The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 280, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 29, 1953 Page: 1 of 20
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BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Wedneidey, April 29, 1953
TODAY’S NEWS TODAY
Serving La Porte, Crosby,
Highlands and
The Greater Baytown Area
TELEPHONE: 8302. Five Cent* Par Copy
IRBERS HILL IN ROW OVER TEACHERS
\
Only .6 Of An Inch, But-
Rice Farmers Welcome Rain
Baytown got only a little more
than half an inch of the heavy
rains that swept across Texas
Tuesday night and Wednesday
morning, but area rice farmers
welcomed it with open arms any-
way.
Rainfall here totaled only .6 of
an inch for the 24 hours ending
at 10 am., even though heavy
rains up to 10 inches were reported
in other parts of the state.
But the intermittent, soaking
rain was the best kind for farm-
ers in this area, most of whom
are just now planting their rice.
It will get the fields in good
shape for those who have not yet
planted, and it will save flushing
and give a welcome boost to rice
already planted.
Pastures, which have been suf-
fering from lack of water, also
will benefit,
“It’s sure a life-saver,” said rice
farmer J. C. Kannarr happily.
“We could still use more rain;
but even thus much is worth a lot
of money.
"A soaking rain like this will
do more good than an inch-and-
a-half hard rain that would have
run right off."
No damage was reports here,
though heavy gusts of wind con-
tinued throughout the night. Both
ferries across the ship channel
were operating Wednesday morn-
ing, although high water caused
the Lynchburg ferry to susul-nd
operation for a ' while Tuesday
night.
The Morgan's Point ferry kept
operating, even though water in
the channel was up over the rocks
on either side of the slip and
/
Reds Back Down In Truce Talks
But Split Still Remains On Two Points
m
. FIJI STYLE — Inspector Jioji Snguturngr of the Fiji
pdire chits with a hobby while in London for a three-
ftaisin* course. The Fiji cop doesn't wear a helmet — how
, ptone on over that head of hair? Note his scalloped
JsKidik Jioji is 32 and has been a policeman for 14 years.
• International i
Spots
Safecrackers Hit
Wooster Pharmacy
For $180 And Dope
*Bv LEROY HANSEN
PANMUNJOM. Korea. April .211
-UP- The Communists gave
ground for the first time Wednes-
day in the resumed armistice ne-
gotiations. But the Communist and
United Nations truce teams re-
mained completely split on two vi-
tal points regarding repatriation of
war prisoners. ' ,
"We made some progress,” said
senior UN. truce delegate Lt.
Gen. William K. Harrison, Tues-
day he had threatened to break
off negotiations unless the Reds
stopped stalling.
Communist senior delegate Gen.
Nam II said at Wednesday's 64
minute meeting that his side would
be willing to nominate an Asiatic
nation to- take custody of 46.918
North Korean, and Chinese Com-
munist prisoners who refuse to go
back to Red-ruled territory.
This is believed to have removed
one point at issue, for Nam is ex-
pected to name India and that
country is believed acceptable to
the U N. . '
Nam said also he was willing to
blowing across the road on the
Baytown side last night.
Temperatures were mild, rang-
ing from 66 to 72 degrees.
Elsewhere in Texas the weather
news wasn’t so good.
The first tornado in Bexar coun-
ty's history struck and killed one
and possibly two persons.
Lightning hit a 27,500-gallon oil
Storage tank at Kilgore. The tank
exploded and caught fire, and five
persons were burned to death,
A twister smacked into the edge
of Smithvilie. a Bastrop county
(See Rain—Page Four)
Two-Cent
Milk Price
Drop Here
Baytown area housewives ap-
tney are not adamant
The meeting was adjourned until (See Truce—Page Four)
Humble To Show Off
New Office Building
He pointed out to Nam II that the 11 a m. Thursday (8 p.m. Wednes-
Geneva Convention on prisoners day esri.
, . , , . , . Harrison said of Wednesday's
forbids the use of force to repa- meetjnf,:
triate them. The U.N.. he said, is "We made some progress today.
no more willing to force them to At least they have made some kind pare'tiy arp faced with thp plea',
go to a neutral country than it. is of move on a neutral and indicated an, pro ct of jng two (,pnts
to force them to go home. they are not adamant on the time lp8ks ppr q|iart o( mUk> atthough
one, major distributor said Wed-
nesday morning he had not yet re-
ceived word of the price slash.
