The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 1937 Page: 1 of 8
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■
-. 41B
FRIDAY, JUJ^
added.
Hi, body wa, remov#d
l»tely from the electric chlH
“Co*^
enate Probers Seek Expose Of Ford, Steel Labor Prai
B‘J|/M»kin8 Sute
Welfare Unit f
AUSTIN, June 4
division of public weift„
thorized a* a part of the J
board of control today, .
Jamea V. Allred ,1^ *
fr the purpose.
The welfare division «U1 m I
created, however, unle*, u^.1
a favorable vote Aug. 2j«J
stitutlonal amendments for Jl
children and needy adau
people. If those amendment.,
adopted the division will tak. ^
place of the- present Tex*,,
organization, the child welfu,,
vision and also handle sis*,]
blind. • •
■FICIALS OF
IMS CALLED
HO TESTIFY
THE DAILY SUN
cast harris-
cooler.
EAST TKXA8—ParOy c^o«id^t4
night .and Sunday, cooler
VOLUME 18—NO. 303
GOOSE CREEK, PELLY, BAYTOWN, L\ PORTE AND SURROUNDING AREA.
SATURDAY, JUNE 5,1
jjvil Liberties Group
[Sleuths On Ground
ITo Determine Cause
0f Union Troubles
Gas Routs Strikers;
Lumberjacks Driven
From Relief Office
Local Man’s Father
111 In Pennsyly
Mr. and Mrs. Edward R.J,
ho live on Market Street l
n Wooster, will leave toniM
Jerlin, Pa., where Mr. Jaar^fl
her, R. W. Jones, is aeriodslt]
Word of the illness of Mr,/J
vas received this morning.
, Mnste civil liberties commit-
^conducting an intensive inves.
-lion of two large steel corpor-
*n(| the Ford Motor com-
y with a view to public- hear-
I fi„ their labor practices, it
j learned today. ’
[Hundreds of subpena’s already
t luon served on officials ond
iployes of the automobile firm,
TWl-irton Steel Corporation and
mblic Steel Corporation. Am-
t those subpenhed is Ernest T.
board chaiman of the Weir-
Proposition For Gym
company. -
Probers On Ground
fto Crack investigators of the
;e body, which is headed by
a* Robeit M. Lalollette, Jr., I.
1 0*1 m ».* are now in Youngstown, 0.,
I W KIV Iinto th cause of the steel
w w ** Kike and friction between the
many and striking members of
Steel Workers’ Organizing 1 Voting was slow today at La
ittde, an affiliate of John I I’orte in the $151,000 bond elec-
*..........~ ’ By-uNrrEi) wtess
There, was fighting on the Ohio steel front today, as 40 sheriff’s
deputies sprayed tear gas on 600 pickets and sympathizers who
sought to block entry of a train into a mill of the Youngstown Sheet
and Tube company at Struthers, O.
Republic Steel corporation, continuing operations despite the
walkout of members of the steel workers’ organizing committee,
sought to obtain delivery by U. S. mail of food and clothing to work
..era still in the plants.
Ford Meeting ('ailed
EMPLOYES AT
REFINERY TO
VOTEMORDAY
Balloting On Naming
Bargaining Council
Will Be Continued
Through Saturday
LA PORTE GIVES
BONDS FOR GRADE
SCHOOL BIG LEAD
ipo
Trails In Light
Balloting
m
Lewis’ C.I.O.
jUFollette pointed out that the
nas did not necessarily mean
; public hearings have been
uled. He said that in some
es, witnesses were subpe-
J wily for "interview’’ purpos-
He added that all present in-
UgattotiB are still °lrt "prelim-
utaKes.”
Alliance Included
[U Follette said the investiga-
|on includes the Citizens’ Alliance
J Minneapolis and St. Paiil.
JNo date has yet been set for
|e next bearings. However, ar-
(Continued On Page 2)
CRASH DEATH
TOLL SET AT NINE
oman And Baby Are
,dded to Seven Men
Who Perish
tion, but early indications pointed
to a sweeping victory for the
000 elementary school building.
In the first 30 votes cast this
morning the first proposition on
the ballot had a 4 to 1 lead. It
was ahead 24 to 6.
Proposition No. 2 calling for an
additional $40,000 to finance cost
of a high school gymnasium and
repairs to the present structure,
was trailing 12 to 16.
