The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1953 Page: 4 of 10
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I
THE BAYTOWN SUN, FRIDAY, JUN* 5. 1952
itorials...
isenhower Administration Appears To Be Doing All Rightly
The Eisenhower administration has been
In power for four months—a sufficient
period of time to give Congress the com-
mentators, and the public at large a good
Idea of its objectives and methods. Much
discussion is going the rounds as to how
It has done thus far.
The concensus is that the President's
popular standing is as high as it was at
the time of his election—perhaps even
higher. He has improved materially as a
speaker, and he presents his thoughts with
greater clarity and precision. He has a
*
happy and rare combination of friendliness
and dignity. His continued stress on tra-
ditional, old-fashioned ideals and princi-
ples has evoked the warmest kind of re-
sponse in the hearts and minds of millions
of people.
He has enjoyed a genuine "honeymoon”
with a Congress which is narrowly divided
between the parties and this happy rela-
tionship is continuing. The President and
his team are learning that in government,
results can’t be attained nearly as quickly
as in military and business life. There has
been little really bitter congressional criti-
cism of his administration or himself. For
the most part, debate over controversial
issues has been conducted on a high plane.
Where and when the administration has
shown weakness, it generally has been due
to political inexperience—no one in the top
group ever held a top federal position
before. To take one example, the early
furor , over the stock holdings of certain
Cabinet appointees, and the period of con-
fusion that followed, seemed largely due
to ignorance or misunderstanding of an old
law. To take another, some of the Cabinet
members obviously felt that reorganization
of their departments could be accomplished
in jig time, whereas, due to Civil Service,
patronage, and other such forces it is a
long-term job. To take a third,' administra-
tion members on occasion have wounded
Congressional sensibilities, because of a
lack of knowledge of the unwritten laws of
protocol and custom that are jealously up-
held by both House and Senate.
To sum up the general view, the admin-
Tillie, our titian-tresaed tvnewru
per, declares she isn’t interested!* H
perfumes developed by Russian ic!l!r ^
She insists she wouldn’t riv. «« eBtl
for one Red scent. * n* (
suit with 400AJockttj;
An arrival in New York was di
to be wearing a suit with 400 poXf
of which each contained a wsteh u’”1
SUN SLANTS
By Fred Hartman
BOB RALBITZ—Sl'PER SPORTSMAN
ONE OF THE reasons I like to live in Baytown n
that there are people in this area like Bob Kalbitx.
I wasn’t on hand the other night when they had
aome dispute in a Little League game that had
gone into the records is a victory for Bob’s team.
All I know is what I heard and saw in the papers.
Bob decided his team didn’t deserve the victory
because a cloud of doubt had arisen.
He asked League President W. F. White to allow
Stevie McWilliams’ home run and to replay the
game from that point. Bob’s team was leading at
the time, and his team ultimately won the game.
He set an example that Is simply terrific. When
Bob tells the youngsters on his team to be good
sports, they’re going to know that the words are
coming from a man who practices what he preaches.
All Little League fans should follow his example.
I could write a lot more about my old switch-
hitting first base friend whom I like to call Ruby
Robert, but anything more would be an abundance
of superfluity.
You might outscore guys like Bob, but you can’t
beat them.
called Prof. Parker to report success, he did ask
me to come to the luncheon and introduce Ray.
Ray doosn’t need any Introduction in Baytown.
He and his family have lived here long enough
to be called hometown folks, So I guess I can chalk
up another free meal without having to do much
to earn It.
CUSTOMERS CAN HELP
call up
me to do something I could write a little about, I
could sure get through with this effort in a hurry
this rather warm afternoon.
CALM, COOL AND COMFORTABLE
ACTION OF CHIEF H. E. McKee will make
1 i
I
OOWAHS AND TUNNELS TO MEET
YOU NEVER KNOW in this business what you’re
going to be called on to do next.
» For instance, just now:
, The phone rang, and it was Fred, Parker, the old
•Horace Mann, on the other end.
, He is chairman of the Lions luncheon program
mn Tuesday, June 16.
i He knows the Bnytown-La Porte tunnel opening
is getting closer and closer. He thought the Lions
ought to be brought up to date.