The reduction in South Texas
was caused by a decision by dairy-
men to cut their prices to distri-
butors from $7.56 to $6.64 per
hundredweight of Grade A milk
containing four per cent butterfat.
A representative of Phenix
Saturday will be homefolks’ open house day at Humble's Dairy said milk prices were lower-
new main office building. ed Wednesday two cents a quart,
Plants Manager Gordon L. Famed announced Wednes- on' other'3 dairy Sdwts such^s
day that plans are being made to care for several thousand cream, chocolate milk and cheese
Humble people, their families as well as Baytown friends will also be cut in varying
of the cbmpapy. amounts, he said.
The open house will be observed between the hours of cKtoTcJJd his Arm hod
9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. lowered wholesale prices two cents
iso he was wunng to Persons interested will be taken on a conducted tour of a quart but he had not yet re-
wh1c>,iaimtile len^» 9f tl«e during the entife building. Each visitor will be given a specially eeived word of the retail price cut.
yhich anti - repatriate prisoners . . , „ ,, ,b , , ... , Official notification would prob-
shaii remain in neutral custody, printed Humble brochure and will be served light refresh- ably oome in this afternopn.s maii,
ments. ■ he said.
Famed pointed out definitely that the affair is not a ___ .
Strictly employe open house. 'iWpublic is invited to visit not become effective until Sunday. signed Wednesday
the new building al%. S "
~S‘ ------- „ There will be plenty of parking space in front of the Wednesday, because otherwise M w .mon„ six con vwieu
Safe crackers had suceeMfMitjr • building, and entrance is through the main door facing .the many people might hold off buy- tractors whoS(, bidg were oppm,d
wXX zzgLSszs Brains sase w** •» »f*•****■ s;k3»r.2 stsrs
$120 in cash, $60 worth of postal _ stored milk.
B. F. Stallonnes. manager of the
MI NDERS WIFE -Shown
after his arrest in Bridgeport,
N. J., Ernest Manrus, 17-yeur-
old son of a wealthy family,
confesses that he shot and kill-
ed his young wife outside his
mother’s home when the vic-
tim turned down $30 to finance
divorce. (International)
$42,703 Bid Wins
Contract For New
La Porte School
Coming
DIRECTOR A. V. Bar-
:5g Mid-Raytown bus-
... Wednesday to get in-
usd by the city in tigur-
property taxes,
staid have. Jan. . 1 in-
asdy on merchandise, ____ ______
iicarfs, shop, equipment mon(,y orders and an undetermined
tuns classified as per- amount of narcotics.
The thieves took $20 from the
pharmacy till and grabbed $100 in
post office receipts,
Investigating officers. Deputy
Sheriffs M. M Brcavn and, J. C.
Bickerstaff tagged the job “highly
professional “
But then Nam said he would not
name the Asiatic country until the
U.N. agrees to send all anti-f-epa-
triate prisoners there
The U.N.- insists thev must be
kepi ih Korea.
Board Fires
Two Despite
Hot Protests
Trustees of the Barbers
Hill school district had fired
two teachers Wednesday af-
ter a stormy Doard session
Tuesday night at which some
125 persons jammed into the
small meeting place.
Most of the people had
come in support of the teach-
ers under fire and to protest
any changes in the present faculty.
The board's action broke up a
husband-wife team at the school.
Teacher Henry A. Scarborough
“failed to be re-elected" while
Mrs. Scarborough was elected by
a unanimous vote.
However, it was reported that
both Mr. and Mrs. Scarborough
had signed contracts with Spring
Branch. Before the meeting they
had requested that their names
not even be considered. Scarbor-
ough taught high school science
and his wife was a first grade
teacher.
The second teacher who “failed
to be re-elected' 'wae J. B. Gill Jr,
junior and senior high mathe-
matics.
A third teacher, Mrs. F. M.
Busch, home economics instructor,
was re-elpotod by a vote of four-
to-three with Board President J.
E. Matthews breaking the three-
three tie.
“The school district Is at the
crossroads tonight,” Matthews said
in an impassioned speech before
the meeting formally opened.
