The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 201, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 6, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
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TUI DAILY SUN-00081 CREEK, TEXAS
SATURDAY, FEftB
CITY MARSHAL Ed Wcksns to
concerned about motorist* who fail
to heed the waminf of seresmln#
•Irene on ambulances, fire trucks
and officer* caw.
When an ambulance made * run
Friday It narrowly mtoaed a car
driven out of a ride atreet into it*
path Marshal Dickens aald,
I" “It la illegal for cars other than
wnbulancee, Are truck* and police
automobiles to be with
aurena." he said. “All ot these ve-
htclcj have the right-of-way when
on An emergency run. They have
sirens -and sirens are prohibited
on regular car* and truck* In or-
der that ordinary traffic may be
warned of their approach suffi-
ciently far ahead to give time to
dear their path,
"It Is the duty of all drivers to
pull up to a curb and stop until
the vehicle sounding a siren has
passed. Failure to do so to a vio-
lation of the Jaw."
The reason for this law to clear
and sensible.
To clear the path of ambulances,
lira Uucks and poWee cifs ti*to
protect driver* of the emergency
vehicles and the lives of other
drivers. But it ha* another pur-
pose. It permits the emergency
vehicles to make faster speed with
comparative safety.
* Often a minute or two differ-
ence in the time taken on an am-,
balance run Is the difference be-
tween life and death for the vic-
tim. 9Loss of time for a fire truck
.might result in a serious biase.
Time often is Just as Important to
an officer.
Marshal Dickens says the ambu-
lance that almost collided with a
oar Friday was not making execs-
rive speed. -
•* The officer warned that persons
Who fail to pull out of the path of
emergency vehicles in the future
will be prosecuted.
THE DAILY SUN
■Msnd as SMSMl *Uss matter at At Q*m* Or*#k, Texas, pa*
m mUm Om
Ml «r .Omens* March 8, 1117.
Ip Mail; ffcM T«
Wsak I At;
Ms MsaOi, Payable la A#»i
Danin
11.24; Tsar |4JB.
Katas By Cantet
Six Months
United Pro** Win bsrvto
Kiag Festers* SyadJsaU and CsatraJ
Prsn Ssrvtss
Natl anal Representative: Texas Daily Pros* League, Dallas Tsaaa
WHOLE-HEARTED EFFORT: Whatsoever thy hand flndeth to
do. do II with thy might; for there |s no work, nor device, nor
knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest
tastes 9:10. . >
Eccles-
For The Public To Pay
Th« demand of the “Big Five" railroad brotherhoods for a 20
per cent wage increase, coming a* this does in the midst of the union
controversy affiliating the automobile industry, scarcely adds to the
national sense of well-being. * . 1
At-least, however, in this esse there will be no Itrike and no
stoppage of rail transportation, until the remedies provided in the
Railroad Labor Act have been exhausted. Either side may appeal
to the Board of Mediation, or the latter may proffer ita services, in
any dispute. If they can agree to arbitration, that too is provided for,
and as a last resort the issues in controversy may be referred to
the President.
Bcrwvll:;W this procedure worked on the whole that rail strikes
'have Wen few, and national rail strikes conspicuously absent, since
the act was adopted in 1926.
As for the equities involved little may lie said beyond the fact
that the rail companies are beginning to eftrn profits, and rail labor,
being human, is demanding a share. It must be noted, however, that
the railroads are one of the relatively few national Industries which
now are paying pre-depression wages. The 1932 wage cut was re-
stored in 1934 and, since' then, railroad men have been paid according
to the same wage rates, if not always the same annual wage, that
they had before the 1929 crash.
From the public’s standpoint it is to be noted, also, that per-
sonnel costs, ineluding salaries as well as wages, constitute over 60
per cent of thf opsrating 'charges of the average railroad. If
wage increase results from the present Remand, some of it is quite
apt to be reflected in time in the living costs of the general public,
SWEEPING IT AWAY!
Just when we were becoming accustomed to using “Sino" for “Chin-
ese” we have to start fresh remembering that “Madrileno” means a
citizen of Madrid, Spain.
PRESIDENT RODS ICVELT’S
proposa! for court reform, includ-
ing a request for authority to In-
crease the number of justices on
the supreme court, probably is the
moat discussed topic in the United
Stales today!
