The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 155, Ed. 1 Monday, December 9, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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EMBER 7,
SERVICE
pNS ! ! !
and Used
We
Sell. Trade
ALLIN’S
loo* Creek 8t
SURFACING
tmsiung
r Like Them
—Estimates
ire You Do Your
noon
w floor co.
OooMCn«
SERATION
Sale* and Seal*
ERICSON
ition Sendee
o«4 Woo%
0oo5.ru
^nd Used
PARTS
and Truck*
TO WRECKDjo
Phone M|
■ET CLEANER*
Clean
Type*
Upbeietery
1024J.
TO PARTI
|U.
PARTS
u»
K Creek 8t
i m
ITURE
UTERINS
REFINISE
TRAINED-
TUBES
AVAILABLE
RADIO CO.
«*c Creek
076JX.
tdlo Service*
d Delivery
■tANSFER
se ca
cm Am .
ns Dtetance
H '
ITS CO
hmSb wttS
1 our Servipi
Experienced
inechu-1
STOCK
PAPO
ROOM
npany
phdMl
ICREEi
ERVK
ODOM
Owning
!•’ 1 '
eathk
•>*r**5' cloud> to cloudy with
iid**ly Kcallered shower* tonight Bnd
Not ntueh change in tempera-
fcure. Moderate to frenh »mith to »outh-
jt wind*.
fOL. 29 NO. 155
ODe Bail
GOOSE CREEK, TEXAS. MONDAY, DECEMBER?, 1946
i,x Bodies Unidentified- FrdllCO DeffcS
TLA NT A HOTEL DEATH TOLL Interference
TANDS AT 120; 89 HURT
Of UN
BIRNS BENNETT Work of the doctor* and nurse*
TLANTA, Ga., Dec. 0, — u.rl for the most part now is Just rou-
k seared bodies, two cremated tine. But red-eyed, exhausted un-
|rn beyond sex Identification, re- dertakera and mortuary workers
dined unclaimed today as offl- still labor unceasingly. Many of
moved to prevent a repeti- them had only short periods of res-
of the tragic, early-morning pite since the swift catastrophe of
.se which claimed 120 perions Atlanta's “second terrible Decem-
l gutted Atlanta’s 15-story “fire- ber 7th."
.oP Winecoff hotel. Representative* of underwriter
Even as the death list was be- firms, fir# prevention and build-
constantly checked, physicians er’s groups, Insurance Inveatigat-
fcr.'d it might still mount from ors, and fire department officials
> list of *9 persons scattered from throughout the nation joined
oughout hospitals, suffering In a minute, room-by-room check
i shock, burns, asphyxiation of the fire-blackened hotel skele-
injuries received when they ton.
nped from window*.
fcKNARDO SEGALL, Brasilian
ni*t, will be presented at *
today at Robert E. Lee high
boot auditorium under the su-
er* of the Trl-Citle* Civic Mu-
I association. The .South Amer-
i is hailed by crlties a* one of
world'* out*landing music-
iberal Demos'
ip Program
Opposition From ;
is, Special Interests
TIN, Dec. 0 -CW - Unequal-
opportunities to promote .he
[fare of Texas by proper use of
nrsl resources will be in the
ds of the 50th legislature, rep-
tntative-eleet Jim Wright of
0therford, told the People’s
[Mature committee here Satur-
night.
The city council’s fire ccmmit-
Former German
Ocean Liner 1$
Sunk At Le Harve
French-Owned Vessel
Damaged In Collision
tE HAVRE, ,Dec. 9. -a’Pi-The
40.746-ton liner Liberte, formerly
the German Atlantic speed champ-
ion Europa, tank on it* starboard
side in the Le Havre harbor
day after a storm-tosaed
French officials of 0
pagnie Generale trans-Al
new ow ners of the liner, a
was good hope of pumping
refloating the water-filled
The Liberte was wren,
its moorings at 11 p. m.
a gale, blown across the
basin in three minutes and
ed into the overturned hulk of
the wrecked liner Paris.
A hole was torn in the Liberies
side at engine room level.
Two Houstonians
Die In Wrecks
tec met today. Special coYnmlttce*
from the National Fire Prevention
association and the National Con-
ference of Building officers also
are making exhaustive studies of
the carnage
Unofficial theories for the blase
include spontaneous combustion.