He asked me to contact somebody to do the job.
I was pretty sore that he did not ask me, because
I am a tunnel engineer of long standng. I fumbled
and fooled over the phone, but he never did ask me
to give out with the scientific facts about this
*10,000,000 job.
When I saw he didn't intend to weaken, I meekly
suggested that we might get Ray Lyons, the resi-
dent engineer and a man who knows so much about
‘the tunnel he can say Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Hall
;*nd MacDonald backwards.
I called Ray at his La Porte office, and he agreed
to come over that day.
So the Lions are going to get it out of the horse’s
mouth.
I did recover something from all this. When 1
harder for our policemen to get "hot under the
collar.”
The chief has announced that members of the
Baytown force for the remainder of the summer
will place their regular uniforms in moth balls and
will wear a suit of lighter texture.
They will feature open-front, sports-shirt type
collars.
Policemen have hard jobs to fill, and there is no
reason why they have to be unnecessarily uncom-
fortable by wearing high collars and ties while
their “customers” are free to dress a little more
casually.
The way the thermometer has been acting lately,
we wouldn't mind if they passed a city ordinance
that would make it legal for us to go shirtless U
it would be cooler.
Dignity and 90-plus temperature don’t go hand in
hand in my book.
TRAGEDY STRIKES FORMER BAYTONIAN
MANY PEOPLE in Baytown will be saddened to
learn of the death of John Brown, a former Bay-
town man who came here to represent Architect
Herbert Voelcker on recent school construction
jobs.
Brown was *n elderly gentleman with great love
for the Presbyterian church.
Soon after he came to Baytown, he and Mrs.
Brown joined the First Presbyterian church, and he
attended regularly until they left last year some-
time.
He lived a colorful life, coming to this country
from his native Scotland at the age of 21. He lived
a long and useful life, and it is bad to know that
he lost his life in a rail crossing accident at or near
Camden, Ark.
Washington Merry-Go-Round:
Sen. Taft Fast Becoming
'Mr. President' To Cabinet
ly be denied, but one of the most ’ The LoemocratlcN«t
amaslng advices ever given to a <“omm‘ttee was In t tur(8l!|i
Cabinet regarding a particular week. A trucking
senator has just been suggested to “lost” 175,000 sddr«i«i 1
Elsenhower cabineteers namely. reldy to b a ***
to clear all major policy matter* , 1 ut with |
informally with Senator Taft. material for th(
This was not handed out to the t’*m°cr*t!c Digest," Th»
Elsenhower Cabinet a* categoric vel°pe* were finally di*?*,,—,1
hard-and-fast orders, but rather Baltimore ... The Bur. J.
as a suggestion. However, the ef- ternal Revenue will **
feet is just about the same, an* . ,. . woi'Io*«
the advice is having two important »|*u h.‘who npfftM
results: ™P th'ir **»
1. Taft, the man whom
hower defeated at Chicago, more being done In the
than ever is becoming Mr. Presi- economy. . . . u,t
dent. He is In the unique and en- Bureau of Internal Revenu!»u
joyable position of having power the -House of Representative!
without official responsibility, ing room and seised 131
While Eisenhower doesn’t guaran- cigarettes without federal mJ
tee to go along with Taft on every- The cigarettes were Intendedt
thing, as, for instance, cooperation the National Training School t
with the United Nations, he has Boy* but somehow had been I
leaned farther than any other verted to the congressmen,1
president in years to give Taft the congressional dining room
fullest cooperation -almost veto *fUing the tax-frss (
power -over domestic policies and at regular prices,
appointments.
LOOKING AT LIFE
By Erich Brandtis
WILL IT FITT
'THE ANCIENT RACE of the Incas of Peru wor-
shipped the sun, and ao once did the Mexicans and
‘many other heathen* who considered the aun prs-
aminent over all other gods.
We neo-Americans have developed a new kind
of worship, the worship of a goddess pre-eminent
over all other things—the goddess called “SUC-
«» . . . .
-GEM.’
! We worship her in the magaaines, in the ntws-
papers, on radio, on television.
SUCCESS IS EVERY child’s dream, every man’s
ambition, every woman’s desire. ,
To reach success we work ourselves into all sorts
of sickness, nervoue and mental breakdowns—yet
how many of us ever achieve it?
