The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 204, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1944 Page: 1 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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. .
fiONESDAY, FEBRUARY
night
feather Forecast
LSX TEXAS—Cloudy with ll*ht rain on
eoasi' Ihiit afternoon; cooler tonight,
LjemiHTiture Friday.
illy , for
I , s
Iject. in
In T?al-
at»y.
I a con-
Ibatlam,
Litipany,
BUILDING MATERb.
Bratton MiH 0n4
Lumber Co.
Highland Farm*.-
iHighlands, Tex*j
-~r
^RKET" CREATfOr
iful,
lunior
two
es
full
I new
a^W>>
-
-e--«
lutifully tailored in
kerican prints, plaids,
.. In wool and part
I
A98 ses
*» Up to ■
[rivals -
Iauty
[ICS!
and hurry,
tryone to get
printed linens,
and rayon
nd fancy de-
Priced
/
V k
■ H i
. Hfi
' If,
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PRICES
MAIN STREET
PELLY, TEXAS
- j-s^^r
I0LUME 2 6 No.—20 4
—, *----• •
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i:
GOOSE CREEK. TEXAS TH UR SD A Y.GEIR U A RY 3, 1 944
rboy»dsptsd
res ter papers
aesed m>
Ourb
a# reel
wr«pp*4
pliei. Don't let
tlitm down. S»»e
waste paper I
»e*aaee«*a*av«x
*5B
i.
Vll CONTROL OF KWA
I«f Suicide Troops
rapped In Cassino
By Mail or Carrier — 75c Month
NNEAR
istav Line
shattered By
UN Blow
Germans Before Rome
[tep Up Pressure Of
ounter Attack Moves
Renewed Red Sweep
IntoPoland. DeepjO^fesjs^^^,**^
Reich U-Boat
Base Blasted
By Americans
1100 Planes In Day ’
u Blow On Wilhemshaven;
Coast Raids Continue
LONDON, Feb. 3.” «»'.!?> — More
than 1,100 American heavy bomb-
ers and fighters attacked the big
German naval base of Wilheim-
/ shaven today in the third m.ajor
United fetaifcs dayQghLlissaili' on
utt/iiu m iitnolr.
JAPS PRESSED INTO TWO DWINDLING
POCKETS ON BIG ATOLL BEING CRUSHED
Go f>Ut ; --
The German announcement of the evacuation of, the two'cities quUo^targets'1 tn^Westcm Ge^
disclosed that Fjn.w Nikolai, "K, many were not announced.
Vatutin's forces' had., .bfatova.-.....Brnhnhly 6QQ. -four- - -nratored-'
two-week staiemayg on the bombers of the United States
Southern Polish fpbnd* and
Allies Advance
On “ . • ■"
And New Guinea
LIED HEADQUARTERS^ .Al_-
lers, Feb~3.' <uh —► American
kills and infantrymen have all
\{ encircled the fortress town of
ssino at the center of the
|trmans' shattered Gustav line,
: was disclosed today, as other
■Hied 5th army forces extended
|eir beachheads below Rome in
l face of increasingly - heavy
keniy counter-attacks.
'striking swiftly to implement
Juesday's break through along a
lur-mile segment of the Gus-
Iv line above Cassino, the Ame-
fcans filtered into the outskirts
(the town late yesterday, while
er armored forces broke into „ , ,
fortified village of Terrele, ®°“*alnv,Uf; “ "* announ«d
|ve miles to the northwest,
ith Trap Closes
[Front reports indicated the
nericans already may have cut
fcross the Via Gasilina above
jassino and closed a death trap
Bound the Nazi renaming in the
[German forces north of Cassino
rew in repeated counter attacks
laiitit the Advancing Americans
M Wench in an - effort ftr re-
i Allies Encircle, Page ‘2)
[ely To Discuss
On Peddlers
Rabaul Pounded Again; *
34 Jap Planes-Downed
ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD-
QUARTERS, New, Guinea, Feb.
3. d'.Ri—Allied ground forces
scored new advances against the
Japanese on New
iT
today, as American airmen de-
stroyed or damaged 34 more en-
emy planes in another raid on
Rabaul.