A total of 32 votes had been
counted at 1 p.m. with two ruled
The corporation planned to pro-
test again to Postmaster General
James A. Farley against alleged
refusal to accept for delivery "ir-
regular malt”
In Detroit, members of the Unit-
ed Automobile Workers union call-
ed a meeting for 1 p. m. (C8T)
near Henry Ford’s enormous River ,
Rouge plant/ Police took special
Rockefeller-Leaves Estate Ol
$25,000,000 To Daughter;
Others Are N anted AsTrustees
i
Voting among members of the
Empipyes Federation at the Bay-
town refinery of the (Humble Oil
and Refining company in the elec-
tion of representatives to a collec-
tive bargaining council, will start
at 7:30 a.m. Monday. I
The election, which will contin-
ue through to. 5 p.m. Saturday, I
June 12, will be conducted under j
the supervision of Joseph S. My- J
era, commissioner, • representing
It Gan Sain
In Tri-Cities!
If you have forgotten what rain looks like, this is
it on South Goose ('reek street after the two-inch
downpour Friday. It drained off qoickly sad the
ground, parched for 35 days hsd almost absorbed
last traces of moisture oh the ground today....
*0Uiier Grandchildren
And Descendants
Are Barred
!»'
I
■■T
I
precautions to prevent recurrence | the’ Uniud Stateg department * of
of fighting which broke out last
week when union leaders sought
to distribute literature at the Ford
factory.
Tear Gaa Used
At Munsiing> Mich., state police,
armeA with tear gas and guns,
surrounded the Alger county
courthouse to prevent striking
lumberjacks from seizing control
of the relief administration.... Ap-
In Richmond, Cal, U.A.W. mem-
bers in the Ford assembly plant
voted to continue their strike for
union recognition.
;
STRIKERS ROUTED
void by Election Judge M, O. Lam, ,N fA™?.
bly. Clerks assisting in the bal
loting were Mrs. Scott Lovell and
Mrs. Peggy DeWeese,
CLEVELAND, June 5 (U.Pt-She-
riff’s deputies used tear gas to
| dispel 600 pickets and sympathiz-
Although interest seemed slight | ers at a Youngstown Sheet and
REDDING, Cal., June 5 (U.E)—
unidentified woman and her
were added today to the list
8even men who died when a
•bound Pacific Greyhound
careened off the highway,
:umed and burned Friday.- -
C. Bennett, driver of a stage
which passengers were trans-
to the Ill-fated bus, said
iy that he had put a woman
T child about one year old
There was no scheduled
between their point of depart
and the place or the wreck.
>roaer Rov S. Dugglnsaaldit
have been possible for ..the
dies of the woman and baby
I have been consumed in the in-
m heat of the fire which de-
Wed the bus.
[Two other persons known to
Ivebeen in the bus still were un-
pitified today.
Mortlmar Wilson, 45, of Red-
toe driver, was Identified by
badge. Alfred Vessel, 36, ne-
from Marysville, was also In-
definitely among the dead,
/Continued on Page 2)
in the poll, a much heavier vote
during the late afternoon and eve-
ning was in prospect.
The booth is located in the home
economics cottage on the high
school campus. Voting will con-
tinue until 7 o’clock.
ILLNESS FATAL
FOR J. C. LANE
Resident Of Pelly
Dies In Hospital
At Galveston
I -
1. • -
nggcH
round Town
|h toe Tri.ctles: Tommy
up from Ingleslde, re-
acquaintanceships, and
a brand new tie fit to
»n eye out. ,_. and chin-
®wh Capt. Roy Young
imutuci friends . ., V. V.
ivelasKl enjoying himself with,
WcoHee .. . Fred Lintel-
1 investing in 4 new shirt.
_,j* w. Hunt promising to
••wncthlng if he could remem-
Verda Malone getting
:k«d and then having her
‘ quieted . , . Mayor Jim
1 Jelling about the time he
a faat one qo Johnnie
‘ on a deer hunt . , . Jzck
dressed up in a white
Eluding the hat . . .
1 M°rria heading out for
_ K. ear*y ln the day—early
■, T* * v A. W. Fayle remark-
,“»t fishing ought to be
“morrow, what with toe
R owing out of the west.