Somwherc perhaps there were
oily rags in a maid's closet. There
were also supposed to be paint sup-
plies left over from recent woik.
A guest reported yesterday that
he mw aparki In the elevator shaft
several days ago He believed It
was from a short-circuit. Hotel of-
ficial* have not commented.
(See Six Victims, Page 2)
100,000 Spaniards
Gather In Mass
Protest Meeting
MADRID, Dec, 9. — (UP.)—
Generalissimo F r a n c i sco
Franco, speaking from the
balcony of Oriente palace to
a mass meeting or 100,000,
persons said today that Spain
would not tolerate foreign in-
terference in Spain’s internal
affair*.
The meeting was summoned as
Nation's Industry Pkks
Speed As Coal Strike Ends
—-*-—-
Lewis Is Confident Of Victory
Mine Chief Faces Three-Way Fight
•ON, Dec. 9. — <EE>-
began reopening today
aftes an 18-day strike shutdown,
leaving the temporarily vanquished
Unlwd Nations dollborntlono on the „„„„ „„ United Mm,
Spanish question. workers
Franco attacked all "enemies of Lawis was boxed in on one side
our cruaade, Singling out In par- b , government attack in the
Ocular Premier Jose Giral of the ^ on another by the threat
Spanish republican government in
of labor legislation from an an- avert a strike pending a ruling on
gry congress, and on still another Lewis’ contract termination rights,
by a deep split among coal mine He held Lewis and the union in
owners. contempt of court when they Ig-
Thc next step in the court battle nored a restraining order requir-
was expected to be a decision by ing them to call off the strike. The
the supreme court to take juris- contract termination dispute pre-
diction of the case. But even with- : ably will reach the supreme court,
such swift action, a final rul- too.
exile.
The United Nations, he said,
have questions of peace to settle
but Spain has the right to benefit
from her internal victory without
interference from the outside.
The protest day was organized by
government supporters who warn-
ed that the present menace Ut
Spain’s sovereignty parallels the
threat of 1808 when Napoleon in-
vaded Span. They revived the cry .
“Spain is in danger” whic.i w .e Move Against Franco
used to rally the people agate*: t XT „ _
Napoleonic invasion. LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Dec.
oxP: ■ ■■
Coincident with the demonstra- y ’flit'’ —
tion diplomatic informants spread United Nations disarmament de-
John W.
East Harris Deputies
Investigate Accident
Auto , accidents in the »-----
area claimed the live* of W. L
reports that Spain would be amen- 1)818 today with a proposal that all
able to what was described as
tK^iaKTlt wn‘2 th£t demobilization of their armed for-
saysr«.!sz£ ssr
bian resolution which recommends ft °*.e resolution be-
that Spain settle her political prob
Ing may be weeks away.
The request for a supreme court
review came from the government
last Friday, two days after Fed-
eral District Judge T. Alan Golds-
borough levied a $3,500,000 fine
on the UMW and a $10,000 fine on
Lewis for contempt of court-
Still before Goldsborough is the
more basic dispute whether Lewis
had a right to terminate the un-
ion's wage contract with the gov-
ernment. Lewis claimed he did and
the miners struck in response to
the termination notice. His order
Saturday sent them back to the
government-operated bituminous
mines on the terms previously in
Egypt joined France in the effect.
Goldsborough had sought to
Egypt Urges UN
Members Call
Home Armies
Britain And U.S. Fight
9.-
Sylvester
Pe
Humble
By Indus
ing drafted by a subcommittee of
SSWrrtBTS Rocket Warhead Shoot.
._oSpan sh America,’ balanced withdrawal of forces of Streams Of Molten Metal
UN** ' ' ' “ .....
states to that end.
P
Nazi 'Guinea Pig'
forces
members stationed without
Honored Trial Underway
(See Egypt Urges, Page 2)
Goodfellows
W. Sylvester, „ e^t ,
• in the department of in- Experts Face Tribunal
of *thf Humble Oil X" NUERNBERG, Dec. 9. —
Are Santas
night when the car ho wju driving tUm in the Houston area. when th went on for HIC +JUIIIU 3
was forced off the Market street The association will stage its an- their weird exDerimcnts on hu-
road near the San Jacinto Ord- nual Christmas party In the YMCA man guinea pig^ln concentration
nance depot gates by a six-wheel Assembly hall in Houston tomor-
truck. row night.- Sylveapr will be for-
The Joyner machine catapaulted inally inducted into office at this
into a deep, ditch and came down party, He succeeds Fred J. Rous-
the time of the explosion. Some 39
were believed to be in the imme-
diate vicinity of the blast.
