The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 288, Ed. 1 Monday, May 5, 1952 Page: 4 of 10
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omen
Sun Slants
>2 -PAGE 3
Editorials
frdhi th* fleeci
By Fr#d
FATE STRIKES LOW BLOW
SATURDAY WAS u fine ft Msy morning ^
ever see in Baytown. I walked; down T«u A
and couldn't help .but be imaxed at th* jr*^
crowd of youngsters damorjnf .fieiit**^
Saturday morning matinee at th«%rMWB. "
And there vu Pollcehian Henry Entx Pfwj)
r with the dignity of • supreme court Juttica a
helped younfRera out of their mother! can
looked out for theae who had to crow the him
He wm so busy at hia Job be didn't even •*, »
■I paaaed by. When I walked back -.by a few
later, moat of the youngsters were already t|
ahow. "He waa atandlng there failing with »<
Weil done” look on hia face,
I spoke to him this time, and he spoke hut 1
thought ran through my mind that there wu „
who really enjoys hia Saturday morning chore i
the folks of Baytown owe him a debt they can m
fully pay merely with a paycheck Chief H, g, j
Kee hands him twiee a month. , . ; if
X returned to the office and stArte#’ <t,u
through -ail .the thinga .that will pile up on yow*
.ft didn't seem hut a few minutes until the ah
rang for me On the other end at the line wat Om
Some of the bretks ia price* eited by the
Journtl are very great For metaace. copper
reached 60 cents a pound in world markets
after the Korean'war started — sow it »
down to 40 cents and leas. Wool alumped-
, from a high of S3.30 to $1.55. Cotton touch-
ed 46 cents, then slid back to under 42.'
» Here ia how tb* Journal summe-i up the
economic situations in a number M major
countrie*.- . \ .
France: W’aoleaaie price* have turned*
downward.' despite the fact that the govern-
ment’ printing creases have been working
hard 'producing franca. Am the newspaper
said. “The fact that French prices are slip-
ping at all. underscore* the strength of the
world trend."
. Britain:.' Unemployment has- appeared.
0 notably in .textiles. Prices have weakened.
Foreign demand for British goods, has con-
1 -----........ ■ ........ .
Belgium: A Brussels- bank reported,
"During February signs of a recession in.
the Beifian economy were still apparent on'
ill sides. The eotire price schenpe U on the
decline, with the exception of wages.”
Canada: Wholesale prices have Been de-
clining for many months. The government
ha* relaxed inatallment buying regulation*
Because of lagging sales of consumer goods.
Denmark: The market for Danish good*
world economic problem. This new was ex-
■ pressed by Britain's Chancellor of th* Ex-
■ chequer. Richard Butler, when he nJd Com-
•v » atesfe warn 4pap*W th*
S iriau .and the possibility of unemployment
in the world in general than some of the
lively economic cntics ou&de this house-
imagip*.'* . .. ' •* .jatU.
According to the Wail Street Journal
roundup, several factors seem to- be res-
ponsible for the .reversal of the price trend,
ftm. world1 producticn'of physical goods i»
""WjF-teglL SbeonCthe oatfcrealr at the Ko-
rean war started' scare buying on a global
. scqle and shot many prices' clear out of line.
Tkhni extremely stiff taxes are cutting
'•'■deeplylnto fee bmying powepr of the peo'ple
in this country and abroad. Our .per capita
fUTafl' * »a. ATrlaim • riwiM ami at as
months. * said a feature news steiw in a re-
am issue of the adthoriuuve,’Wail Street
Journal.. " • ■ —»* •
’In equatanai Singapore, a-pound of rub--'
ter worth 80 easts last ajriog asm arils at
-36-cents. Southeast of London, a,five-room
■ house pnce-ragged at 15.660 just four
months ago is now offered at $4,482. in
ClteagDr a hundred jkhbhIs of hog .worth
121.50 twelve months'back now hnngs. oBiy-
$17.50. " - ■ ■ " . . '
> Such iJeveioptoents as these, the story
wmft oe, are symptoms of work! price de-
flation. More and more o’f them- are appear-
ing! -And fee- point is. that many .an .acoaomr.
ist ih costing to behove that deflation. rath-.
igTBartBBWrlKtsobmr may fee the greatest-
has shrunk, and unemployment is about 10
per cent greater than a year ago.