■ Mike Franssen taking his
to give it an over-
rr« for sanitation,
L- U p°rt«.' Nell Rexroad and
Harold Pfeiffer were
| toe esrly riaers today .. .
Y*raln f°r Texarkana
F,asulla topping f<
feu. ** the rain . .'. Geo.
“““n continues to brag
Herman Waldman’s 8yl-
1 *■«» orchestra.
J. C. Lane, 52, of Pelly, resident
of the Tri-Cities since 1920, died
in a Galveston hospital at 5 a. m.
today after a two-weeks Illness.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p, m. Sunday at the Em-
kens Funeral Home in Texas City
with Rev. Burch, Episcopal rec-
tor at La Marque, officiating.
Burial will be In Broadway ceme-
tery In Galveston.
Survivors Include his wife, Mrs.
Chester Lane; three daughters,
Mrs. O. H. Doigen of Goose
Creek, Mrs. Leah Kirk and Miss
Lily Mae Lane, both of Pelly;!
three sisters, Mrs. John D. Reagan,
Mrs. W. E. Smith and Mrs. Eliza-
beth Blair, all of La Marque; and
five grandchildren.
For toe past three or four
years Mr. Lane had been asso-
ciated with his father-in-law, H.
L. Woodliff, in business in Pelly.
Prior to that he had been an em-
ploye at the Baytown refinery for
seven years. He was a boiler-
maker by trade.
Mr. Lane had been in bad health
with a heart ailment for the past
six months, but his condition did
not become critical .until two
weeks ago.
Tube Company plant today in the
first open clash on the Ohio steel
strike front.
The gassing occurred at Stru-
thers, O., a Youngstown suburb,
labor, under terms of the Wagner,
labor relations act.
To Elect 47
There will be 47 representatives
elected from the 43 divisions. Each
division will be permitted one
representative for each 100 em-
ployes.
Myers will conduct the election
in each division. He will hand out
ballots* receive them after**' the1
voter has made his selection, and
will tabulate the returns. Assist-
ing him will be two men selected
by him from the division where
the balloting is being conducted.
No Names on Ballots
No names will appear on the
ballots. The voter will write the
name of his candidate on the slip.
The high man in each division
will be declared elected if he re-
ceives a majority vote. Otherwise
there will be a run-off election be-
tween the two high candidates.
Only employes who signed for
membership prior to 5 p.m. yes-
Snow, Dust Follow Floods
WHIT* PLAINS, N. Y. June S
The will of John D. Rocke-
feller who (had la Ormond Beach,
Fla., May 23 at toe in of 97, wa#
filed for prohate todajf in the of-
fice of Surrogate William J.
Shells of West Chester county.
The estate was valusd at ap-
proximately $25,000,000.
The entire estate was left to
Margaret Strong de Ceuvaa, a
'granddaughter of toe oU magnate
who is to have the . income during
her Uf^tone. ■,
The petition for prohate wan
signed by John D. Rockefeller, Jr„
one of the executon.
for m
12 OF TOWNSEND
crowd which attempted to
entry of a one-car train into a
sheet and tube mill No one was
injured.
In the tense situation which fol-
lowed the clash, Mayor T. A. Rob-
erts, of Struthers, met with lead-
ers of the steel workers’ organi-
zing committee, who demanded
that deputies be withdrawn from
the Strutherd area. The request
was met.'
Later, when the locomotive re-
turned, leaving the car in the
plant, deputies said pickets melt-
ed a short stretch of track to pre-
vent any further passage over the
same rails.
It was not though that more
than a maintenance man or one or
two others- were inside the - tube
plant when the train entered.
S.W.O.C. leaders contended that
sheet and tube was running in the
train to test whether it could in-
filtrate men to the plant.
The sheriff’s deputies were re-
moved from the strike area in an
armored truck whose plates reach-
ed high enough to protect the of-
ficers from any possible violence as
they crouched within it.