One group of 23 men escaped
consent, without delay.” WASHINGTON, Dec. 9. ——A immediately and an hour later
B itain’s Sir Hartley Shawcross white comet with a tail of flame three more were brought to the
>ro] osed that a demand for the 100 feet long will streak across the surface.
military staff committee to get sky about White Sands, N. M., at The explosion occurred about
dowh to work on the needs of UN’s 11 p.m. (CST) December 17. 8:45 a.m. (2:45 a.m. CST) in the
international police force, be writ- Astronomers who witness the mine owned by the United Steel
ten Into the disarmament resolu- strange, man-made phenomenon Companies, Ltd.
tion- will see a shower of brilliant me- Rescue parties were organized by
Shawcross said no nation could tcors shoot out from the rocket at the secretary of the Cumberland
Steel Mills *
Face Worst
Problem
Miners In 'Rebellious <*-
Mood' After Lewis %
Sounds 'Back To Work'
PITTSBURGH, Dec. 9. —
(U.P.) — The nation’s soft
coal production surged today
ae United Mine workers end-
ed their two and a half week
strike. Reports indicated that
more than 280,000 diggers
were back in the pits as day
shifts reported across the nation, t
The back to work march started
early today in the eastern fields
and the working force grew hourly.
Night shifts will swell the total-
some miners still awaited ''official'
notice of John L. Lewis' strike
cancellation order, but were pre-
pared to return to work as soon as
local union meetings could be held.
In the rich fields surrounding
The roof of some sections of the Pittsburgh, the Solid Fuels admin-
mine caved in at many places, irtration reported today’s produc-
Three men were brought out badly tion will reach 242,000 tons with
burned. 44,220 miners checking into the
It was reported that 230 men .pits. Only 16 mines, employing 3,-
were working in the diggings at 180 men and producing 16,580 tons
w >
By calling off the strike, Lewis
(See Lewis Is, Page 2)
13 Men Feared
Lost After Blast
In Coal Mine
English Rescue Crews
Rush Into Diggings
LONDON, Dec. 9. -CP)- At least
13 men were believed to have been
trapped by an explosion today in
the Lowda coal mine near White-
haven, Cumberland.
10 second interval*. From this Miners association, T. Stephenson
novel experiment, scientists hope
to gain new .knowledge about out-
day remained closed. Absentee-
inn at open pits, however, was
reported at about 20 per cent, com-
pared with a normal of 6 per cent.
In northern West Virginia, a full
(See Industry Speeds, Page 21
Maritime Board
Affirms Profits
Committee’s Figures
Almost Identical
was the first state-wide pub- bn jjop*'vvidj Mr. and Mrs. seaux, prominent industrial per
f Joyner pinned under It. »onnel manager, as president
Sylvester ha*
| meeting of the committee
eral" Democrats which orga-
aftcr the state Democratic
vention at San Antonio
fteipber.
ppositkm to the People s Legis-
Ve committee program will
-w Helpers
SEi-var*
Efwi
intro1’ in I
. . . .
ucw ruiuwicauuuv - - - f* •
The comet will be produced by #70/©/ / /f6
army ordnance men in connection
with the first night firing of one
of the V-2 rockets captured from
the Germans. The rocket will have
a special warhead from which the
meteors will be fired by a bazooka-
like device.
All official observatories and By RON ROSS
... i.oo amateur astronomers in the area WASHINGTON. Dec. 9. —<rp»—
have been asked to watch for the Old buildings and the use of com-
... 1.00 rocket firing and record the re- bustiblc decorating and acoustical Maritime commission in a report
. . .25.00 suits. A materials in modernizing hotels are to the house merchant marine
2.00 From these report* the scientists to blame for the wave of hotel committee which is investigating
Blamed Upon
Old Buildings
,$127.69
WASHINGTON, Dec. 9. — (CP)—
A congressional committee was
told today that 10 shipbuilding
companies grossed an estimated
$356,006,612 in wartime profits on
invested capital totaling $22,979,275.