Aussie* Break Through
Australian jungle fighters, aid-
ed by a heavy air and artillery
assault, scored a break-through
Monday in the Ramu valley of
---------- ----------- un-
leashed a powerful new offensive
along the Warsaw-Kazatinriaii-
road. . •.»
Gain 00 Miies / '
The German loss of Rovno and
Luck represented’ maximum Rus-
sian. ggins of about 60 miles since
. lntd-Jaituary, opthe-basis-ofthe
Nazi admission”itrrtl' lite last bat-
tle positions reported by Mos-
cow.
Three weeks go today the Red
army salient tipped by Sarny
angled southeastward
along the Slucz river, a German
Guinea and—defense line which has been
forced. A crucial battle in the
Vinnitsa sector to the southwest
has been raging ever Since. The
Nazi command evidently threw
everything it had into that bat-
tle, weakening the Sarny-Shepe-
tovka line sufficiently for the
Russians to swing it down south-
westward through Rovno and
rerchants' Protest Is
«nt To City Council -
iThe Polly board of aldermen at
' next meeting will tak steps
•tmignten out an Itinerant
Iddler problem which has been
pxluccd by the city’s mereh-
pvor C. H. Olive recently re-
I'M a petition signed by the
|y> 10 businessmen requesting
Nation of truck peddlers who
J*. WjRchandiae in competition
|~ *W, and used a tru?k as a
land sales place.
Luck.
Pour Into Estonia
As Russian tanks rolled across
the plains of Soutlwn-Poland-
other Soviet armies to tBb north
poured into Estonia lit a develop-
ing offensive against the strate-
. gic railway and highway junction
or Narva and began a drive to-
ward- Latvi from Novoskolriiki.
The great Red army break-
through on tile southern front,
sought to escape by barge or flee as indicated by .the.German loss
into-tfie Km*-- of the two key bases "in the
in the
New Guinea and reached a point
only 30 miles -from American
forces in the Saidor area on the
northern toast, Gen. Douglas
MacArahur’s communique said.
The Australians killed 220 Jap-
anese and Resistance o^ the trap-
ped enemy forces appeared to be
crumbling as many of them
—Irild
Flee To Mountains
The communique said “most of
the enemy seemed to have dis-
. integrated into the mountains"
and that the Japanese dead
showed signs of extreme starva-
tion and exhaustion, testifying to
the effect of the allied aerial of-
fensive against Japanese' supply
lines and shipping in the area.
Junction of the Australian and
American troops would give the
allies an airfield and supply base
for a drive on Bogadjim, 40 miles
tc the east, an important base
protecting the enemy’s strategic
Petition set forth that these stronghold of Madang. Madang
ibei'chantmen pay no taxes. has the best wharf facilities on
------—-— ’ the northen New Guinea coast.
Army Uses Tank*
(A. dispatch from Guadalcanal
reported ..that American, army
troops, supported by 17 tanks,
(Sec Allies Advance, Page T)
yw* require* to Show no-
I# eertiflcgt* as is required
businessmen who
wen in biisinss in thb city
Finn.
tthe suggestion of . the alder-.
VMayor Olive instructed City*
I TJW Naydene Bolmanskic.
L*weM a lettar to-the peti*
suggesting that they ap-
: M the next board of alder-
| Wetting to disetpu proper
With city officials.
*°UND town
„,'h* Tri-Cities— R, Robson
.,rlW«i the traveling opera he
.. aboard a bus from the
i,Tna • • •John E1|ii tryh
L* ‘‘"fouBh with hit work
7, «4»y . I . B. A. Stewart
« • short visit with his
*n • • • Rev. A. Li. Jordan
7* When he’ll be able to
’* new book ■ • . T. W. Lyons
«h rt cut . . . jTommy
flnt r^hC* 0Ul 0f th* door
.,lr,t Moml*es to be
’Summer' Temperature
Recorded Wednesday
Summer returned (apthe Tri-
Cities Wednesday, Alex Purvl-
nnce, local weather observer, an-
nounced today. The thermometer
hit a high of 72 degrees. Ldw
for the period was 6t.