I am not talking about the ordinary success, the
kind each one of us can attain.
The kind of success that most of us worship Is
.ipelled with a capital “S” and in electric lights.
- Yet, what is the chance of that kind of success?
Is it worth our while to make ourselves miserable
for the chance?
■* Out of more than 35 million tax returns only
about 16,000 reported incomes of more than *100,000.
, Those are the CapitM-S-successes, as success is
measured nowadays.
, Yet there are thouands and thousands of others,
who hold down good jobs or are the heads of their
own businesses, who make much less than *100,000
but are every bit as successful, in the true meaning
of “success.”
What IS success? “To obtain the desired object
•r end,” Says Webster.
In other words, it means to do what you aet out
to do.
To set out to do more than you are mentally and
physically able is bound to end in failure.
The secret of success, therefore, lies not in climb-
ing the highest mountain, but in selecting a
mountain that you are able to climb.
FOR EVERY SHIRLEY BOOTH there are thou-
sands of actor* playing fine supporting roles—roles
that *re just as necessary to make a good play as
that of the great star.
For every Albert Einstein, there are a host of
men and women working quietly in their labora-
tories, bringing the blessings of science to mankind
by their knowledge and their research.
For one Bishop Fulton Sheen, there are miniaters,
priest* and rabbis in every community, in every
military encampment,-yes, In almost every institu-
tion bringing solace and comfort to their people.
Mori Than People-
Slot Machines All Over The Place In Nevada
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS are happy
RABBITHOLE, Nev., June 5- oddly they
UP—Slot machines almost qutaum- you walk out of their joifit * win
are happy to take your dough, but, can afford and added that “you
appear just as gleeful if may not win anyhow.”
it Of........
side _
You’ll" find them in everv store in not Ion* a<° and made enough vance, get* the impression that
lercl!e" money.to fin.no. . fir^lasa v*- certain matter, have b*« decided
ber people in Nevada.
CHARLIE , WILSON'S R
2. Secretary of Labor Durkin 1* As the congressional
almost certain to resign creases. Secretsry of j,
Political enemy No. 1 of the Charles E. Wilson is groping
labor movement is Robert Alponao, tlcally to juatify his curtail—
Taft. Because he authored the of the Air Force. Latsst groptin
Taft-Hartley Act, both the AFL pull a brand-new atomic
and the CIO did everything In out of the hat.
their power to defeat him. There- This i*: The theory that ft
fore, for the secretary of labor, a developed more powerful
former AFL. executive, to clear homb* since the 143-vte
policies with the enemy of labor is y'orc* was planned twe ymn
more than he can take. therefore we can deliver th
Dunkin doesn’t want to break Pu"ch with a smaller Air
with Eisenhower, and hi* AFL , f*ct: Th* Plan to
colleagues don’t relish the idea of tmd**t. c*m* fir,t: ^e ife
a break. But if the instruction to ?*e had stronger aomlc
clear with Taft stands, Durkin is briu**>‘ up afterward,
almost certain to bow out of the .*1“™’" ,act: ***
cabinet in the near future. ********* *
Note-The Secretary of Labor •tmnte atre^gth ftat lmt
has felt unhappy about two other tX* rfP°rt
things. He has received no help
regarding the revision of the Taft- _
Hartley Act His oolleagues In the ‘*™‘**"!*
Cabinet just aren’t Intereated. Sec- of E,lr°Pf*n defense based os
ond, when he gets to Cabinet
meetings. Durkin sometimes find*
other cabineteers there in ad-
gas station and bread shop. Every you change your bills into silver. cation in Mexico.
place * almost except churches,
schools and banks.
■ lsm»s ass Sasssssta
The minute you cross the Utah * i8Ck' ^ have •round U* clock.” Senate barbershlp still charges
■ mmute you cross me Utah pot every 49 seconds. One 7 a.ra. I strolled into the only 75 cent# for a haircut *
A 77-YEAR-OLD MAN was arrested in New York
the other day.. He has served 38 prison sentences
for almost every crime In the book.
This time he was charged with raising a postal
money order—a federal offense.