United States:. The wholesale price index,
which has been slipping slowly down for a
year, is at the lowest level sinch March,
1951, There has been much price cutting on
durable goods: such, as television sets, and
soma other commodities as Well. Our frc-
torv outnot is mors than douteft that pf
“I thought you ought to know " Grover iajd.4
Just »»nt Henry Enax to the Veterans Howtij:
Houston. He bed a heart attack. McKee took a
in." ,
1 was stunned. It didn't seem possible that *
thing eouid be wrong with Mr. Henry. Hadn't I a
seen him a moment or so before’ J
But it had happened He had the attack. He is*
pitalited in Houston. 411 we can hope for is that*
attack is not a serious one. and that he hob a
return home and * little white later can take I
usual piece on Texas Avenue and be ready tom* %
urday morning soon to look after the youngstenj
front of the movis.
You must be able to see by :noW that there
' thing about Cop Henry Enax that gets under ■
skin in a hurry. One of the things wrong witb J
world is that there aren't enough folks like mm M
in th* world. , t
And I know, tar sure, that Rafus Honey-utt J
his big boo*. Howard Brunson wilt secono -tit %
tion.
MAW PICNIC NOTE
NOTE TO MY OLD pal. Educator Bill Hsj*
Please let The Son know when you plait as*j|i
Horace Mann faculty picnic. W* want to send gj
specialist. Sports EditorDan Shafts, out to eov*ti
MIL III .MBIT, COMM TO TOWN • C
ITS ALWAYS pleasant to not# that Hummei J
boss. Hines Biker, is doming to town. Hit
anee of * Ktwarns invitation to speak to a j*)
meeting of Baytown’s service clubs assure* tb* rt
cess of that dinner.
Mav 22 is the date, with th* dinner schedule! |
Robert E. Le* cafeteria. They are expecting at J
>n0 persons to be on nend »inc* wives of tb# me|
bers are also invited to be there
President B*k*r usually drop* down to BeyuH
Jtnea -he ca» so Humble Lay bur thia is' th* fg
starched collar event be* been to her* is
‘some time ,
We might wieh that the cafeteria bad an *»r-«J
ditioning aystem. ,o it before the dinner is nver.ii
maybe It won't be such a not,,tjme in the oid *M
that night j
SATIKDAY - HUMBLE DAY *4
MENTION OF HINEB Baker and things Humril
is a reminder that next Saturday will b# Hnrii
Day in Baytown.'The annual barbecue gtenie wp
ail-day osting of the Humble Club promise* f.tm
ail previous efforts.
■ Plans have been mad# to take ear# of more tag
14,00ft persons. As I recall «„• that number eg *$
about that, set a new record last spria*.
we hop* the Hiimblc folks have a gmi teat
outing this year and we hope, aboea all that. If
will have only the finest cooperation poaibi* te
the W rather Man. He is a very vital peeawt to Mi
on your side this time of y«*r. espeeteMp wbe* n|
plan to be outside all day
And this aside to the harkmium |p %nm SSiJ
than you need, I wont be dotef ......iWlg, |
Wasbingtdn Merry-So-R-'ouflrf: - * . * ■
Charles Wilson Lashes
At CIO Chief Phil Murray
Todays Bible Verse
THOU.SHALT not tax* the nameaf the’
Lard thy God in vain: for the Lord wit)
not hold him guiltless that' tafcsth hia
name « van, exodus 2f3:Z
By DREW PEARSON steel -nrboration in the world, was
WASHDW3TON'—Ex-Defense Mo- ucikmg to Ellis Arnaii ex-gov-
bfirter Wilson, terming before fntoe of Oeorgta. now price. *d-
the SenStie Bukins 'T.rr»scy •nmjsrrator for tni'y*Bon.
' "Ben.’ M.'i Gciventor Am ail.
.H-vy man:/ shares at tl S. Steel
st.x.t do you t.f*
“A thousand snares,", replied the
bead of the steel company s'
'•Wha'f Oniv ,i thousand: Ydu'r*
•a piker."-, replied Arn*lL ’You
mean to say’ tnat you're runmag
tns* tiling an only a thousand
■share!" Why Tve get almost "J»t
many various steel ghares rayseif.