One company was said to have
made an estimated profit of $2,080,-
000 on a $600 capital investment-
The figures were set forth by the
to iSSSSSS ^
to—9-t-- ~ -aS—t: H, CHIEF <MM»DFEU^W
crimes trial unreeled was packed Whcn ganta claug outer space. That is the opinion of Dr. S. H. tLt its previous estimates were
SArrJfirtVrC ..MU,mm.. tototo*“■
leaders were being tried. well realized that we’re very
A splash of color amidst the thankful to these scores of Good-
drab chamber in the palace of -_
the ambulance reached the hos- institute.
ll: committee program win {^' ”” ^"mjJItos^He^ba^k
hine°^Wrfihtffi S ** b^en... / / Killed
■" they know it will coat them H. E. McKee II f\fIICV
money.'’ 1 and M M. Brown investigated the . f#
III \SUIIUUIUII justice was the bright purple dress
, . . If s I Of with white collar worn by Herta
the truck was headed to Nig*A Oberhauscr, the only woman am-
.ceas for depression*,” Houston, as was the Joyner ong the defendants.
“6 c«te' °r WhCthM U WaS tr8V g SASKATOON. Saskatchewan. Dec. Thc Khar*es tha 23 wcre
L - m l m R L Bowen, auto service fore- 0. -C.D- Authorities attempted cr mcs “fmst h-^rrmnity, war
minimum^ salary for £ >- » Buck Turner Chevro- today to complete identification of ^^<Tmit er3 ^Linri'
let company, happened by in a 11 persons killed early Sunday by commit crimcs a*a,nst
wrecker just an instant after the ft spectacular fire which virtually humanit>'
« 'repression wnicn win maKe
people turn to their patented whether t
aceas for depressions.'' Houston,
|ring ........J>......
Ubersl Demos, Page 1)
Tri-Cities Lions club members
tomorrow will do their bit for the
Goodfellows.
Every member who attends the
meeting is supposed to bring a
toy cost 50c, or more to give
to another member. Then, after
toys have been presented — and
n little fun had in presenting
them— all will be given to the
Goodfellows.
Some of the bodie^weje^bunicd JJrtn^pl^awh1cl^em»ld<>beS<u»e<S*^ln fellows who, this year as in pre
’Big Inch' Gas
In Indiana Area
resistance investigations at the Na- tual investment or profit. The ra-
tional Bureau of Standards here, vised figures were almost identi-
The Atlanta conflagration fol- cal with the original ones,
lowed two hotel fires last June xhc commisgi0n Mid the "esti-
ofnH1’ hi*Afito not n
lowed two hotel fires last June
which took a toll of 80 lives. Dr. mated"
profits do not reflect pro-
■ G«y:.Seturdey’*'Ywdpg-prob-. {“ft'tolr'^f f°S to'getfo" be™
nnTl., „, „ . - - . had to tear off a door to get the beyond recognition The .c*- .
Ir »ii* entn Y?irk*tir0Ut ski®y (Hoe Two Houstonians, Page 2> irtcr and other records were de- ?..1° r.,,i,i,-Lg
all . Ora Glen Ilfrey helps latino. imnn..ihi« »« „». Sterilization, abortions, freezing,
< hristmas deal ... The Dai-
Pun staff is 100 per cent again
vious years, will help get Santa
Claus to every underprivileged tmotion in Ohio today.
- ■"* W. C Norman.
Spring-Like Weather
tar3^rorCrorsmwera practiced'wRh: "ThouTanTofToungsters in tin
was tess th^i 100 out stlnt hy the Nali"' 8«cording (See Coodfellow* Are? Page 2)
Fire Marshall Albert Higgins said ^Tira U»lt«T'States opened its , . ...... _
sraSSftaasflK l**« w* Present
fninl MW
1 Isobcl McConnell back at her
f a zur.. -asa Continues Over Texas
[grave promises to investigate
"“■W %to^iS.*stoG. Gifts To Wounded
pons to Wyatt
Bowman 01
dominate Texas today, with warm
• clouds which
temperatures and clouds which guests fled to safety. cording to Brig. Gen. Telford Tay- . _ wifi be increased beyond the 50,-
D. Jones almost iunmed formed light rain In central and The 18 were injured when they lor, thc chief prosecutor, "came Tri-uties American Legion Post 000,000 cubic feet now being moved
igh the telephone at the hint coastal areas. jumped from windows or fell while in wholesale lots and were treat- 'VI,J cooperate with other posts of through thc little big inch daily.