"Despite high feelings, the
school board should, and must,
work as a unit and without bit-
terness. That's what a school
trustee should consider — only
what's best for the schools,"’ he
said.
Matthews said he had checked
into Gill’s record for the past sev-
en years and found it to be en-
tirely satisfactory.
J. >. Presnal and G. A. Mills
were board members who were in
favor of rehiring the entire'faciilty
as the first order of business. Mills
made the motion and Presnail
A contract for the new La Porte
The reduction by producers will Negro school building list! been Sl'c0n^ed ll' but the vote was four
, ............... bv the Moore „ „ ... T _ .
Moore Construction Co. of La pCarhrel1 BaLb*r'
Peri Irish and Mrs. Emma Farr
voted against rchiring the entire
perty, Barber said.
■ Chib Play
: COLLEGE Curtain
■ <tage 'The Curious Sa-
litbfe-art earned) .drama
I night in the college
i Curtain time i* set
. Admission wilt be 50
|Ik* who have student
kinds will be admitted
It's 'California, Here We Come,' For PWs
'Freedom Airlift' Transport Takes Off From Hawaii
HONOLULU, April 29 -UP- Hickam Field at 12:13 a.m
Thirty - five sick and wounded a.m. est
and
American soldiers and Marines
J. C. Johnson, an early morning took off for California Wednesday dom flight after
customer at the’drug store, found - on1 the first “freedom airlift” re- turnees a checkup during
Doctors at Tripler Army hospit-
al approved resumption of the free-
giving the re-
11-
Calif.. itar San Francisco at 12:13
p.m. pdt (1:13 p.m. edt),
South Texas Producers Associa-
tion, said the association’s direc-
tors had voted to cut the price be-
cause the unusually mild winter
and favorable rains have resulted
in production of more Grade A
milk, and they hope the lower
the north door open and called turning former prisoners of war. hour stopover in Hawaii
' era about 7:50 a.m. ' . The C-W . transport bearing the
officers about
Bickerstaff said the opened safe
at the rear of the store showed
few sigrth of violence.
"The knob was broken clean and
punch used on the lock," he
said. “It was the clean work of a
pro." '
The officer said he had a long
Rwmlc*' wh=ch “church list °f missing narcotics but that
that be is io contact. thp 'otal 1<,8S had not b<,en cm"-
puted..
The clean cut job hadrtjfrtTttHe
evidence towork on, he raid.
The store' is owned by L. E.
.. Sheram. of 12830 Colson in Greens
DuPonf
The returnees were expected to
returnees homeward took off from land at ^Travis Air Force Base,
! GROUP recently ap-
ji Theater Manager Rufus
6 and asked him to book
s religious picture called
kfrtawj Country” Well,
i picture now but
xl News
ROKs Kill
17 In Raid
SEOUL. April 29 —LT—South
Korean raiders killed 17 North E<>-
■ reatis and possibly many more in
a pitched battle during a driving,
rainstorm Wednesday at the east-
ern edt’i' of the watersoaked bat'le-
front.
The original adversaries'of the
French Post
Is Overrun
HANOI, Indo-China. April 29
UP— French armv headquarters and tbe boys started coming out
grim, their faces lined; able only
to
With a matter of hours, all who price will stimulate more consumer
are well enough will then be on buying,
their wav by plane, train and bus
to their homes ail over the United
States after a physical checkup at
Travis Base hospital. • »
The C-97 freedom flight plane
which brought the GI’s 3,400 miles
across the Pacific' from Tokyo
landed at Hickam Fielji at 7:13
p.m. Tuesday. •
High officials, high brass, and
•Hawaii’s hula- girls were* on hand
to meet them. An Army band blar-
ed its welcome. The crowd cheered.
The doors of, the plane opened.
at a meeting of the trustees about ?’attheW* fen preSe"ted t.hrae
r.«n ^ „ ... , petitions that were submRted to
$42 703 3 bld t0taled. the board. Two of them, with 197
.-L. ' , ,, ..., names, urged trustees to "continue
r « rT t; t p,"“i
. „ ' ■ , 1V. 1 superintendent and faculty,
tosen, Spaw-Giass and Pyramid. j j Jenson is superintendent of
Designer for he new budding .s thl. Barbers Hill school district.