•Asking that hia oasxe'f *nd* fm' bottling bn the other side
..... 1 —for the public. *
•:<i Arr.aU .vu been the toughest
:?.Jwhian tne,steel companies have bad
. yLJmi *«b in demanding that
“e there be no increase in the price of
Wi.aca steel.-It was Charley' Wilson's or-
igin*, idea that the wage boost for
steelworkers could be handled by
giving the industry a compensating
.jc-v-’- to scut price increase, but he reckoned
without pis price administrator.
Arnoil baa consistently refused
to budge, and bis immediate chief,
Ecpr.omie’ 3tabliixer Putnom. aim-
seif a manufacturer, has stood be-
hind him. ,
MBS. MELVIN W.
anet Lee McKir
'ows With Lt. Ivi
Looking At Lite
eammatm « the' h«.g-i!> of the
- stri- fffMsIet' loose L-fierry tirade
xt^SO President Ph.i Murray. It
wag so Slot, that ev»n though the
senators were *i;t.r.g r. tlosed ses-
■ iM, ire asked t.v stenographer
not to record t
Senator Fuihrgal'of Arkansas
touched -iff ’.it* W blast ny n-
quir.ng about terra.n amendments
to the bill extending st»hilixat,on
controls, v/ - ' ■ "
m off-tae-r*cyd. Waon repue-1
'The tmef situation you *iioi
tonsider a "the grenong cont.-oj
.a.lor over tets -..L.
T am not talking about. :
rank-and-file o? law
ennanued. "tut aaout the;.- .ead-
crs.
'A few men. a Saf?dfi: if iabor
ieadera, bav» tne
down this country ' w,d tne fe-
me- head of Terera. Electric ;n
icy tones
“One man. ’ he yoni.n led. refer-
ring to Murray "baa ir.fepower to
shut dawn not oniv out alu-
minum. copper--*,: the metals in-
dustries; " . . .
“We talk about .tc- importance
of rompetition .- • te ateelyindua-
try." concluded - :,:oc 'bu' here
is one man, ome ianor leader, who
hag the power to- shut down the
entire metals industry ’
“I* there any use.” asked Sena-
tor Pulbrght "in having the gov-
ernment to control labor. Since
iahor ;s testding fo control the gov-
ernment
" Wilson ‘declined
8y Erich iraraeis
A YOCNG 'Harvard graduate g»»» me a lessee
ia juvenile jaycismagy as; Saturday . This nap wmi
- coni* out ,«to ’.be tmir.try for the weekend to visit
his mother, m n« does a-most every weekend.
He ms aa apartment n New York City wears
nice ciataes. and is as ad-wound man at the woral.
I am. not aegaamted with sis- Monday-to-Friday
diet, but I DC know yaat Friday nighu. Saturday a
and Sundays be gets *.he.Jie* if ever-thing-,n the
culinary line T have eaten at hii house: •
THE FEIXC-W -as £ -ia.-!, had come out to s.s
mothers m ,-•■ as isusl sod vas doiluig up for a
party »V,.,:r. ae was going .a die evening
Hu ms USed bint whether he wouid h* good
encugft -r; '£* tne gaze out n ir'mt la? net It- ie*nn
that one at the post* asd rotted away, or some-
thing. sad the gate wild : 1 stand up
Reiuctsariy se went out ht- • he yard to see wear,
was wrong wi.tr the d~a thing. I happened to pass
by the place Just then.
"Hello. I sasd. see you’re making your-
seif asefai ’
“Yea. be repTSei “T giiess i'-n Cheap abor “ ......
I WENT ANSWER mm at the cm*. W> talked
aamt c'het tntr.gs. .about Spr ng in tne couauy and
life Sr.'few Yorg and w forth.
But when f got 'same I started to ponder I was
wandering bow many modern kids consider •he.-.,
selves ",cheap labor' when -i«r pareiata ask them .
M do somstaiag.