The mayor agreed not to call for
(Continued On Page 2)
a.m. Monday at the main office
building for the division of medi-
cal, miscellaneous salaried employ-
es, technical service, process con-
(Continued on Page 2)
JUNE WEDDING IS
TO BE REHEARSED
Mid-West States Are
. Hit; Roads Bloeked
ASSISTANTS QUIT| Afterward
-- J DENVER, Colo., June 5 <U.P>
Resignations Given ) Floo<i water, snow and dust were
After Attacks On Iehurned together UK,ay in * ncw
Roosevelt I uI,heaval of elements across
__ the Rockies and Middle West,
CHICAGO, June 5 (L'.P)-Twelve I Til° worst ,lufit storm ,)f the Year
of Dr. Francis E. Townsend's I 8WeIrt eastward from G'jymon- 0k
SIMPSON LIBEL
SUIT RESTORED
Case is Put Back On
Docket By Former
\ Mate of Wallie
Webb Greer to Give
Young Pair Free
Rides On Bus
MAYES TAKES BANK POST
AUSTIN, June 5 <U.R>—Wendell
Mayes, Brownwood, t^ay succeed-
ed former Gov. Pat M. Neff, Wa-
co, as chairman of the state paA
board. J. V. Ash, Bastrop, new
member of the board, was made
vice-chairman.
Stocks Close
Courtesy Citizens State Bank
and Trust Company
The Bayshore Bus Lines are go-
ing tp taka the June Bride and
Groom for a ride.
This is not meant In the Chicago
meaning of the term, but rath-
er In the East Harris county ver-
sion.
Webb Greer, owner and oper-
ator of the Bayshore Bus Lines,
will give the young couple to be
married on the stage of toe Ar-
cadia theater two round-trip tick-
ets from tlte Tri-Cities to Houston
good at any time. These tick-
ets will be both for Mr. and Mrs.
X-to-be.
The week-end will be spent ,ln
practices and rehearsals on {.the
stage of the theater with the new
Arcadia manager, Arthur Patur-
eau, ln charge. By Wednesday
night everything will be in readl-
ness for toe big event of toe year.
The wedding vows will be read
by Rev. J. D,jFuller, paator of the
Tri-Cities Baptist church, between
toe first and sec<md shows Wed-
nesday evening, t A capacity
(Continued on P®g* I) _.
highest lieutenants resigned from
his old age pension organization
today because of his “repeated
public utterance8 attacking the
president and hjs administration.’’
Their resignations were an-
nounced^by J. W„ Brintofl, vice-
president and general manager of
the organization while the Cali-
fornia doctor was . speeding fibm
Washington in an attempt to
close the rift in his ranks.
Those who resigned were:
Gilmore Young, national - secre-
•tary-wntf'treastimr^ -r-"*'"”'"”*'
Gilman Beeler, director of the
Townsend National Legion.
Harry B. Presson, manager of
(Continued on Page 2)
lahoma, where the ground
still too soggy to plow
heavy rains.
LONDON. June 5 (U.R)—A slan-
der suit brought by Ernest A.
after } Simpson, divorced husband of the
Duchess of Windsor, against Mrs.
was
A blizzard and the latest spring
snow on record moved out across
the plains. Denver experienced ““T-----
Id and heavy snow-: .restored today to th* high court
Joan Sutherland'fpr remarks he
charges she made abopt him, was
Quiz Asked in Death
of Seaman On Tanker
PHILADELPHIA, June 5 <K»
—Because of warnings that he re-
ceded before boarding the ves-
sel, a Port Arthur, Tex., woman
requested authorities today to in-
vestigate the circumstances of her
husband’s death aboard the Gulf
Refining company tanker, Gulf
Gem* -*^1-
Mrs. Roy M, Moore said she had
received a radiogram that her
husband, quartermaster on the
ship, had died at sea from a ce-
rebra I hemorrhage. Previously,
however* she had received a let-
ter from Moore, she said, in which
he told,her he hqdbeen warned
to leave the ship because of la-
bor trouble. .......—-
Rebels Claim Loyal
Planes Brought Down
SALAMANCA, Spain, June 5
<U.R>—Nationalist sources reported
today that one of their pursuit
squadrons surprised a loyalist
combat squadron trying to attack
three insurgent bombers over
Lemons, southeast of Bilbao,
The report said five loyalist
planes, chiefly of the American
Curtis type, were shot down in
flame#‘ -
La Porte Council At
Work On Budget
54 5-8
£1
14
35 1-4
18 3-4
5 3-4
55 3-8
54
78 1-2
15 8-8
22
National Dairy ...... $£ ***
National Power .—........... * M.
Ohio Oil ..........”