Rainfall during the past 24
hours was ,11 inch.
The forecast was for cloudy
weather with possible rain and
-enittHtcmpcratures Friday. Cool-
er wither was in prospect to-
night;
Stocks Close Today
course of embittered defensive
fighting,” carried the Russian
vanguard more than half way
across the eastern strip of old po-
(Nee Two Nazi Page 2)
Mississippi Man
Dies At Baytown
Funeral To Be Held At
Taylorsville, Miss.- '
John Colon Robinson, 70, of
Taylorsville, .Miss, died at 3:49
p.m, Wednesday, at. the home of
his daughter Mrs. Fred Miller
of 307 Magnolia, Baytowtr^'7 ^
the remains will be sent by
the Paul U. Lee Funeral home to
Laurel, Miss. Burial will be in
Mt. Zion at Taylorsville Safur-
jdgy.-------------—
Survivors include two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Walter. Rigdon of Gil-
christ, Ore.; Mrs. Fred Miller, of
Baytown; one son, J. G. Robin-
son of Vicksburg, Miss.; 11 grand
children,
three
strategic air force smashed at
WllheimshaVen, naval city of 28,-
000 packed with U-boat yards, .re*
pair and fittiogr depots, barracks^
amraunttlon and fuel stores;
Fighters Go Along • *
An estimated 500 long range
fighters of the United States
eighth air ,foxce escorted, -the
bombers in. their. roun<i t rip flight
df*t00 miles or more.
The size of tlip raiding fleet
approached that of the record
force which pounded Frankfurt .
ughly - Ia,8t Saturda>'' >hen 102 German
* ■ planes were shot down. The
.Americans were- back over the
Keicli the next day,, attacking
' fi
■Kfm,JM- next day,, attacking
Brunsu’ick and Hannover and
Downingjli more enemy fighters.
The night operations followed
heavy American attacks yester-
day on the Pas dc Calais area
of the French Invsion coast,
spearheaded by four-engined Lib-
erators. No enemy fighters were '
encountered, but there was con-
siderable .anti-aircraft tire and
two Liberatorr were lost.,
Bern that. 200,000 workers were
thrown out of work by damage
to factories in the latest series
of RAF raids on Berlin.
2-Year Service
To Win Furlough
Soldiers Being Brought
Back From Far Lands
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3. (LID-
The army's plan to bring soldiers
home on furlough after lengthy
services overseas is now in, ef-
fect but the number returning
.is necessarily limited by uvaik
able shipping facilities, war de-
partment officials sad today.
The program's extension to the
Pacific theater, where troops
were sent almost immediately
after the Dec. 7, 1941 attack on
’Pearl Harbor was reported yes-
terday by Ll Gen. Millard F.
(See 2-Year's Service, Page 2)-J:~
Cham demands Help
For Prisoners Of Japs
THREE MEN DIRECTING the Marshalls in-
vasion, top above, are, left to right. Vice Adin.
K. A. Npruancr, commaader of all foree* in the
invasion; Maj. Gen. Ilarrv Sehniidt, of ihe Mar-
ine* who commanded first troops on Roi; and
Rear Adm. It. R. Turner, eommamler of atnphi-.
Won* operation*. Below is aer’al photo of Roi,
one of 90 Islands which make up the Kwajaleln
atoll and site or the principal Jap air hase jj) the
Marshalls. Koi is firmly In t’. A hands.
Debate Limit Set On Soldier Vote Bill
Coalition Introduces "State Angle" Amendment^
accent on the AdmlnlstraUon-
oppOsed state ballot plan. , 1
The amendment would Ml au-
thorize a Ftderalv ballot only if
the voter's liome state failed to
■provied adequately for absentee
balloting by service men: (2) ro-
ouirc service men to write into wenmlaa
VAAl.MII k.m/v, IK,. AT *■*'•“"*****"
WASHINGTON. Feb. 3. OJ
In a move to speed action on the
jioldier vote issuo, the Senate
agreed . to HtfiU. debate on the
pending Green-Lucas federal bal-
lot plan beginning at 2 p.m. to-
day.... ■ .......... T“ -
Democratic Leader Alben W.