Come to think about it many times when I w«* a
youngster I resented my father or mother asking
MB w do eoir.e'hing around the house or to ns ia
errand for i.-.eni
Oieap laser they emsider me, I thought
NOW -JET % Meg bow chfap this young Harvard
man's .aijeir realty is, 4ted some years
a*a,,S-i.'-.re then ins mother, a jmsfness woman, had
feared s‘.m. ’
With aer own little inheritance -and her business
income file had managed to - send him to Harvard,
to pay for at* tuitior., ms soar-1, au fraternity dues,
his clothe*, and the various extramural epmplica-
t.ons :ha> which he got hianaeif
She Sought aim an antomooile and paid for its, up-
keep.
He was very sick for a while So she ,xid his Hos-
pital bills and his doctor bills and ail the other ex-
*-----— •---.urs when sickness strikes.
■ The First Baptist church Sat- S
Brday was the setting for the
Bedding of Miss Janet Lee Me- D
Hinrey and Lt. Melvin Willard p
■arse Jr. of Fort Belvoir, Va. son
■The bride is the daughter of Mr. Cai
Bid Mrs. Barrett T. McKinney. W.
Boi Missouri. Parse is the son of
■r. and Mrs. Melvin W. Parse, ,
■S27 East 18th, Tulsa. Okla. v
■ Rev. E. R. Couch performed the
Hoahle ring ceremony at 8 p.m. the
■ Baskets of csUia lilies and tall the
■indelabra entwined with south- ^ou
Bn smilax and white daisies fram-
B the wedding scene. w
■ Wedding music was presented dinj
B Mrs. E. O. Keefer, organist, the;
Kd George'Meason, soloist. _ ..
■ The bride entered.the church.on !
Be arm of her father. She was brie
■tired in a diamond white satin sha:
Ban designed with square neck- ft#v
Be encrusted with seed pearls
Bd bugle beads and filled in with ld c
B illusion yoke. A full gathered M
Birt swept into a forma! train Rob
Br fingertip veil of English Colli
■usion fell from a pearl embellish- Texi
K lace cloche. The bridal bouquet ta C
■a.«: of stephanotis and lilies of ^
Be valley with an orchid center hj
■ Maid of honor was Miss Julia ”•
inn Famed, Mias Mary Ann _ .
■ichardson of Bryan, Miss Eliza-
Bth Ladofl of San Antonio, Miss tv*P
iiii'inne Huggins. Mrs. Travis Me- j1
Imncy Jr, sister-in-law of the fj"13
Bide and Miss Clarence Mae Gid- A1-ai
■ngs were bridesmaids.
■ Junior maids were Karen and
iartha McKinney of Houston, »ou
fcasins of the .bride.
IThe attendants wore matching Char
■esses of scafoam green net over Mr.
Iffeta styled with shirred strap- daug
iss bodices and bouffant net Mies
lirts They wore scalloped edged
let capes enhanced with a floral y.
fcsign in narrow hairbraid. j *y
latching lily - of - the - valley I VI
fcisd^iiux with face veils complet- >
6 ihjpensembies. C
EWSFarned carried a basket of Id"
Bnegated daisies. The other at- r, i
Indants carried baskets of pink Mp]
[Best man was Lt. Herbert Mills* _
I San Antonio. ’ Tor
[Groomsmen were Robert Parse Bayto
[ Tulsa brother of the bride- standi
loom, John Allred, Gene Gillis, He
id Tate and Travis McKinney, the I
[other of the bride. night
After the ceremony a reception ia.
b held at the home of Mr. and The
!rs. F. L. Witt, 101 Crow Read. .the D.
Member* of the house party were done t
(iss Benny May Wilburn, Miss of_the
!flen Timpson of San Antonio, This
[iss Julfe Peddie of Houston, Miss was e
[ary Beth Moore. Miss Glenda Mol»y
’hite and Miss Jerilyn Witburn. P«t *
STOLEN DIARY Pentagpa nr-
cies expect U Gen. Edwin 'Brooks
to go easy on m* feiiow genera!,
P-C3ert W Grow, -fle .'ormer msi;-
tary attache in Moscow, whp.ieft
hi* diary lying ioose so a Com-
munist spy was able ta photograph
■it. ' ‘
Brook* ia tommanadr of the Se-
decide
cond Army, which will ^^
ahead witn a
. martiai of Genera! Grow.