The U. S. Commissioner, before sentencing him,
delivered a scathing lecture to the old man.
He asked the prisoner whether, in his whole life,
he had ever been successful at ANYTHING, done
anything of which he was proud.
“Oh, yes,” said the man,- who straightened up.
ALONG BROADWAY
FIVE YEARS AGO
TODAY’S HEADLINES: Federa-
_ . tlon Win Is Decisive, BEF Re*
“I was the Ditching star of the Sing Sing baaeball ceivea 2,740 Voes, CTO Gets 1,159.
team in 1924.” a lively race for county com-
missioner w*s seen with reports
that H. A. May, incumbent, will
=mm §mjf _
wattryins sss srtfafttu sns.sjt ast tsu
s ss r-tta « gr sr« r
te* «. „ * arg'*-**
rater .ilvjr Ml.r, „iu, , ,!,» lack lo the m.chta. hide hi. ” ,te„„ ’Si.ST.TZi
which says, in effect, that you’re eyes and listen for the clatter of pZL "not Z
silly to risk more than your wallet coins that would indicate a winner. , Th*e State DcnaZ 'm had no
changes in our atomic itn
He m*d* a preliminary
that some eutlmeki it 1 ’
armed strength might bt |
but his full report wasn’t to t
July and now, Rld*w*y njn. <
be finished until September..
Meanwhile, Russia is building
her atomic stockpile w (ut (
V. S. Intelligence experts <
she will hsve enough A-bombs |
wag# war in 1955.
Note the airplanes
Wilson Is now cutting out ef 4
are tfhse to come <91
production line in 1955-
Looking Backward
From Tli« Sun FIU*
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
A Contrtl Prti* Ftafurt
CONGRESSMAN’S KITO.NI
—To look at his voting retodj
social security, labor, otc,
wouldn't know that the milt I
man kindness ran strong is I
veins of GOP Congresonss C
ence Brown of Ohio.
The other day. fire totally 4
NEW YORK — Most producers of television’s
dramatic shows shy from unsolicited play scripts
from unfamiliar sources as though they were im-
plements of germ warfare, but this doesn’t hold
true of those responsible for The Web.
“We welcome scripts from any source, and, what's
more, we read them,” said Herbert Hirschman,
producer of this CBS Sunday program and director
The State Department had no
advance warning before Ambassa-
dor Luce announced withdrawal .........
of U.S. aid from Italy In the event troyed the Brown Publishing
De Gasperi’s government is over- whoilv owned by the —
thrown in next Sunday’s elections.
Her speech didn’t help ... In the
con- The Answer. Quick! Les Enfants Terribles, Le Theatre pXe^ave nut ^ mme*thaf °10*
addition 1. Who was the first motion pic- et la Mode, Orphee; Blood of a W hours overtime'^dthou! nal°’*
to S. A. (Tex) Spate, whose an- ture director whose name became Poet (surrealist filmi. Opium most of it durZ
caught In the web of circumstance. The things that nouncement was made early this a box-office attraction? (diary of an addict). The Infernal . ug,ur » .
Who was Dolly Varden, and Machine (a play). Beauty and the *f,‘ s r®*''**ut*
i what did she give her name? Beast, a surrealist film, which Brownell to "stock” «i wTnew
3. Where does Broadway, New received an award. Can you teH gvsooo Lm» tw ,ne
ork City, begin and end? his name? .£»!■ They alaim Jta a
4. Where and what is the "Land dog:' .t!!at h* could havp bought
of Perpetual Rain”? 2—His first appearance on the a much better house for the same
- - I umi ix. A. incuiiiucm.,
Bv Jack Saver be opposed by at least^ three
sej vwvn tenders for the post In add!
happen to our characters could happen to any of year. Morris Hall, Fred Llntelman
our viewer* without them going out of their way and Har/ison Lucas were reported
to look for trouble, given certain circumstances ^
~t it every other week.
“Naturally, this makes for extra work on the
'part of all of u* concerned with getting the show
on the air. But I think It pays off even If we only
jget three scripts a season from unexpected
sources.”
, ’ Hirschman explained that the reason for this
attitude is that The Web seeks stories that can
be identified with ordinary person* rather than
super-charged fiction dealing with the upper eche-
that might arise at any time.