Packard ®
Pure 6il 5-UU........... 11 7*«
Anaconda Copper ...
Cities Service
Commercial Solvent
Consolidated Gas ....
Consolidated OB'—
Curtis Wrtgto
General Motors
Gulf -------—.....
Humble .—.....
Lambert ..........
Lortllard
Allred Spikes Hope For
Farewell Racing Meets
AUSTIN, June 5.-_(UJ!>—A four-year experiment with horse rac-
ing ended today in Texas with a new wave of reform.
Betting at the tracks will be illegal after Gov. James V. Allred
signs the newest act of the legislature Monday, but the law wilt not
be effective until 90 days after the legislative session ends.
Immediately toe governor will submit new bills designed to pre-
~*vent dog racing and haildMok
mid-winter cold and heavy snow
drifts were piled up across Colo-
rado, Montana ' and Wyoming.
Snow irlows- were- hhuled out'again *
the clear the roads.
Flood waters were still roaring
down the arropos of the south-
west, an accumulation of rains
early in the week that turned the
whole dust bowl area into an ex-;
scene of the famous caverns, was
threatened with inundation. CCC
and WPA crews were piling up
sandbags around McMillan dam,
which threatened to crumble and
deluge the town under six feet of
water. Authorities prepared to
submit to martial law during the
evacuation of the inhabitants.
Strong Wind
, Directly across the muddy prai-
ries, the dust came again. The
cloud of dust moved-into Guymon
in a strong northwest Wind, Visi-
bility was limited to a few feet.
Giles Miller, Guymon editor, re-
ported ytesterday, “The dust
is so.bad you can’t see your hand
in front of your face.”
A low pressure area over- the
Texas panhandle and a high pres-
sure area over Western "Montana
were combining to sent the cold
weather east.
Harvest Halted
High winds distributed the frea-
klsh; weather and produced, at La-
mar, Colo., a “dust * tornado,"
which struck in the midst of chil-
ly weather. tore bricks from
the highJ school wall, unroofed
tourist camP cottages, then broke
up arid produced rain clouds »at
Springfield, Colo., 60 miles away.
At Liberal, Kans., a “Mack bliz-
zard” delayed the wheat harvest.
list of cases for hearing.
Last term, .the case-was-vritlc
dffiwrf from the calendar by inu»
tual consent, presumably to get
the coronation end the Duke of J
Windsor's marriage out of the
way first.
Today the case was No. 23 In
This means that it is to be heard
by a picked jury in the king’s
bench division of the high courts
of justice.
In the normal course the case
would not be reached for several
weeks.
In his suit Simpson alleged that
Mrs. Sutherland said at a society
luncheon that he was “well paid”
to permit .the Duchess to diovree
him. Simpson was represented to
The will Is a long document, sad
it ha* three codiclle. -*■ r
A memorandum on th* will ante
issued by Sinclair Hamilton and
Mlzell Wilson, of the tew Him of
Mllbank, Tweed, Hope and Webb,
New York City, attorney*
John D, Rockefeller, Jr.
The memorandum ln ful: i
“Mr. Rockefeller** will is dated
June 2, 1925, and there are three
»codicils dated May 14, 1930, No-
vember 4, 1982, and October 8,
1934. respectively. The fljggtelj
codicil make* a radical change in
the disposition of hie estate.