Architect Lowell Lammers of Bay-- Th{. third p,,tltion signed by so
Thl . ,, , .. parents of first grade school chil-
h( $4*4.0 K) bid was slightfy dren, urgrd th<* board to renew the
above previous estimates by the contract 0f Mrs. Henry A. Scar-
school board. Original estimates borough.
had been set at $35,000.
City Warns
No Let-Up
In Tax Fight
Matthews then gave each board
The Negro school building is a member a list of the faculty mem
part of the $300,000 school, con-
struction program which is under-
. way in La Porte.
Construction plans call for-com-
pletion of the entire program by
September.
The Negro school building will
provide three classrooms, with
hers and asked that they scratch
the names of any teacher to whom
they had any objection.
Mr. and Mrs. Scarborough and
Gill were the only names scratched
by the trustees.
There was no way for - the
audience to tell how the board
• *•> provide a fourth
jW-ihon with pay to all
[.•spioyeej was made
1V- the du Pont Co.,
(SO M. C. Sperry, man-
! Hounon Works at La
employes with the
»r more years have
! vacation. An estimat-
Ffw and women of du
L *6$iNe to receive the
this year.
ISl^vd week is esti-
f lor this year.
NEWS
________ __ Ss :
34-month-oid war fought toe-to-toe little Laos kingdom, or the pretty Red Cross volunteers
for an hour and .20 minutes before The post of Nambac, about 36 who draped ieis around their necks.
City Attorney George Chandler
Wednesday promised, no let-up in
the city's court actions against
property owners who are delinqu-
ent in th-ir taxes, and said about
smile half-heartedly and wave .50 morp tax s!,its probably wilf'be
they dame down the gang- fj|pd tbjs afternoon. .
City Hall employes are busy pre-
paring the suits, and they will be
filed as soon as they are ready, he
said.
.The city attorney filed 85 suits,
covering a total of about $4,000 in-
back personal property taxes,
Tuesday in Judge Roscoe Zicrlein'y
one-room comblnaiton classroom members scratched their lists, but
and auditorium. (See Teachers—Page Four)
Probe Of Judge Is Debated
Texas Senate Speeds Action On Row
In Brief
WASHINGTON — The Housing
and Home Finance Agency ap-
proves a $l,J67,00# loan lo Fni-
veniity of Texas medical branrh
at Galveston for construction of
donmitoriea.
said Wednesday Vietminh Comma
hist invaders have captured anotb
er French post in savage hand-fo- plank. ~
haiid fighting north of the royal They hardlwiociked at the hula
citadel city of Luang Prabang- - in. girls, in their swirling grass skirts
tie
Thi
the RQK raiders withdrew under miles above the city, was overrun Little more than one week ago they
co'er'of a heavy artillery barrage bv enemy forces Tuesday after Jin were in the isolation 'of prison
They counted U Red bodies in. ali-mgljp battle, the French, said, camps, not knowing whether they
the mud and' estimated they killed There was no mention of the fate ever would see their families and. Tuesday in Jt
five more The ROKs also blew up‘of the defending garrison. ; sweethearts-again. They had gone Justice Court
ilffee bunkers sheltering an un- A number of other French posi- through the.excitement of the ex- Ail the suits, being filed this . _ . .
unknown number of Communists, 'ions fell during the past week to change at Panmunjom and the wei- week are for amounts less than resolution adopted Tuesday to con- district .out
rhinese Rads attacked Vegas Vietminh forces driving toward come at Freedom Village and had $200. One suit scheduled for filing ?jder a proposal by Sem William and ..Brooks counties, puts Starr,
the Panmunjom front of Luang Prabang in a blitzkrieg in- made an exhausting flight across Wednesday is for the staggering H- Shireman of Corpus Chinsti tor Jim Hogg, Webb and Zapata coun-
...... •' -* -*♦ Amount of 89 cents . an investigation of 79th- District ties m the 49th district, and forms
WTo
wirS
lving
nip r ciumuiijujjt tiiHu v/i * *-"-’"••h, *** a blitzkrieg
western Korea but got only part vasion of the jungle kingdom. the Pacific. They were tired oat
of the way up the slippery slope (At Paris, a special government and homesick. Some had tears in
before United Nations defenders conference was called Wednesday their eyes'
repulsed them with concentrated to study the worsening Indo-China It. took, half an .hour for the 35
small arms and artillerv fire, military situation.) • men to get out of the plane.. Some
R-iin and mud held fighting else- Advance enemy spearheads limped painfully. Tile last eight
MEMPHIS — A six-day wildcat wbf,re along the front to patrol, Tuesday were reported within 12 came out on stretchers. Thev got a
strike touched off by promotion-.^ ancj.brief skirmishes. miles of Luang Prabang. resounding cTaeer.