"For example, you might be sitting in your hom'e
some evening and the doorbell rings. It could be a
hold-up man—happens all the time—or it might
be someone who has rung the wrong bell and gets
you Involved In his own problems.”
The welcome Hirschman gives to unsolicited
The marriage of Miss Betty
Moneyhon and Laddie J. Fisher at
the Cedar Bayou Methodist church,
was announced by her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. D. Moneyhon.
5. What was the original name a“’ was via radio in an afternoon mo"fy ■ • ■ " bite House haggling
of the tune, Hail Columbia? musical program. It wasn’t a very c°ntlnu*» over five big political
and on* of the mainstays djj
home town of Rlancheiter. T
taneous with this heavy i
loss. Brown was strickw
gall-bladder ailment,
major surgery.
Despite all this, a new («
being built in Manchester
owned and operated by
employees. He has quietly«
ed the financing for them, h *
dition Mr; and Mrs. Brow# »*
some of their personal fundi Md
10 YEARS AGO
OTIS E, DUNAHOE,
good show, according to the erit- P|ums one FCC commisslonership, place the plates of the
Your Future ics, but this boy seems to have *wo each for the ICC and SEC. yearbook which had ossa
Under these auguries you should found his special niche on TV. A B*f*nse Boss Charlie Wilson and ed in the fire
manuscripts is due mainly to the fact that he feels second class, returned to Corpus 1)8 aWe to soIv« *ny problems barmonica-plaver and humorist, he 'yi,e attend more “important” par- Said one employee. ^ ^
the program's plots have to come out of believable christi following a visit here with easily' and your work bring sue- v’as born in Toledo, O. He enter- “** th»n any other Cabinet family, man Brown won t ao
situations. “All we ask when someone send* In a jjj* parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. ces* and, satisfaction now and in tamed the troops in Europe dur- "ilaon “aella” the Defense Depart- ha’* ju*t about laved our
Ions of crime.'
"In fact, I think of it as a program of melo-
a Aeima shod' ” Ua sals) “ A a
drama rather than a crime show,” he said. “As
the title implies, this is a program about people
script or idea is that they sign the regular legal Dunahoe
release involved in all scripts, no matter what the u Roy R Burnett Jf arr,ved
.. tA: from hter from Fort Benning, Ga., to
Wt will even buy the outline of ®.n iaoa from • urifft no-.-*, w_ ^_j
time to time, giving the creator the option of try- _h ’ rarent*’ Mr’ and
ing his hand at turning out a Script or letting us Mn' K’ Burnett'
turftTTover to regular TV writer for development.”
DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD By Aline Mosby
Trv And Stop Me
HOLLYWOOD—SB—Hopalong Cassidy today of-
fered a tip to television stars Lucille Bali and Deal
Arnas—don’t get too popular, and you’ll last longer.
Hoppy, or rather silver-haired Bill Boyd, admitted
he had to “level off," or he wouldn’t have lasted.
So he was happy, he said, when those “space ship”
radio-TV serials came along to give him competi-
tion.
i “If Hoppy had stayed as big as he was In 1950 he
wouldnt have lasted more than two years,” re-
flected the Western hero as he relaxed in the ole’
homestead, a super-modern home of glass and low-
slung furniture perched atop a cliff in the Holly-
Wood Hills.
“I decided to let this thing cool off exploitation,
wise. We could have burned up Hoppy if we had
kept on doing what we were doing.
By BenrA+4 Cer4
*5*r.*Kt a "JS r0 PR0VE John D. Rbckfell-
gets hi, throat cut.” hood' A anak* 011 remedy pitch-
Boyd became the first television star and the cen- f0*”: ea**r to draw a crowd, Hour-
ter of a bonaxa when he released his old eather l»hed a silver dollar and demanded,
movies to TV. His Hopalong Cassidy character had How much am I bid.’ Young
“90 per cent aaturation of the country.” •'ohn D- P'P*d UP, A nickel. 'Its
Then those space ships loomed in from outer your*- son." boomed the medicine
space onto radio and TV. And the bubblegum set
added 21st Century helmet* and ray gun* to their
Hoppy cowboy outfits.
the coming year. A child born |f|* World War H He has played
today may be very clever and his harmonica (one of them, for
moderately successful. he has a large collection) on TV
shows, where his homemade type
I»’s Been Said pf humor is much appreciated. His
We ought to do our neighbor all television show is titled,
the good we can. If you do good, Two f* the Money. What is his
good will be done to you; but if name?
you do evil, the same will be meas- (Nam* at bottom of column)
ured back to you again.—Pilpay ..