fiusss-smSmstissi ,h“ “‘“u" 1“
Rev. E. R. Couch telephones state, but said precipitation would mg. Higgins said firemen rescued hospital in Temple,
as he was about to be tele- be mainly local and likely wouldn t "almost 50” guests, carrying them STOCKS RISE Commander J., T. Mgebroff ap-
ed . . ; Mr. and Mr* F R total more than a quarter of an down ladders ot guiding ♦’***"
them §TOCKS RrsE
HniNTfiM Drr u (11*1 The Wjh ^ fallura l° enclo8e “amounts of disallowances are
fSS'bwl.d’T^IS Sir *2
wbich has totalled more than 200 Among the companies on the
IS pl^Hne*1 untU*next°April S T' “IF
30 despite the fact that the coal Describing the Winecoff hotel as Kaiser'firm whlchreportedly made
the same type of structure as the an 08timatcd profit of $58,840,855
I^Salle hotel in Chicago where 6» on a $460,000 capital investment,
persons lost their lives in a fire in The st John-s shipbuilding Corp.
June, Dr. Ingberg said neither of of Florlda was said to havc made
(See Hotel Firn*. Page 2) an estimated profit of $2,080,000 on
secrctary-treas- *—“re- a $€90 capital investment,
urer of the Tennessee company. BARBECUE TONIGHT Following are figures reported
said the first gas reached the In- Members of the Tri-Cities Jun- by thc commission in other casts
diana area last night. ior Chamber of Commerce were re- where private operators built ships
Norman said work was progres- minded today that the barbecue in yards financed at least in part
sing on getting the big inch line at the Humble Community build- by the government:
ready to move eas toward thc eas- ing will start at 6:30 p.m. It hon- Todd - Houston Shipbuilding
tern states, When the big 24-inch ors the 52 new members of the Corp., capital investment $189,200,
line is ready, the volume of gas organization. estimated profit, $13,678,303.
strike has been called off.
Texas natural!gas, which start-
ed moving through the little big
inch last week, is nearing its des-
Dr. Sande! Of La Porfe
Stocks Close Today
f©
Courtesy Citizens National Rank
pointed a committee of Louis van I)!a( CiiHHonlu In ftffiro Allied Chem .....
down fire escapes. NEW’ YORK, Dec. 9. — cf.Pi— Meldert, Z. V. Warren and W. R. JUMUUhJ III vIIILC A'ieghany
•v/ - - - • Edgar to receive gifts here in the T ........ „ „ . A^eg Lud Steel .
name of the j
_____ _ ________ ___ _ ___________ ____ ____________ them to Disti
id about a car for sale, people and Dallas Reported traces. Pal- dying fire. The resultant explosion workers back to their jobs, but a llam s- Traill
driving me crazyi” which is cstine recorded .36 of an inch, and j,pread burning gasoline which mild profit-taking movement seal-
her way of saying that Daily Houston .07, ------ **“ -J ‘u-
lads get results. Low temperature today was 35
s- Buck Harris, formerly of at Amarillo. Salt Flat had 36, Lub-
|rsi£"S"i3; On/jf. Miracle Can Prevent Chinese War
fair,r::.E l°:r*b U.s. Must Begin Overhaul Of Far East Policy
Ped • . . Mr. and Mrs. F. R. total more than 1
Ipbell of 215 Carolina, Baytown, inch at any point. down fire escapes. NEW YORK, Dec. 9. -HI®- *>«<»«. o. v warren ana w k. —— ... «;icgnany
^ •toto.»ss rssL’tsfii srr zxzsfsxss&sr. "HrHilrSl “rHU :
The legion also is planning to i« Tpvqc Citv for manv
ssssi ffSr** “• ~he **,,ln’ “ “w
: Funeral arrangements will, be
.......... Iflft Kingston Prod
...... .. 4%
announced by the Paul U. Lee Fu-
neral home.