Whether you believe the presi-
dent was justified in his request or
not, you can not deny he has had
provocation,
.. Time after time rulings of the
court have nullified laws which he
believes to be necessary in his
campaign to “restore government
to the people."
Those folk who say they are tired of seeing the picture.of Head G-
Man J. Edgar Hoover in the newspapers should remember that
Hoover's photo makes racketeers a lot sicker.
What’s What
IK WASHINGTON
BY CHARLES P. STEWART
It is probable he feels the last
Stand is being made against in-
trenched greed and that anything
that is going to be done for the
masses must be done during his
term in office.
Froth this standpoint, any move
that is legal appears to be justi-
fied.
IF CONGRESS passes his bill
and permits the president to add
six justices to the court, it will
that tribunal has been increased.
As President Roosevelt pointed
out in Ms message, it has ranged
from the original five, to ton
members.
Set up in 1789 with six mem-
bers, it ".-was reduced to five
3801. The congress of 1807
creased the membership to seven
and it was further increased to
\ nine in 1837. It reached its peak
: membership in 1863 and was re-
jN dared to seven in 1669- The pres-
ent membership of nine was set
Pjttplfai 1869 —
in the light of there facta, the
ety of those opposed to the re-
quest that a sacred _
abqut to be. wrecked will fall rath-
er flat. ■
ire*......
WASHINGTON, I). C.—A dictatorship undoubtedly has its good
points an certain emergencies!
If the fashion in which President Roosevelt has exercised his power
(maybe to some extent extra-legally) to meet the mid-western and
mid-southern flood situation hasrt’t been dictatorial nothing ever has.
Heaven knows that conditions have been almost unbelievably ter-
rible anyway. Also, however, only heaven knows how much worse they
would have been but for the president's promptness and energy in
dealing with them.
Of course it has been ^manifestation of- dictatorial methods which
no one is inclined to criticize adversely. Nevertheless, one would not
wish to see it broadened ami continued indefinitely.
This is not to imply the ghost of a suspicion of such a thought in
President Roosevelt’s mind, but it does give an idea of the way in
which dictatorships probably get started; an awful state of affairs
exists, a strong man takes it in hand and saved a whole population.
&mm I FORGET
I. Tht tmlmmefOomUr. tbtfnUojJu* tbaUfm; Iff!
JI Thtday that you rmumhtr, tbt Jay ibal / forpt-Suwburn, I
COmiQHT—RKUXKD SV CXUTSAl. PRMS ASSOCIATION
read this mart _
Janet Paynter. newly married to •
xecond-rate actor, Joel Faynter, phoee
mow *«au?i,.cis,^i?^SL5u?r2
from an old friend, Harry Devan ter, a
Him eeout, reorienting a screen toft for
Ihe
V
continue working and then conceals the
fact he has boen playing the role of
gigolo at a cocktaU bur because he can
Una nothing elae. Joel 1» elated when
rtoittgh^ofJoEi.uc^fr.
in test. Be does not know that the
^KTlie does not know that t
aid wasJOtendedJor her—not for hti
.for her ... .......
Janet proves to be Joet’s inspiration
d HOW 60 UW WITH THE STORY:
fU/err/cc-
CONTRACT BRIDGE
WHITEN FOR CENTRAL PRESS
By E. V. SHEPARD
FAMOUS BRIDGE TEACHER
THE SAFEST CALL
A WEAK no trump and eminent
support for partner's call, espe-
cially when that suit is a major,
makes his suit the safest call, as
wag Um case with this hand,
4843
4 J 10 5 4 2
4 A3
4843
4 J 1065 2
496
4KQ4
4 A 6 4
M
2 *
s.
4 A K ft
4K3
49865
4Q10 9T
407
4AQ87
4 J10 7 2
4KJ2
— -Naturally miittons are grateful to him. Then, If he is that kind of
Bidding went: South, 1-N6
Trump, at best a poor opening bid,
especially with a partner who will
open bidding third hand op a fair
suit and two quick tricks, or a
good suit and .even one and a half
quick tricks; North, 2-Spades;
South should have bid 3-Spades
and allowed partner to complete
the game call, if able to do so, as
North would have done, but he
went 2-No Trumps, whereupon
North bid 3-No Trumps.
The opening lead was the 4 of
hearts. Dummy played low. East’s
Ace won. The return lead was the
7 of hearts. Declarer was in with
the K. He ran three high spade
honors, then he led a lew diamond.