Actually, the Xrmy is afraid the .«
spy may also have photographed — -
other top-secret document* that ^ __ .
were in Grow’* possession at the .?•— wB%
Grow assured Army invest!- ______,, .—
gators that he kept the other do- , ----- ■■ - ^qBBBBBBMI''"'.
ium.ents pn hi* person, but the SEIZER CROaBES THE RUBICON -
investigators aren’t convinced. — ----;-t—*---------------------...---
One aftereffect of Grow’s ear-
ieaaaeu has been the hasty with- u, kj-w V-aet •
drawal of those military attaches . _ , _ _ .
fn0Gr^“°^T“^ Movies Beginning To Steal Stage s Thunder
partietiteriy sore over this; because --- -.......-
their military attache was an ir- By .MEL HEDCER camera* Goubility. he said, let the play, "Venus Observed," which
replaceable expert in Aussi*. NEW YORK After nearly 20 movie hurtle along at uninterrupt- »“ directed by Uurence Oliver
Note—Russia has quietly pulled ye»rs of sitting in assorted parts. . br,,k-,,k th. and was billed as ' one at tb*
ail iu military atUches hick to *f every legitimate theater in New * ^ * theatrical events of the season. I.
Moscow from around the globe. York aty- yeari spent marveiing “c«*J|ionaiiy necessary . device « walked out after on* act, , __
Some observers wonder if this is «'Writ* masterpieces as Jose Fer- the theater of having action take Q>upl# of nights later I saw a
a tip-off that the Kremiln is plan- rer’* "lago, ’ K. Hepburn's "Tracy place offstage. so* thriller catied "Five Fingers '
ning a new military move. Lord" and Maurice Evans' Ham- Yoy C0^T,o on and on about pretended to be* ni mor*
let —It is sad indeed to arrive than ,it was-and- th* story, told
sfEis&xssss-
asy Knowledge **.«■««.«. *—«.« ^ Uz? ™
A Central Press Feature * ™ trym, to be pontifical L.”Tie'
rreSI reaTure *bout this, but the fact TI was L\ THt 0SK EDGE th’ ««•
minister of the gospel, a news- talking the other afternoon with a iL* .mu".w;10 hav* « in *h« presentation of
rrr r«<m,tr ^asrrussrs
“ "• ~ » t», U,>»ua p«,t»»r.ph- “?Lr ’“ITT V 1^, T *•«« -Cym“-
the 89t.h Congress and to ail sue.- era in Manhattan—you see his .‘“T y bav# made sharp inroads.
reeliine tr. xotk in th* "Hamer’s Rasaar”- F*’* are proouce* tnese days, .till w-__...
to, answer.
Note - Wilson tangeid with labor
leaders—both fhp CIO and AFL—
When .re first came to Wahsmgton
as defense ir.obtiizer and junked
the plan for a defense advisory
board. Dunng World War II. an
advisory board or. which was'rep#
resented MSbr, farm 'groups, the
public and business sat under the
chairmanship of the late. O, Max
Gardner of North Carolina in order
to advise the government on mo-
biiiwtion,, Wikon ditehed this idea,
ignored labor advisers and got the
CIO and A Ft, fighting mad. They
have never warmed up to him
since.
PRICE PROTECTOR—Ben Fair-
ies*., son of a coal miner and now
president at V. 3. Steel, largest
pens** one me;
«'° %
AND NOT ONLY tfeaf She worried at least ,2ft
pounds off herself over the . kid. and sha lived almost
her entire life JocJBus,
She kept up a lovely home printerily for HIM.
and she looked forward to ever/ weekend when he
" wouH spS3'*"f«w ftoun wtth- h«f — ---------
And even then she didn't see too much of him.
There were ail kinds of parties be d "have to go to,"
and that cost HER money. >H<* ,* at present en-
gaged in .a so-called business enterprise with what
he calls a future." At present it's only an expense
--.and that means mosey out of HF.P. pocket.!
THE. WAY I FIGCPJE it,this mother nouid have
saved f a ic of rnf/rfpy if she -bad hired out-
side labor at JFiO an boot " •
But that ;sr. t ’.nr ray mothers do ;» -
•y Ueiwirl M
FAITH: Robert Penn like all bis saHmtumi
"Paint Your Wagon." grew a beard for rite rod
few. momma ago Penn wm blt...by aa wsbekwes J
rusaetl to tb* hospital and for weeks hia Ufa
despaired of but through it ail b* refused la
imt hit heard to b* tooted H« aeedod it b* i
to resume bis role in the musical.’ Pa** Wat «
at«d oh twice, and persisted in rafUMng «o a* t|
Have A Laugh
By Boyce House , Jr" C:irta‘in'’
... ,.j,; 3. Wfeat is the organ of speech?