Kenn Copper ............
Uaod .................
74 ’ Libby McN and Libby ...
36*4 Mack Trucks .............
96% Mid-Con Pet .............
Amer Tel and Tel .......... 166\ Nstl Fuel and Gas ......... 14
Anaconda Cop ............... 41 % Natl Dairy Prod ........... 38
........ ........... 13 Natl Bellas Hess ........... 4%
............ .......... 218* Ohio Oil ................... »
Budd Co.
Celanese
Cessna
....
................... 41* Packard Motun, ............ ««
Cities Service ............... 27 >i Pantepec Oil .............. 12%
|mg. in dramatics in Houston
I- J- B. Day get* ready for a
png event . . Roy Scott and
family went through that last
and are no longer residents
•ose Creek . . . Sam Stassi
time out from being so busy,
j offers a lending hand to a
i® • • . Tom Laughlin went
nting down at Matagorda over
week-end and came back em-
handed . . . M. E. Young seeks
of pasturage . . . Raymond
IPearl Haley were visitors down
1 yesterday and he reports plans
nother store in Houston' . . .
an Johnson reports on things
F>*y, and reports well.
tin 66.
HI NABO°R
By WALTER BUNDLE drift which is held largely to have reduction of military expenditures
SHANGHAI, Dec. 0. -(t.Pi Well characterized American attitudes The first and second alternatives
informed quarters believed today toward China early ln the war and are objected to by seasoned observ-
that only a political miracle could from the departure of the late Gen. ers. The third line is the one they
_ ^ U n nr] ikof ’ Toltonk W .. r, ♦ i I Ikr. onriiml *_____ L..S .J 2*. ______X-
By OUn Milter e^uptil
would
A feller kin
save a lots of
time and trou-
ble by not ar-
quing with
fools, traffic
cops and
women.
avert civil war ih China and that Jo»eph W. Stilwell until the arrival favor but they admit it presents
widespread warfare of "Gen. George C. Marshall. difficulties.
kuuiu umn^l the United States 2. Adoption of the course favored __ . , .
•rss1■*' ■**"
Responsible American quarters, rsts - pull out of China completely °[ °ku£alfd
It was understood, already are sur- and leave the Chinese to
veying possible eventualities if their ownfate.
worst comes to worst and the Na- 3. Continuation of aid to the
settle an honest return for services ren-
dered. Many Americans doubt that
the United States could carry out
tionalists and Communists become present Nationalist government puc? a cou™e ot 8ction now-
>Wlt w ‘
locked in civil war. _^8ut with enforced conditions of re-
They believe America has only form, liberalization, cessation of
three alternatives: civil war except where it can be
1 A return to the eld policy of proved to be defensive and general
The implementation of such *
program would require a large
staff, spread throughout China to
(See U. S. Must, Peg
*rr 2)
Coca-Cola ......
Con Edison ...
Copper Range ..
Crown Drug ...
Callahan Z,-Uad
Curtiss Wright
Davidson Chem
Du Pont
El Paso , Nat Gas ...... . V..54
Emerson Elec
Orn Motors ...
Goodyear Tires
Graham Paige .......6)
Grevhound .....,;>-••• 40
Gillette Safety ____33
Gulf Oil ......., .........63!
Houston . Oil ____......____ 19-
Hudson Motors ......... 4.. 16V
Humble Gil .......... 62
Inti Nickle ................. 33‘
Interlake Iron ............. 12 V
Jones and L. Steel ......... 36
Sag:
145 Pepsi-Cola
. 27% Penney’*
. 10Vi Radio Corp ........
5% Rio Grande Val Gas
. 3% Salt Dome ........
6’* Sou Pacific
18 Stan Oil Ind
186% Stan Oil N. J.
St. Regis Paper
13'* Sun ray Oil
54% Texas Co _________...
55Texas Gulf Pro ____
6% Texas Gulf Sulphur
40 Tidewater Corp
33 Union Pacific
631, United '
19% U. S. Steel ...........
16V4 White M
62 Wilson and Co
March
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 155, Ed. 1 Monday, December 9, 1946, newspaper, December 9, 1946; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100183/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.