“Mr. Rockefeller’s reason for
disposing of his estate aa be haa
is explained by the following state-
ment in the codicil of Oct 8,1984:
" ‘ I am setting up this tniet %
for the benefit of my granddaugh-
ter, Margaret, and bar <1mii$ 'M
ant* to the endmleB eg my oth-
er grandchildren and their
cendants because wnen the time, a
came that 1 felt It wise to place J
upon my children the responslbti- M
ity of owning and administering
substantial muni and for thgt pur-
(Continued on Fags 2) ' 4 *3
EXTRA GIRLS ARE
lemoNPARfli
Studio Efnploye lg
Named As Attacker 'J
at Ranch House
'MSI
LOS ANGELES, June 5 (UB—
District Attorney Burqp Fitts
questioned movie extra girls today
about a gay “hayloft party where
Patricia Douglas, 20, said she was
assaulted, ?•; iH
He said the plump, curly-haired
actress had Identified a movie stu-
v j* . .. . <Ho ealesman as her attacker,
be angry at the role, into which complaint* were mad* In affidx-
pntinaridA hde frirndA film fiwrl I....... . . ... _ - - JK
reticence has forced him, and to by uot-h,
be determined to go through with hinge* Wyatt, another estm Sg
his suit,
who described the party li "th* :|
^wildest I ever eaw,”........-
BRIEFSl^l^r^
oht by the atodlo, presumably to' »
go to work on a picture. They %,
were told to appear in cowgirl and %
Spanish costumes. They report-
ed it . the studio, they said, and
were taken to a ranch house whara
the studio was entertaining its
voting ealeemen. The gptl
were paired off with the 1
( HRISTOBAL, C.%, June
5 (UJ!) - The Untied State*
army tnuwport-frelghtor Lad-
lngton, carrying a eargo of
explosive*, arrived today, af-
ter a race to port wMh^ aa
apartment fire WMf ho|S ______............ , ,
This Are tug TavwmBla stood they ear then
La Porte aldermen today had
gocony Vacuum.................... 19 1*2
Standard, N, J, ................. fMf1
Texas ...........—------------------ 60 1-8
new budget
— * .[to 4
last nignt
started work on
after a lengthy
at the
draw up the budget himself.
Mayor Sharp said It will be sev-
eral weeks before th* new finan-
completed.
Tidewater fp;
TXL------------
T P C O ....
9.06*......
u. s. Shi
Amer.:
10 7-8
■it
t~..... »l-2
partment appropriation bUl, effec-
T,----------- Wilson A Co, ■■!>,,
dal guide for the coming year Is 8unray Oil .........-—4 1-8
La. Land
IS M
Production Of Oil
For Week vis Lower
■..........
HOUSTON, June 6 <U.Rl~ The
nation’s oil wells flowed an aver-
age of 83,400 barrels daily less
during the past week than in the
previous period, .Mtelritar to-**-_________ _____Pfll
timates released today by the Oil itate racing commission.
Weekly which said that further
"SfartfaSih--
tion for the _ peril
was estimated at 2
daily, or 196,175 more than the
figure recommended by the U. S.
Bureau of Mines for June.
GONZALES, June 5 (UE)-The
rain-swollen Guadalupe r 1 var
climbed to 20 feet today, two feet
below flood stage, and residents
Hope* that either Arlington watched report* from June 5 (m
Down* or Epsom ,D<»*mi ^........ * |mA|
work In a short faU meet before
by while the hatches wen «tt*
battened but nothing happen
4
" >■ ■■■•»-,
WASHINGTON, June 5
<U.R>—The office of S«. Car-
ter Glass, D„ V*-, announced
today that Mbs. (Has* died
last night after a long Uteees
at the Glass tome to Lynch-
burg, Va.
"" . 1"" . .ft ■’
with liquor and 1
the hay
mow.”
Mis* Doug** complained that
one of An salesmen knocked her
(Continued «ct Fags I)
Mayor of Watt Texas
Town U (km Victim
PATER, June 5
the San Marco# river on which a
River observers predicted that
he will strike from the de- m Quadalupe would reach 25 feet
ochool girts were drowned to-
day near Ptonita when their
boot capsized on too take top-
ing a thunderstorm.
' Of a second ‘ ‘
three I
night la a shooting on
street at Roacoe.
Physicians ptephred to operate
to remove two bullets from
body of Parker, who has I
- Roscoo for 17 *—
Down, at
----- wag vttSned in a winter
meet the full 60 *
year aUowed a licensed track. Ar-
lington Downs and Epsom Downs
split their time bolding 30 day
(Continued on Page 2)
astw. -
feet before damaging com and
cotton crop* hi the bottomlands.
The San Marco. Joins the
fuadalupe here, however, and, It
was feared that its burden may
over-tex the tatter, m No heavy
rains In either watershed were re-
portiK! today.
WASHINGTON, June 5
<UJ!>—-President Rooncvelt out-
lined to boose leader, today a
seven,point legislative pro-,
graro—taciadiag both judicial
and governmental reorganlza-
he doslna passed
night watchman
Parker dismissed
held in jail
pending an
Justice of 1
at 1
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Pendergraft, W. L. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 1937, newspaper, June 5, 1937; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1095455/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.