to bring their
baby from England.
* J4 2
49 K J
*K J 8 2
+ Q J U>
2
Wrong Leg
* 10 6 5
* Q 7 6 5
* 4
* A K 7 5 2
(Dealer: South. Neither side
vulnerable.)
After West opens with 1-Dia-
mond and North sticks in a
psychic 1-No Trump, wha$
should East doJ
HOUSTON, Aug. 6. (UJb-Nolan
Foster wished today the bullet had
hit him in the other leg. __
The 27-year-old veteran of the
French - German campaign was
was cleaning a small calibre rifle
at his home when it discharged,
the slug hitting him in the leg,
just above the knee.
"Now, which leg Is it?” asked
the doctor at a Houston hospital.
“It's thc left one," replied Fos-
ter. "The right one isn’t real. I lost
It in the war.”
.Jacobs... for the best in jeweli
1 mb give you speedier
these days — and
eta or repair your
1 and jewelry with
>nd Mize
Jewtler
mm.
1«& Askbel
the. wedding' I
Maty Ann, tol
Will take plai j
mortal Baptis
!> An arrangi
White iiSters
crystal bowl
laid with a wjl
Black and Ml
gifts to their |
. Guests wer
wedding party
Howard B.
the prospectiJ
Kev, and Mrs|
Houston.
Stagg-
Weddini
™ The kwddinl
Stage, daughte
A. E. Springe!
Joseph F. Webl
Mrs. C A. Wef
will be- solemml
at the Second j
Houston.
Invitation is |
the press.
Vuu&or,
I BOUQUET IN SILVER
TO BRING YOU NEW BEAUTY
• Inspired by a decorative motif
carved in the wood paneling of
England's historic Windsor Castle,
Windsor Rose it a pattern you know
is Sterling at first glance. Only the
finest solid silver could take such
richness of design, such perfection
of detail. And only,Watson’s master
craftsmen could have created such
grace and distinction for your table.
We invite you to aee Windsor Rote
this week. You’ll find the prices sur-
prisingly moderate for such -lovely
Sterling.
m
JV}
*«•••* IfeSt^L
J*Wej
122 W. TEXAS
DAILY CROSSWORD
TO',..* install 25
two stomachs ot were not o. a diet. iechanlama. TO, change would hhve to he lhaerted
two stomachs or were not on a diet.
Our cleaning woman is away on a vacation and
even before she went, according to my wife, she
avoided ail work that was one inch out of her rou-
gP»-' t “
So, according to' my wife, the refrigerator was
full of icicles and barnacles and, inspecting it so
often, I should have noticed the improvement, even
in the taste of the food. ...
„ I TRIED to square myself and said “Of course, dear,
I noticed the difference. This morning’s toast tasted
entirely different from the way the steak tasted
Before you cleaned tbe icebox.” » . A
My wife, having the usual feminine sense of mm v aa* m m
humor, didn't get the joke—and now that I read it y OJJ 1*6 I 6lllliQ Ivl6
inside the cellophane wrapper—like it was back in
tbe dear dead days beyond recall when cigarets sold
for less than' 20 cents.
The men who own the machines say they can’t
afford to go to all the expense of changing the mech-
anism, just for a one^cent raise per pack. They fig-
ure they’ll have to kick it up at least to 22 cents, -
Says one operator, “we’d like to know jua$, how
much the public will pay, for cigarets.”
J So would we,-but, brother, let’s not put it on that
basis!. ,
ACROSS
1. Frigid
6. Deed
9-Canal
across
N. Y. state
10. Wind
Instrument
11. Small nails
12. Public
announce-
ment of
marriage
14. Roman
pound
15. PiiOe out
17. Portico
(Gr.)
18. Support *
20, Qebine
51. Musical 16. Water
Instrument (Fr.)
52. Witter
DOWN
1. Stopped
2. Grampus
3. Similar
4. Writing
tables
8. Watch
6. Arabian -
garments
7. Receptacle
8. Male sing-
ing voices
11. Story
13. Oriental
drink
19. Commonly
21. Wayside
tavern
24. Tbe head
(slang)
26. Striking
success
(slang)
28. Damp
30. Pant
31. Ceremony
32. Total
amount
34. Ravenous
35. Thin
38. Strong
winds
Yesterday's Aaserer
41. Malt
beverage
43. Man’s
nickname
46. Observe
48. Through
I don’t get it- either,
t everything is aJl fight again.
Texds Laughs
*.‘is
By WiHkm Ritt
, In Arizona, according to Factogrsph8„ (there is
law against kicking mules. Now,-the Missouri va
By Boyca Horn*
rii ty, we hear, unlike the Arizona, usually takes
the law into its own hands—or, ratter, hoofs.
THEY HAD been married 25 years when the wife
ill and breatted her last. As the coffin was
" through the front gate, one of the
lipped /nd the corner of the coffin
the gat«pp|r There was a sigh from the
” and rfie iat up. . She had not been dead
i a profound coma.
nt by and the woman became
J was being carried out the
» bereaved husband said,
An intruding rabbit almost broke up a Texas ball
game. Now if it had been just a mere stampede of
steers——. . .....
Communist Togliatti was on his way to buy some
ice cream when shot. Pravda now, no doubt, will'
excoriate the subversive cone.
There are 50 different ways of spelling Eliza-
beth -according to a newspaper item. But there’s
can’t do with Elizabeth and get away
22. Noah’s boal
23. Paradise
25. Not-wise -
27. At the
present time
29. Not
------ (prefix) ---
30. Swimming
bird*
33. Source of
water
36. Breeze
37. Pull with
difficulty
39. Regret
40. Pierce with
dagger
42. Insane
44. Pennsyl-
vania
1
2
r-
T~
r
r-
r-
r-
4
i
to”
“
II
i
r :
11
14
n
ar
is
•T"
16
IS
M
ar
if1
IT-
is
H
2S~~
z<.
vT
«r
w
M
so
SI
SZ
P
sr
*4
»b
M
w
sr
M
sT"
40
*
•u
it,
n
(abhr.)
45. Whimpers s
47. Rabbit fur ;
49. Toward
the lee
45~
&
4T~
44
so”
SI
—Mi
1
sT”
! 1
l8S
NEW SATURDAY HOI ,
EFFECTIVE AUGUST 7f AND EVERY SATURDA]
THEREAFTER, WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY.
THIS NEW POLICY IS IN KEEPING WITH THAT OF OTHER HARM
COUNTY GLASS FIRMS, CONTRACTORS AND CONSTRUCTION
WORKERS FOR A 40 HOUR WEEK.
WitheF
IT ■
Art
WHIT
Now Open Monday Thru Friday 8 to
,, Th* ’49 Ford has a wonder-
"Lifeguard" Body ... 59%
* rigid, for extra safety. It has a
®r C6n,er of gravity, too, for solid
on the road. And there’s “Pic-
* w'ndow" Visibility all around.
All orders received during the later part of !j|6U
will receive prompt attention and every e^or1} T!
made to make ell shipments or deliveries by
WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE
^ III
Telep^e!1
Outside—a "dream
silhouette. The whole cc
* lower, yet there’s pleni;
rood clearance and b<
room. Inside—new upl
stery, new instrument pa
new fittings, for a new i<
aii through.
800 W. Texas
ACME GLASS COMPANY!
YOU HELPED DE
Gj.ASS DISTRIBUTORS • MIRROR MANUFACTURERS
P. O. Box 486
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
|.; , .
or
C/A
/* £Atr
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 53, Ed. 1 Friday, August 6, 1948, newspaper, August 6, 1948; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028136/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.