West picked. Dummy’s Q won.
Two added spade tricks were run.
To avoid going down two tricks,
dummy’s Ace of clubs was taken
at the ninth trick, forcing West to
let go a low heart, but the K of
clubs, Ace of diamonds and two
heart tricks belonged to defenders,
setting the contract a trick. Had
West gone up with his Ace of dia-
monds and led hearts, declarer
would have gone down only one
trick, as four heart tricks and one
diamond trick would have been
taken.
Had Smith supportgd his part-
ner’s spades, game would have' re-
sulted. The opening lead almost
certainly would have been a dia-
mond, which West would have won
with his Ace. West’s most natural
return lead would have been a
club, in hopes that East held
either Ace or K. North would
have let the trick run to dummy’s
Q-10-9, and East would have won
the second defensive trick. Then
or later another defensive trick
would have been lost to the Aco of
Jiist yielding game at
spades, or two tricks more than
South was able to make with his
3-No Trumps.
CHAPTER 9
THE TELEPHONE rang Imper-
atively and Janet Paynter teetered
on the table where she had been
trying to stand quietly the last
fifteen minutes. “Catch it, please,
Mrs. Birney,” she said to that lady
as she let herself down gingerly.
She caught up the velvet folds of
•her gown as she did so.
' “Hello, darling," she said to Joel
and rolled her eyes ceiUngward;
Her voice was gay enough, “Not
a thing yet. Don’t be impatient.
It's only a week . , . well, have it
your way then, it’s ten days but
you know how those people are.”
There was a hint of mischief in
her voice as she said demurely,
"Couldn’t I call you at the studio
if there were any news? No? All
right. Try to be patient.’’, -
j "My, goo’ness," Mrs. Birney
shifted the pins in her mouth and
; picked up her chalk. She was short-
ening Janet’s blaek velvet dinner
dress to street length and causing
Janet no small compunctions. Janet
i had loved that dress but she had
jno smart new frock and she needed
. This one badly for daytime use.
j’That husband of yours acts more
like a bridegroom than any man I
ikriow. That’s the second time he
I has called you this afternoon.’’
Janet stood very still. "Don’t
jmake it too short,” she said and
continued, "Joel Isn't calling me
ljust to talk to me. He’s going
'frantic waiting to hear how his
.screen test came out. He tele-
phones me three times every after-
Virt/xt-. nnrl trollo m A nmilTT/l AS
“Joel Isn’t calling me just to talk to me.”
were to re-enter It again at times whatever the uncertain I
4Q8 3
4 A 4
4 J 7 3
48 Q J82
4K J72
4 J 10 6 2
4 10 9 5 2
47
N.
5.
49 6 4
49853
♦ Q6
49653
4 A 10 5
4KQ7 '
♦ A K 8 4
4 A 10 4
South Is declarer. The contract
Is 7-No Trumps, doubled by West.
The opening lead is the 2 of
hearts. Before tomorrow see
whether you can fulfill the contract
against the best defensive play.
-#—
a strong man, that it will be best for everyone concerned if he prolongs Rf*l$On
the system into a permanency. v
Ultimately
-ttot be the first ttine the slze of And^jfa awhile, probably (he millions agree with him, but ulti-
mately they usually tire of it.
Well, the foregoing merely is an abstract discussion of dictator-
ships. It is a commonplace that a benovolent despotism is mightly ef-
ficient, but can it be guaranteed to stay benevolent?
The point is:
President Roosevelt’s flood dictatorship has been a dandy.
it has been the worst flood since Noah, but the best handled.
/ , Ample Authority
As army and navy commander-in-chief the president had ample con-
stitutional authority to mobilize these two branches of the national
service for relict purposes.
The coast guard equally is subject to his mandate.
The WPA, the PWA and-the CCC likewise!—all these are under
immediate presidential jurisdiction. ' s - '
: Likewise^ the public health service—tremendously essential in such
cases.
SFtK money to fihanec the operations of these various agencies?
They had, indeed, the caah available. It was appropriated by con- «
grossj however, for other purposes. President Roosevelt is spending it, yea -old woman, have been indiet
Today’s
Yesterdays
not necessarily as designated, but as he sees fit—for flood relief. Con-
gress will acquiesce—that is a certainty. But it is a safe bet that J.
