Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 194, Ed. 1 Friday, November 8, 1935 Page: 2 of 4
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C'MONE T1GAH,\
AH'LL BUY MJ' XJ
SOME FRED “FISH
AN' A SLUG A
HAPPY VJATAH* _kp
BOY/ WSH'T AH
YjASVAF RUjOOKA
AH MEANZj--f,
IH'LO SMOKEY " Y'OLE
SKONK. WHUT XY IS_
DOIN' WIF "AYSEF
BUS' I
MOOT,
FRIDAY, NOV. 8, 1935.
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
Test Yom
Knowledge
Th. ST QUESTION SERVICE
Newspaper InfoCTnatfca Service
Washington, D. C. .
Incorporated.Can you answer seven of these tea?
questions? Turn to page three for the
answers.
1. Were the owners of slaves that
were set free by the Emancipatio.,
proclamation, compensated by the
federal government?
2. Who were the Pharisees?
3. Who was Hans Dahl?
4. What is the nanfe of the sour
acid in vinegar*
5. Where is the city of Goa? y
6. Name the oldest of the Greek-
letter fraternities.
7. In what year was the U. S. Na-
val Academy opened?
8. What well-known social work-
er >n associat'on with Miss Ellen G.
“tarr. established* the Hull House
in CMcago?
0. What name is applied to the na-
ive people of the Atlantic coast
>f Mexico, south of Tampico apd
•he lower T’anuco river? .
10. In which state is Coolidge
Dam ?ITCH
IS RAGING IN TEXAS
Why suffer with skin trouble, when
a jar Shur Shot, the prescription for
ich. Eczema. Tetter, Scalded Feet,
athlete’s Foot. 50c jar. For sale by
Tristram Pharmacy, Citizens Phar-
macy.PROFESSIONAL CARDS
X-RAY
CHIROPRACTOR
Dr. G. C. CURTIS
Neurocalometer-Examination
A Scientific Health Method
PHONE 277
01 Corner Commerce 4 'St. Chart-.*
If your hair isn't becoming to you
You should becoming to" US I
BLUE BIRD BEAUTY
PARLOR
PHONE 70
Complete Beauty Service
Centennial Stamp* Given.
DR. R. H. LENERT
Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat
Also Fitting of Glasses
Hours 9 to 12 a. m.; 2 to 5 p. m.
Phone 209 Over Tristram’sCLASSIFIED COLUMN
;_______FOR RENT_______
Fink Apartments For Rent, upstairs
and downstairs; gas in every room;
515 00 per month. Madie Allen, pro-
prietor—--193-18tp.
FOR RENT—Furnished bedroom,
idjoming bath. Phone 497W,—193-4t
MALE HELP WANTED
M AN WANTED for Rawleigh
Route in South Grimes County, Som-
rville, Navasota. Write 'mmediatelv.
Rawleigh Co., Dept. TXJ-83-SAR,
Memphis, Tenn., or see W. B.
Raschl^e, Brenham, Texas,— Ipd.
Insurance Salesman Wanted to re-
present Old Line Co. in Brenham.
Salary and commission. 'Experience
not necessary. Write qualifications
% Press.—192-5tpd.
__WANTED_______
WAN! ED—Fifteen live, wide awake,
experienced salespeople to work
through sale. Apply tomorrow (Sat-
urday) between 9 and 10:30 a. m.
Hoile Hardware Company. Come
eady to go to work.-^-194-lt
■crnian country girl wishes employ-
nent in good family. Gen. housework,
an cook, wash iron, not afraid of
work. Address 308 N. Baylor St
irenham—192-6tp.
WILL ROGERS MEMORIAL
■ FUND
Local Committee for Washington
County
Date ..............
TO THE EDITOR:
Wishing to have a part in per-
petuating the memory of one of
our most beloved and useful citi-
zens, I enclose herewith my con-
tribution of .. to
the Will Rogers Memorial Fund.
I understand that this gift will
he added to others from Wash-
ington County and will go with-
out any deductions whatsoever to
•he Natrona) Fund to be expend-
ed, also without any deduction,
a* the Memorial Committee may
determine.
Name
Addresshim
how-
first
CAN P. DAS
AH'M D1_AWD
HIGH GCN'AL.
WHl IT YO' r
. DO INAH'M KINDA RUSKIN'
ROUN' FO' DC SMYFF f
OUTFIT. AH KIN OUT- L
BOX anabooy he got
FO SPVXRRlN' POONAHS
) BUT DEY JES' USE ME
FO' CLEANIN' UP DE H
--------y RUBBISH.)HUNTING AND JOUSTING- ?-
how about dancing And ,
FLIRTING- «- ALL THE /
LADIES OF THE COURT/
HAVE TOLD MF ABOUT
YOU- TO HfAR THEM
TALK, YOU HAVE DONI
MOST OF YOUR HUMTINE
IN THE BALLROOMS
ANO SHADY LANES—
NOT TH AT I CARE, BUT
| MAY DO A LITTLE
HUNTING-
Cwiritht.
He
the
THE LIFE-PRESERVING FLUID
(An
and
re-
"TPe Cold FInger Curse"
A by EDWIN DIAL TORXEP.SON
you’ll
downright funny and
I
essentials and.
DID YOU EVER STOP TO THINK
By EDSON R. WAITE. Shawnee. Oklahoma.
“You
ca.
aa
1935.
a slang-coiner.
Va.