Eariftey naked, ntni - nmeived, Jhr FcdcrM thr^ftame of
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3. HIM
Sen, Dennis Chavez, D.y N. M„
has asked Secretary of War Hen-
ry L. Stimson and Secretary of
;»ri ■rrr:'
brother*. E H. Robinson i( bclnfc ,lone nnd wtu be done
of Taylorsville; W, J. Robinson,
also of Taylorsville; and Wiley
Robinson of California; three
sisters, Mrs, Joe White of Green-
wood, Miss.; Mrs. Saul White of
Taylorsville: and Mrs, Tom
Evans of Taylorsville.
Mr, Robinson was a member
of the Salrmount Masonic Lodge
No. 384, of Mize, .Miss.
have
n the
mall aubscrlptions
nZ pn,t \ 1«e • • • better
we *'ire hate to atop
I liw. ,Th* StJn Boos to a lad
ATt,*? WTVlc« • • • ft. M.
a hurried trip out
PS™?*** Jh Qould ________I
friAi et Great’Lafiju B6hd W.^w"rrrjrr ■ •
ocn, I.. , _ ..'r. ' *1^.*and Light . . 4*» *»d POlmif
American Radiator ......
Anaconda Copper ........
American T, and T. ......
Bamsdall ................
Cities Service ...........
Commercial Solvent .....
Consolidated Aircraft
Curtiss • Wright
Baytown rfuMtSmtde
.till.! wwl| with a lettar to
And, as aomc other
BTnion. remlnd you, have
F •* be wn*^yu f0r your c“r'
L-.ee wont have to make
unk1? 11 when your
U 2L* duo! Thanks!
tit|in.1 ihil ,Bobhy Jon«* *n-
■ • • Leetor
prti erlrt*rU the day with
’ right »», d CowI«y lakes a
it* St* Pipe (amoke-
Ite ', • ft St. Rhymes
> bin. of * customer on
—
Sr/ ?, 'i&M
Electric Power nnd Light
El Paso Natural Ga* ...
Freeport Sulphur .
deneraf Electric ....
General Motors ......
Graham Paige ..........
Greyhound .....••••■.....
<3plf Oil ..................
HL h and P. Oo. n.-rtmt
Houston Oil
...... S3
..... m
. 52'4
. 1*
. 20'4
. 45‘i
83
Hudson Motors .,,,,JH
Humble CHI ..... W4
Jones end Laughlln
Kroger,Grocery
Louisiana I^nd,<>...........
Umbert ....................
Murray Corporation ........ *
Nash Kalvlnator ------- “j*
National Dairy ....... #0V»
15 North American Aviation S%
88«4 Ohio Oil ....... 17%
034 Packard Motors’..354
24% Phillips Petroleum 4454
167-. Pure Oil ....i....rr,..L... 18'k
1654 Rustless Steel ...............305*
78% ; Wnc'elr • .......... ........ ”
18% Skelly ......................39,
1444 Socony Vacuum .........r.
1254 Sperry Corporation . *#'*
5% Standard . Branda ........ ■ ■
... -- -----—.....“JtSU
r-sr" n'm .>v»,'.»- .... •..... Ha*
Standard OU of New Jeraey 5254
Fun Oil a®
Fiinray Oil B*4
Texas Corporation 4f%
Texaa Gulf Sulphur ....... M
Tidewater Corporation lS'k
T-P Land and Trust ...... •
T-P Coni nnd Oil ..........» 1#
UMt4d ingraft .............31%
United Corporaliog. ....... Its
United Mas
United * **s ........ *. .j. *
United States Stetl ........ 52
Walworth ..... 754
Western Union ,..,...w: 4J,‘
White Motors .........Tv... 30‘s
Wilson Company ...... ft
Atlantic *...... >d 4
Bethlehem .................. 693b
Dupont ..... 13*
being done nnd
beyond the effotts which
heretofore been expended (
Pacific buttle line,"
' ' Chavez protested in fetters to
tlie secretaries yesterday that ’
there was "complete absence of
the faintest note of encourage-
ment” in the army-navy account
of Japanese war prison atroci-
ties. He asked for a joint state-
ment introducing “a ray of hope
Into the dark night, which is be-
clouding the heart of every Ame-
rican mother, father, brother and
sister of a man now1 In Japanese
hands."