(or Bidpal). Happy Birthday
Celebrations are in order for
It Happened Today Alfred Kazin, critic; William Boyd,
1349 — Denmark’s constitution actor; Eddie Joost and Lou Bris-
signed. 1916 - British battleship, sie> big league baseball players,
Hampshire, sunk by German mines and Marion Motley, professional
off Orkney’s, Scotland, in World football player.
War I, with Lord Herbert Kitchner m . .
aboard. 1913-In World War I, the ",tth Your Language
CURLY KAYOE
psa
—by S*"1
IRugel"
Kay R
Battle of Aisne ended.
Folks Of Fame-Goes* The Name
ok at I Love Lucy, Everything you pick up
cad about Lucy. It's dangerous. When you
But Boyd insists he welcomes the competition.
“There’s a placp for everything” he said graci-
man. “Hand over your nickel.”
“Take it out of the dollar,”
countered John D., “and give me
95 cents change.”
Todi
'ay’s Bible Verse
BRETHREN, if a man be overtaken in a
fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such
an one in the spirit of meekness; consid-
ering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.
ously. “The kids want something new. But those
space things never will take the place of Hoppy.
They’re imaginary and so far away from every
r day surroundings.”
Boyd plans to film 26 more TV movies this year;
he may not make any more. His backlog of 106
films can be released over and over “a* we get a
new audience of children every year.”
"WHY THE GLOOM?” a familiar
face at Sardi’s bar waa asked. “It’s
toy wife," was grim explanation.
“She swore she wouldn’t, talk to
me for ninety day* and—they're
up tomorrow!”
A CLERK IN A Hollywood book-
and then settle down." smiled
• Hoppy established shop tried to sell a copy of Speng-
Boyd. “Now I want Ur’s ’’Decline of the West.”
INTERRUPT - (IN-te-RUPT)—
verb transitive; to break into, or
between; to hinder by or as by
breaking In; to make a break in
the continuity, uniformity, mo-
notony, etc., of. Verb instransitive
—to break in upon some action
or discourse, especially with ques-
tions or remarks. Origin: Latin—
Intcrruptus, past participle of In-
terrumpere. to interrupt, from
Inter plus rumpere, to break.
IT’5 THE- ,
doorbell;
I'LL
SAL«/
MADAM! HAVE 'yOU TRIED
OUR NBV DRY 'SHAMPOO ?
was born
tians 6:1
to tour children’* hospital* and schools and see “Nothing doing!” snapped the cus- France, and is an author and nlav-
how much good this Hoppy character can do for tomer. "Who cares what’a happen- wrigbt.’ Some of his books and
ad to Hollywood?"
film plays are; A Call to Order, Shriner
How’d You Make Out?
1. D. W. (David Wark) Griffith.
2. A character in Charles Dick-
ens' Barna by Rudge; she gave her
n!*me to a style of dress popular
after the publication of the novel.
3. At Bowling Green, downtown
Manhattan, and it ends in Albany.
*• Jo Paraguay, South America.
5. The President's March.
1 — Jean Cocteau. 2 — Herb
2^3
^.hek have
pant, for t
Covered Di:
Served /
, covered dii
• ,t noon t
Lottie Cir
„ Methodist
f The circle, whi
•he church I
H. D. Hs
•old.
I Mr,. T. E. Abi
(Mtional entitli
Christ.” Mrs
k “Efficien
j fisher preside
i meeting.
[j prayer meetii
• luncheon.
Do y<
Smart girl..
make-up cov
protect your
last all day ]
*reamy slide
out. It’s so li
Come in for
\
tee’s the
I Max Fac
see it at
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1953, newspaper, June 5, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041722/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.