THE NEW' PREACHER in' the frontier townrifOund' 4. Who succeeded to the presi- — — —. ________ murn a
the place was dominated by toughs of Whom the dency when James A. Garfield foreign affair* committee, a mem- New York
.Worst was Black Pete. In hia first sermon, the min- was assassinated ? .... A, L. IT - . _• ' *
M*t declar'd. “Th-re are 12 rascals in this town, What domestic animal can- ** *’ de,**^« * ^
Including Black Pete." ‘ not reproduce K*etf?-------» • ^naemo, Cal., .for the, Units' . "*,u
Hgxt dayl Stack P«te met him and threatened to Nation# conference on organize ■ ^ ^ . .
whi|> him \StAem be retracted the following: Sunday. Happy Birthday , ‘ tion in 1845. He wa* also a merh- ^ was ^
So the next Sunday, the preacher said, "I want Christopher Mbeiey. isqted svrit* her of th* American delegation ■"««• H^> hi
tft.«TTeet a statement,1 .made■«,week_ag|b. T arid er: Alice Faye, radio and screen to the United Nations General A - . 'g “the j
thii towp had 12 rascals, including' Black Pete. I actress; Tyrone Power, actor, and beflfbip la London in the eam? tory” and
take it hack. What I meant to say was that this _ Freeman F. Gosden (Amos), radfd! year and in New York in mi. n* hbout *
town hq* U rascals, not including Black Pete." actor, have birthdays today. He Hire* at Watcbung, Somerset wayi
And that made everything all right, . . „ ' - -. county. New Jersey What is his ^W-did^th*
Watch Your Language - ■ Vg- ■ n«ra#'* - He point
IT WAS, the cowboy's first visit to the city. He reg- INTELLECT-— (IN-te-lekt) ■ — '..__bow the ci
tetered at a note! and followed the beilboy .who took; noun; the power or- faculty of 2—She was born in Seattle. 'nc*‘* »U*
“*a~*UA -r « fdUtinguUhed'Yrom Wash in I«21-add was stsge mm4 shai
For Hair
Shaping As
YOU like It
ning ft
W\ I
ty gra
Lodge
evenin;
to Voti
Weathers
at the
A0ORAELE
beauty salon-
Malver
ciior..
Robe
talk, v
■ membe
Susie
heart, <
daughti
Hooks,
All D
ates ol
guests.
success, then went to California most cotorfui arbit-
whlre^f 2" ™ ^^ Morai*X b5S
a Hollywood revue, J?£ £*g fiS S£?
went Nwd YWk*nH^l *hOTr pect oyer a close play at the pt«te.
TfS'ET""!, tSi" wMrt vSWotmre.
£ S SUSS 2ft,*oSt 1
men Prefer Biondes Wbo toThe? •
(Name, at bottom of column) A TREMENDOUS hulk of a worn-
■t ..__T-- • *n waddled down the main cor-
,™„r „ SZ£ £
GIVE MOTHER
WEARING APPAREL
from .
Irene’s
LOOKS UNK
btxM«rutx-
VWTH TH’ ROa
PILE, UNLESS
.....bOuCAMSSU
'EM FOR USE
I HAD A PfiifiW CAU. TO Give 1
ME AN ESTWMTE ON BULDNG 4
A BARBECUE VHTH THOSE
BOULDERS, AND YKNCW WHAT ,'
•TV® .BRIGAND ASKS1 #135^.
- HE Skip H^MTICVOWC
SOORNPUUy ASKED IF MtS OTHER
>x tfOB MIAS DIGGING A TUNNEL ,
V WIOPORT
Syd 8. Gould....»...
I Beulah Mae Jackson.
1 Warren Edward*. .V,
ton thal
1st, says you can always pick out
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 288, Ed. 1 Monday, May 5, 1952, newspaper, May 5, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041728/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.