BULLETINS
WASHINGTON. 9>b. S <U.m-
Piraidrnt Roosevelt today nomi-
nated Grayer Bennett IHII ft
Texas to be undersecretary of
Agrteofare. He will succeed
Paul Appleby, recently appointed
assistant budget' dlAtctor.
WASHINGTON, Fib. t <M!>-
Senate Democratic leader Alben
W. Kaatneky today
named Sww Joseph (X (FMohoney
of Wyoming as chairman of the
Democratic senatorial campaign
ISNHMK tNMoioBt < mmwp. '
dnseph y. G Ilf fey of PennaptolMf*
Ida. '•;>/>. ;-
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3. (URl-
Kaymond Clapper, Hannas - born
newspaperman who rose to dis-
tinguished position In Ms p-ofes-
slon, was killed In an airplane ac-
cident In the Marshall Islands
Invasion, the navy department
announced today. . *
unanimous consent to limit each
senator to a single 20-mtmitc'
speech on any amendment and
2n piiutnes on the bill itself.
The agreement came after a
coalition of nine Democrats anil
six Rcpuhlirans. offered an
amendnietR that would place the
the specific candidate and for-
bid a vote by party name only;
(3) retain the right of Individual
states to set up qualifications of
voteys isii<> W give transmission
priority Id state ballots.
Sponsoring the new amend-
ment were;
'
Roi, Principal
Plane Base On
Chain, Seized
More files Occupied '■ "
Wtffc^^ance «y >
Bomb, Shell-Daxed Foe
PEARL HARBOR,
>05^07 S- Marines and in-
fantry, backed by. tanka and
the heaviest air and naval i
bombardment of the Pacific
war,- htw uefeed ._
last enemy-held airfield in
Kwajalein atoll in the heart
of the Marshalls and begun
battles of extermination
against Japanese remnants,
front dispatches laid today.
. ^ .- With the only enemy op- ”
— position in strength cowflasd to a
■ ‘ conquest of Kwsjslrin. first pra*
war JapansM territory invaded
; by (he American, was in night
and ’ perhaps only n matter of
hours away.
MThri SSfeSiS**1RM island,
northern binge of the atoll and
site if it* Main airfield, wa* an- VI
nouneed yesterday and. othar
sources revealed that the Invasion .
force* were occupying most .* of —
the’ remainder of the 90 lalanda
and islets in the atoi as fast as
they can get ashore. * 1
The bulk of the Japanese de-
fenders were being squeezed back
into narrow corners qf the only
two remaining strategicaUyrim-
poriant islands in the aloU. K«w
j*Wn nndJMMim wbera they
ianglng"'hp to' 71
Iflo, k-tmster aerial bombs. _
Japan ‘Doran't Mind*
(Rear Adm. Tnne'.suga Sosa, in
a Tokyo propaganda broaT
npparehlly designed'' to e*.
away the lack of effective oppo-
sition to the American landings,
said Japan "does not mind* if
Aferiea's invasion forces move
father because In that case It enn
stroke at the right moment")
Percy Finch, representing the
combined allied pfea* aboard the
join! expediUonary force flag-
ship, reported that the army*
Sevent Infantry division had cap-
tured one-third of Kwajalein la-
land, at the southern tip of the
atoll of the same name, by mid-
day yesterday and driven the sur-
viving enemy troop* to stronger
defense positions in the narrow
eastern end
Defense* Destroyed VV ;
At last reports, Finch said, the
invaders had advanced half way
across the airstrip Intand wlttrtWf ......
aid of. newly-landed tanks. .' ‘
He revealed that the army men
had splashed ashore on Kwaja-
lein from nearby coral lslet* With-
out opposition after 5,000 ton* of
shel* and bombs literally had put-
verized ihe defense* the Japanese
had built- over a period of 30
year*. • t ;
'Two concrete beach wall* had
(See Full Contral, Page 2)'
Republicans Sens, Joseph H.