of a Negro welder in an all-white
department ends at the sprawling
IntcrftSiiftiial Harvester plant.
AUSTIN, April 29 —UP— The The 79th district now includes
Texas Senate was scheduled Brooks. Jim Wells. Starr and Du-
Wednesday to take up the question val counties., the political stamping
of whether the Legislature should ground of George Parr,'former Du-
investigate a South Texas judge. val countv sheriff who is known
The Senate was ordered into the "Duke of,Duval." Laughlin
“Committee of the Whole,” a par- is, a Parr protege. •
liamentarv device to speed debate. ♦ The redistricting bill, as it went
at 2:30 p.m., under the terms of to the Senate, makes a new 79th
of- Nueces. Jim Welft
by Sen. William and. Brooks counties, puts Starr,
Soldier Tells Of 'Sitting Duck' Massacre
SSHHfsS’Sr Buddies Cut Off Gl’s Frozen Feet With Pen Knife
-Fire rages out of
i)-.. , ’D'ing to take ,** ■>
hie voice after ^ anil destroys
'' ■Peanuts Rush- packing plant of Canadian Oil
-oothing a sunb\irn Companies, Lt-, causing damage
0" the farm estimated at $3 million to $.5
txftcsaa —•
ing his life. ry—•• ••
Cox told his story in the Ameri-
as she jaywalked
1 avenue.
trip to Fort state8 and four
L "eatherford was so President Eisen
TOKYO April 29 -UP-An said, were.i^merican wounded,
American GI, whose frozen feet Pvt. Tally Cox. of Altoona. Ala
WASHINGTON _ .1 , %?£%££ 2£*
territories accept
ns
1 ;Mrs. Irene Conn day and Tuesday,
we Texas avenue
lour »*v,r. . "sitting duck” massacre
Eisenhowers invitation. ■ „ of Americans who surren- He said the crude operation
..... hrie{' 0f in North Korea.
prisoners
believ<
Linger.
WASHINGTON — Democratic
leaders, who learned to their
es all food dismay last fall that Republican
is no longer a swear word in tlie
deep South, organize a drive to
woo Dixie voters back into the
fold.
' ■ • Mrs. Mary
... nf>, but looking
aftcr a rest in
Crii Boyles enjoying the WASHINGTON-Food prices drop
It*,;; J°ycc Thibodaux about as low aa they will get for
E* ”5.1 “ ZSSSTSXS^S^.
1?5- 0*4 M.n, Bi-ivi-u ,n»t mm
Pa”l Prtnce wU1 “<lose
Rationuntii ^urrenUevels.”
" ' Vmuth* bay PAN5HJN30M—Fnited Nations
‘ having command hahds over 500 more
Ure kll ,°U5e with sick and wounded Communist
around. prisoners at the Panmunjom ex-
change center here. ”
cently released from Red prison
which made him a double amputee ca"'DS-
■He said the massacre was staged
near the
in reservoir on uec. 7, 1950.
The Reds, he said, had captured
a truck convoy -of American sol-
diers during an Allied retreat.
Though the Americans surren-
dered North Koreans botrded the
trucks, and fired “burp” guns into
therri • ,
(, "Tfiere were about-25 GIs in each
Wk, and there jvere several
trucks in the onvov," Cox said.
“I was on the' ground but I si
them spraying tlje prisoners
bv^guards who mount^£'S S5h
Estn "3 sss ss ffjas 3
and helpless men with machine the marching prisoners. He credit:
gun fire Many of the victims, he ed the act of-his buddies with sa.v-
Rites Today For W. R. Jamison, 82
Funeral services tor Woody R.