Raymond McCarl, if he still occupied the post of federal comptroller
general, would have overruled such bllfis, as technically illegal
In short, the president is acting dictatorially—and “getting away
with IL”
Grab Bag
Cells Waits At End Of
Rocky Road For Youngest Father
though I had something up my
sleeve.”
i "1 can take some of this skirt
and put little cap sleeves Into this
dress and it’ll make it look like
new,” Mrs. Birney answered, the
train of her thought obvious. “But
now how do you feel about having
a handsome feller like that out
there in Hollywood with all the
beautiful, wicked movie stars?” -
"Wicked? 1 grant that most of
them are beautiful but 1 am not
sure that they’re wicked ahd why
shouldn’t 1 feel anything but
happy about it?” Janet answered
reasonably.
Mrs. Birney sat back on her
heels. “Ysu can’t fool me, Mrs.
Paypter. You're home-body and
not one of those fly-by-night brides
most of my boys bring home. I've
known you now for six months and
I’ve heard you singing and cook-
ing and fussing around up here
and, mark my words, you’ll be hap-
pier this way than you’ll ever be
with Rolls Royces and them other
things,
“Now, don’t you worry about
that, Mrs. Birney. I can take my
Rolls as well as the next girl if I
have to. And think how nice it Janet was to find her love in a man
FORT WORTH, Feb. 6, <U.E>— here Dec. 19
The paths of Pauline and Henry! The unhappy wedded life of
Birt Mullins, Tarrant county a, paujine ancj Henry ended in a di-
youngest parents went separate aeveral monthg The
ways today. Pauline was re-mar-'
rled and her ex-husband awaited , Couple was married at 13, became
transfer to a reform school. ' ' j parents at 14, and were divorced at
Records revealed that 16-year- 16. A daughter was bom Nov.
old Pauline Mullins, twice a moth-
er, was married to J. B. Inman, 23,
, . k ***! . ..
1. Name the city situated at the junction of the White and Blue
Nile rivers in Egypt.
2. What epochal event occurred in Spain last February?
EIGHT INDICTED
IN DRUNK DRIVING
Eight persons, including one 25-
19, 1934, and a son in June, 1936.
Until the first baby arrived, the
two lived Jiappily. A few weeks
later they quarreled and were re-
conciled, but only after the hus-
band had7 threatened his father-in-
law. They quarreled again in
was sentenced to a reformatory on
charges that he struck his wife
with a hammer.
The husband was paroled to his
father and Pauline got a divorce.
Then the grand jury indicted the
father tor non-support of his two
ed for driving while intoxicated by
the grand jury today;
Mrs. Clara Robinson, 35, was,
charged after she was said to have JvWldreTl.
forced Henry Beats, Houston, The youthful father and two
the j companions were arrested last
• month at Arlington on charges of
[p Pritchell Was charged in
{connection with ag'pccident* in
"*■ iuuuPi?,
Houston, on Jan
6. Johnson, 9), was arrested
January 12 three miles out on the
Galveston highway by state high-
indiet4T
Federal authori-
deaires to notify friends,
the temporary tutoress
; -r----fmr
m
jwfr-
way patrolmen. He was
A 34-year-old negro,
Blunt, was indicted after
said toRave been in a eolliston mt
fTRumble highway January 21. . ,
*t telephone road imd
19- dg Pope
counterfeit!
tics gave custody on charges to the
county, because of fats youth,1V *
Yesterday, Heniy Birt calmly court reforms,
puffed a cigarette aa & county
dburt revoked Ms parole given aft-
er the hammer-beating epiaotfe and
■!!v'r 'l;'W
will be not to make over clothes.
And think how wonderful it will be
for Mr. Paynter.”
Mrs. Birney sighed dolefully. “I
hope you’ll be saying the same six
years from now.”
"Oh, I will,” Janet said blithely
enough.
Six years from then! Those
years seemed far away to Je °t
then. She had been a bride but
six months yet she seemed to have
been married to Jbel all her life.
The things that had .filled her life
—her work, her home, her owjn cir-
cle of friends—all these had been
like a dream In these last months.