Ball. Minnesota; Owen Brewster,
Maine;—Robert A. Tuft. Ohio;
Chapman llevereomb, West Vir-
ginia; (X Douglas Buck, Dela-
ware. and Edward V. Robertson,
Air Plant Workers Rebuked
Company Defends Production Record
DALLAS, Feb. 3. (t’.RI — North
American Aviation, Inc., stirred
by a stinging judicial condemna-
tion of conditions at the corn-
pay’s Dallas plant, offered n
,fdw. facts of Us own
today. '
The criticism of plsnt,. condi-
tions, including the cost-plu*
"system of contracts with tlw fed-
eral government, came a* Fed-
eral Judge T. W. Davidson sent-
enced seven former North Ame-
rican employe# for conspiracy to
defraud the government.
Judge Davidson was joined by
two attorney*, one fore each side,
iti rebuking idlenete, slowdowns
(jwhteh the judge said he was told
wa* urged bju* foreman! and
In reply absenteeism for which the gov-
ernment waa paying beckuae of
fraudulent use of time card*.
The jurist, In meeting out sent-
ence* ranging Up to alx month*
in prison, said that If "gne tenth
Democrat*. Sen*. Robert R.
Reynolds, North Carolina; W.
i-ee O’Danlel, TVxar. Ellison D.
Srtiith, Soijtti Carolina: Kenneth
D, McKellar, Tennessee; Josiah
W. Bniley, North Carolina; John
H Bankhead, Alabama; James
O Eastland, Mississippi; John L;
McClellan, Arkansas, and .hohn
H. Overtoiu Louisiana.
Barkley asked debate limita-
tion in an apparent effort to ob-
tain final Senate action of the
administration ■ endorsed federal
ballot plan before the House act*
on its state ballot plan. It ap-
peared unlikely either house
would reach a vote before Frl-
dny. ,
The House completed the see-
ond day of debate on It* bill.
Berlin Reports
Mobilization ll
In Estonia
s,rirjrrf *SSSS; "
8000 In East Harris
Are Qualified To Vole
F-ua Harris county will have a .-^UFent Mae of lke N«l
- - ■ vo(. puppet government, in a warning
IjONDON. Feb. 3. CPi-padlo
Berlin repotted from TaillndE.t*-
day thet the chief of the Eaton-
!*n directorate had decreed M-
eral mobilisation in Estonia aa
Red army forces crested the
northeastern border.
All men born between 1104 nnd
1923 were ceiled to errae, the
broadcast -enid, With the older
groups framing regiments end
tbs younger receiving training.
All men between 17 end 90 not
celled up for nrm service wlB be
liable for service in local defenae
■
. J
would
than
1000 iibovt previous records. Mrs.
Maasek reported todev. The ex-
. mimber will not;'H.'tTlHMr
tiHUFa checkup now underway in
Houston office is completed.
- • Ml - to* unjimwror ^wr
and "under* exemption* issued
ever the Turt
and recorded by U. A
ment monitors, urged lb*
tents to keep *11 road* to
front clear for the movemi
troops and to prepare to
actions for wounded soldi!
s
than among those who
make a Roman holiday."____
Cox Urges 'Hankies’'
T* H-kI* CIh Crtronrl 'impntriotlsmt were sn In-
® ™ Inr jpfCN eSiSra^d^tharit*WM ,rom th# *ocal 0,f,c* “b'l by 11 ui.ij^ UHHJ-sinf Until
=MWZ Him ^
victims ^ to* u*eUrPh*mkiwS*3^ - ^A*""" to tret*
properly In coughing and snee*- gchwedes said that a new rob-
ing is spreading the disease, „ tract on .* fixed fee bail* had‘ -
For th* week which ended been Signed and that It WM I2MBT POLL* PAID
Jen. 29, the .health Apartment retroactive to the beginning of JiOUH
announced *42 pneumonia pa- North American’s manufacture actual
tlent* to 799 th* preceding week, of -B-24 bombers, "so the net
Influenza prevalence, however, (effect today is that North Arne-
decreased, with 5,090 iW cases
compared with
vlous week.
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 204, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1944, newspaper, February 3, 1944; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1028664/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.