82. of Mont' Belvieu, were
held at 4 p.m. Wednesday
'Jamison died at 6 a.m. Tuesday Stancil Func
»t a Baytown hospital. He had
been a Mont Belvieu resident for
Mrs. Mildred Campbell of Midland;
a son, L. D. Jamison of Mont Bel-
vieu; and two grandchildren.
The Rev. Buford Harrell, assist-
ed by the Rev. H; A. Springfield,
will officiate %the funeral. Pace-
IIO.
I
burp guns and I heard screa
ing.”
Cox said he did not know how
years.
rvivors include
is in charge of'Services.
Odd Fellows will be in charge of
graveside rites in the Methodist
daughter, cemetery. ■
home of Dayton many were killed.
He blamed- the North Koreans
for the massacre. He said he saw
no similar cruelty all during his
imprisonment.
The suits against the "big delin-
quents"—those owing from $200 to
$1,000—will be filed next week in
County Court. Chandler said. A
total of about 200 suits, covering
about $20,000 in back personal pro-
perty taxes, are scheduled for fil-
ing.
All those against whom the
suits have been filed will have to
pay court costs in addition to their
tax bills, even if they pay their
taxes before their cases come to
trial, the city attorney declared.
Judge Zierlein said the cobrt
costs will be a minimum of $3 50
plus mileage for serving the cita-
tion, if the case is settled before it
Vcomes to trial. If a judgment is
rendered against the, property
owner, he will have to pay from
$7 to $7.50 in court costs in addi-
tion to the judgment, the judges
said.
McKee Sits On Court a
Bench For First Time
Police Chief ft. E. McKee, acting
as temporary corporation court
judge during Judge" O. S. Mc-
Cullough’s illness, held his‘first
Wednesday sourt session.
Four traffic violators were fined,
one was soflt to jail until he could
raise the money to pay the fine,
three fines were suspended.
A bond .posted by a woman was
forfeited, and warrants were is-
sued for several traffic violators
who failed to appear for court.
[gallon
Judge C. Woodrow Laughlin, u 111th district of Duval and Webb
The Civil Jurisprudence commit- counties,
lee took no action on Shireman’s In other developments Wednes-
resolution as it passed it to the full day, the Senate refused. 14 to 15,
Senate for consideration. to suspend the rules to take up
The House Tuesday passed a bill immediately- a controversial pro-
to split up the 79th district's coun- posa[to repeal Texas’ auto inspec-
ties, along with a general reorgan- tion law;. Sentiment against the
ization of the state's judiciary. <See Legislature—Page Four)
What A Crowd!
packed and jammed — full of friend*
Your living room is
who want to help you!
What—you don’t see anyone but the family? Well—we are
all there—talking to you through our “ads” telling ydb how
wo can serve you. Are we "sayitig it right"?
Fill out your Community Survey form so we may know what
you think.
LARGE ADS TODAY
3 Beall Brothers 3
J. C. Penney Co. (P-'J)
i. C. Penney Co. (P-8)
Sears, Roebuck A Co. (P-ll)
Sears, Koehuek Sc Co, (P-12)
Sears, Roebuek & Co. (P-13)
Sears, Roebuck Sc Co. (P-14)
MEDIUM ADS TODAY'
Max Altman's (Ladies')
Max Altman's J.Men’s) ”
Commerce Food Market
vThad Felton
Ferguson Motors, Inc.
Paul Prince Buick Co.
Scott Gas Sc Appliance Co
Sears, Roebuek Sc Co. (P-3)
SMALL ADS TQDAY
Baytown Hardware Co.
Baytown Paint Sc Supply Co.
Black’s Pharmacy St Variety
Willis Cobb Nash Co.
East Texas Theatres
Thad Fenelon
Mike Franssen
Gulf’Coast Yenctian Blind Co.
Humble Station 32
Irene's
Rayborn Johnson Agency
Kerr Insurance Agency
I a) wry Sc Martin Cleaner*
Si Dyers
Moore's Shoe Store
Jim Nelson's Sporting Goods
Odorless Cleaner*. fes.
Robson’s
Sasse's
Security Service Finance Co.
Burk Turner Chevrolet Co.
Whitcomb’s
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 280, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 29, 1953, newspaper, April 29, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041839/m1/1/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.