She pondered on it wondering what
alchemy love wrought In a woman
that Sill the things that had been,
all the influences, the desires, the
work of living her daily Ute. could
dlSSCiye 'Tnto hb®ngneM to the
-rpsehce of her new love... ,
Long later Janet was to* realize
They receded and remained in the
background of her life, but they
diverse, times , when she needed
them and times when she would
have put them out of her thinking,
Had Janet taken out the things
that made up her life and laid them
out for herself to value she would
have found herself poor in the
things a bride might have called
important. She had no home that
was truly hers. She hadn’t even
had a new frock since she was
married. She had an uncertain
economic present and a future that
might have been filled with riches
and glamor or might as well have
been poor. And but a continuance
of living as ,-she had been from
crisis to crisis, as Joel progressed
from one short-lived engagement
to another,
But she had faith in him, rather
than in his ability. She did not
believe that Joel was a great actor
but she believed that he knew what
he was doing* knew his own capa-
bilities and that the desire to act,
to portray the drama could not
have been so big had it not been
justified.
You might have thought, had you
known Janet those years after Dr,
MacLeod had closed his office for
the-last time and come to the end
of his life five years before, that
Janet was to follow in the foot-
steps of her’ people. Good, quiet
women, married to responsible,
conventional, prudent men. Wom-
en who might have stretched a dol-
lar and darned, their husband’s
socks and done it with dignity. But
you would never have thought that
in store for her with Terry 0
And if her laugh , was not *3
on her mobile mouth, her 1
was staunch and her eyesl
ever upward with iinrl>mt»^J
where her Terry's head waril
clouds. And her manner v
anchbred to the ground 1
small feet served for two. '1
Janet was like' Felicity]
could encourage, she, could j
and she could comfort
pacity was deep and for 1
small stature, she was soul
could weigh her balances and!
the storms in her life were f
nent, she held the wheel 1
itn 1
who would offer her a gypsy ex-
istence, who would have leaned on
her rather than- have been the one
who should have been the stronger
of the two. *
Felicity Burns would have smiled
in that quiet beyond had she
known. Felicity, 4ho had the look
of the wind on the moors In her
eyes, had never seen the great
granddaughter who was to heed a
call she had heard herself some
sixty years before. Felicity had
followed that call and the laughing
eyes of an Irish lad to America.
Felicity’s son, Ian, had married
a Scotch lass and their daughter,
emotions with a,stcady hand, 1
She thought., of Felicity, i
she had never known, duiMj
days when she' and Jbel wmj
ing to hear the outcome <
screen test.
“Joel," she said to him on|
those days, "why do you 1
so much!
"T6 buy you pretty thinpl
To put money in the brill
travel and see the world, j
to have to 'worry about I
meal. Never to see my Jaaefjf
ing another lamb stew."
laughed. (
Janet was very grave,
can’t be the real reason, Jti|
“No, it isn't,” he saidj
smoke rings contemplative!}!
I feel like a fool when I tryf
about the things inside me. j
things have a lot to do I
There are roles I'd like toj
Great, inspirational roles! T
tores are doing great f
giving great opportunities
terpretation, for the exp
an art. I’d like to do them,!
I’d like to play great parte.]
laugh at this, darling, Td
do Hamlet!” '
Janet didn’t laugh. She!
proud of him. He wanted}
press something he felt WJ
ed to create a character c"*
man the same way a | “
ated a scene out of
paints. Acting had
thought, rather incoherent!.
"And so you will,” she saiol
“And you, my queen, ikjjdj
a satin cushion for youL’
Janet, had married the fiery little a ™ ‘f"": p- fl
physician, Angus MacLeod, but the a carriage of chromiu ^
OlCiUJI, Xllig uo iUUVlTOvU, vu v v**v
Irish strain and Feiicity’s answer
had persisted7 and blossomed the
day that Janet MacLeod had seen
the rangy length of Joel Paynter
making his way to her across a
*“"• “» Long later janet was to realize smoke-filled drawing room-. „
February last year aMJififlar-.BitL - - tort throe" thing* tfd'nrt-tfMWWgr BTOffTwRii her iiftTe leath
trunk and her heart filled with
love, had not been afraid to face
and never again will J*?.|
fingers touch kitchenware
sew a fine seam tod ..eat*™
ries and ’ream.” _
"Janet had a sinkingdw
tfiat was just what she
to do.7' And that wasted*1
on earth she wanted,
(To Be Continued)
COMMENTS UPON
ROOSEVELT PLAN
By UNITED PRESS
Hearty approval and vigorous
denunciation, greeted President greater power than ever before
H. Snell, R„ N. Y.: The New, Deal j it might delay rather than
has wrecked the economic Stabil-
ity of the nation and it is seeking
to undermine the judiciary.
Senate Minority Leader Charles
L. McNary, R., Ore.: It involves
the transfer to the president of
Rboseyelt's proposals for federal!held over the judiciary.
Sen. William Gibbs McAdoo. D„
Norris; Ind„
Typical comment! ...............
Congressional— . Cal.; The message receives my un-
M ««rge
*”*■«*»
calls attention of the country to an
of the Capitol’s
reserved commendation. The con-
gress will, in my opinion, comply
promptly with the president's rec-
ommendations.
rorSJtm..jl».k
its work to have so md"?
to; materup their Winds-
Bainhridge Colby, ,f»r
tary of State: It w *
shameful day in the hu
United States. I «seroe
ther expression o«
ing and, tragic develop™*
Former Sen. James A-
Missouri, nations! W
Democrat: I am hornWj
surprised. In comrow
other Jeffersonian pw ]g
rying on their
repeatedly warneo
Mr. Bwsev
g-g......^'SStI
te program seemd to be for f:
“all right” while there
he could] not support.
Pope enjoyed a good night’s rest tJce) WiJijam Howard Taft
than on amyj toe same
Tomorrow the Pope will broad
, first time 1
infamous ■
goung B. Smith,'
seemd to be j for t
to but '
Instead
of the con-
these propo:
hmitti’d to tto
Frederick Sti
cast a message to the eucharistlc
Nicholas Rodriguez, 17, was in-
dicted for having failed to stop snd
Sen. Arthur H, Vandenberg, R„
y ao not
as a result of an accident
mThaiS tL«j Mirti"'%
improvement in the Pope's condi-
tion, his aides were afratd the Cmo- dbjebtfve Is'described
tlonal strain might again cause a jSitie bf words,
set-back. “
I am in favor of the president’s %a,1?ehd“ent' ,
proposal. - • 11 ’f “ow proposed to make chang- '
such meti
— mates eoimectiire’-^riHr*>’ 1
agree to packing the supreme
court no matter how adroitjyjhe.
‘ ‘ In amtolL
a-r-:--.
constitution 1 ^
not 1
accident in the 300 block of Prrt
1 ton avenue January 8.
power of the executive. ' presented. ^
Norton D. Baker* war-time seii-'erlcan
retary of war; li seems to me that <luel wil1 ...
a supreme court of 15 men would was just a mue
But,!
probably-
“r,u“,,wr
• .j
KPtfj
ton3*]
| In tb<’ h'tj
j given
t board,
(tasquvtl
[ *IU varl|
> apP,,"l|
1200 gl
J(nd thl
1 member]
F escorts.
tor-spr t''l
fmembcrJ
f wives: Dl
n; Mr.
; the tv
Jgalone ai|
■ end Mrs.
i.H. S.
Liiry Mae I
, Sargrtvl
4 Grace 11
■ >' I
, of ceren
ace other
toast I
tors, John
|t of the scl|
1 senior aw
11 senior, w|
Tors, andR.
tobert E. L|
Hit their
’ will I
mtation of|
Lowma
vtties will
I Humphi' y.l
' will be
| sextet,
s Hazel e|
|ctor of the
sized into [
(sets of offii]
Jessie !
Sr, heads thl
■ with hi
Bley, drill Cl
lieutenantl
|nd lieutenl
drum si
1, bugle sel
the social gif
Bley, Other|
(lips, vice-
amlett,
|ce Funderbul
e organizatl
fontest spool
Utes, stude|
tort E, Lee
Hre Dance I
ioyed By
|he square d;|
tag at Trini j
fibers of the |
ice_League
| as "very si
(cially and sof
ley, Jr., pres)
About
bt7 ,
pare danciJ
the even
of dancing
Jnission.” Ref|
fed by Mrs.
, Bielstein,
Bielstein,
ribeth Zier
|et sales and
Webb, in
[ the evening,
fibers of the
tue.
I derived
| be used by t
vice League 1
Iwhich they h
fbenten affairl
[League,
Mann T
1 Founders
program
dens’ day
febf’a Night” I
Mann Par]
i.Thursda
short busii
by a con
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m
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 201, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 6, 1937, newspaper, February 6, 1937; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095430/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.