By Forbell
CUDDLES
BY MY HALIDOM-
By HAM FISHER
WHAT AH MEAN
JOE PALOOKA
TAINT (YnOO
Twain's
making
M isaottr-
world's
strip
w ith
win-
word
was
his
and
their
The
birth
Homer Guck, publisher of the
Chicago Herald and Examiner, says:
"When the late great Will Rogers
said, ‘All I know is what I read in
the papers,' he paid h’gh and con-
scious tribute to the press of Atrieri-
thc request
K
Z^AS THOU KNQWEST-
/KING- ARTHUR CHOSE Mg TO
'BEAR A MESSAGE TO THE
KING OF FRANCE - WHAT
THAT FOOL JOKOOKY TOLD
THEE WERE PIRATES“
< WERE BUT HONEST
\SAILORS SERVING- THB >
. V FRENCH KING-
of jeering has been
the process. ''Pulling
by Carlyle as
from.-the head
not contempt;
It issues not in
smiles that lie far
them as m. c. at the Century club.
. . . And Ann Southern's grand-
mother, Mrs. Ingar Nelson, is here
from Minneapolis on her first visit
to the Mm colony. —
Mothers’ Advice
“Take CARDUI”
Has Helped Many
Thousands of women have avoided
useless suffer'ng because they knew
about, and used Cardui — recom-
mended by mothers to daughters
for the relief of functional monthly
pains for more than, fifty years.
"I am glad to recommend a medi-
cine that has been used by my
mother with good results and then
taken by me by her advice,” writes
Mrs. Annie Mae Powell, of Roberts-
dale Ala. “I am glad to say it has
helped me as she thought it would.
1 suffered with pein and cramping
and irregular trouble. This would
unfit me for work at times. I took
Cardui and it surely did help me?
Of course, if Cardui docs not ben®-
TOIL consult a physician.
He told McEniry where he was.
"I wish,” he said, “to detach this
telephone and take it around to the
nearest branch office of the com-
pany—I believe it is on lower Broad-
W*^Yeah ? What’s up?” queried the
NONE A DEM WHITE 1
BOYS LIKE DAT MAN
SMYFF. HE DE MOS'
UPPITY FELLA AH
evAH did see.
HE WONT EAT AT
oe TRAININ'TABLE
WIF 'EM AN' DEV
Plenty so' at 'im.checks
COLDS
and
FEVER
first day
HEADACHES
in 30 minutes
that
the
popular topic
But
notice.
For through our eyes comes 87 per
cent of the knowledge we possess.HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TATE—
They say Henry Wilcoxon may
have to delay- his return to America
because he is an English army re-
DR. A. H. HOWELL
OPTOMETRIST
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
Formerly Wm. Schell
BRENHAM, TEXAS
THANKS FOR the boquets-
HAND5OME - BUT tell ME ,
. WHAT HAPPENED - AMD WHY
v SINCE TOU LEFT ENGLAND - .«orry.
SATURDAY
danger
this,
king
Yon
was h .-nt Taylor. . . . Charles Fur-
thermann, Hollywood scenarist, is
in the Cedars of Lebanon hospital,
and probably faces an operation.
■was stricken while listening to
Notre Dame-Pitt footbill game on
the radio.. . , Another on the sick
list is Sharon Lynne, who is in the
Good Satnaritian for treatment of an
acute sinus it.fec.tion. . , . Jerry Les-
ter, whq did all aright on Broadway,
is back in -Hollywood and wowingThanksgiving Table Covers,
Napkins, Score Pads, Tallies,
Wrapping Paper and Ribbon
in Thanksgiving designs.
Banner-Press Stationery
Dept.
Old physioloists believed
— blood,
■bile.
The
I HEARD YOU WERE
CAPTURED BY PIRATES'*
$O LIKE A GOOD BOY SCOUT-
I STARTED ON A FIRST /
AID EXPEDITION AND 7
FOUND YOU DIDN'T
NEED ANY MORE
AID THAN A X
CAT IN A /
DAIRY>z
SIMON THEATRE
TO-DAY
they rea-
determin-
Hence came
Added Stage Attractions
MYSTERIOUS'
SMITH & CO. ‘
Great Temple of Mystery Show
This stage attraction presented
at regular prices.
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
Pnbluhcd by th* Brenham Banner Publishing Company every afternoon
the studio considerately saw u— her
way. Picture- is now under produc-
tion, Ann having won her case and
obtained sole custody of her daugh-
serve officer. Which makes Sheila
Browning, ‘‘The Great Ziegfeld"
i cutie, very sad. . . . Quite a Holly-
[ wood tableau when Claudette Col-
j bert happened Into
when Sally Blane
Foster also were there, and stopped
to congratulate tnem, on their mar-
riage. ... In case.the rich Beverly
Hills gent doesn't know it, the nice
looking young man who returned his
pet Pekingese and refused a $10 tip
1arriving sA^ely Mere
AT THE KING'S PA LA Ct- ,
I DELIVERED KING ARTHURl
MESSAGE-WHILST I WAITED
FOR AN ANSWER- I HATH
PASSBp THE TIME
i HUNTING- JOUSTING AND
XTHINKING OF THEE /
of
pictm c
nature. put his
But is not- that the
humor?
moisture.
there were - four fluids
phlegm, choler or yiATow
melancholy or black bile,
lative proportions of each,
soned with seeming logic,
cd a person's mood,
the expressions good humor and ill
humor. But, under the wear
tear of usage, words shift
meanings. Gradually. perhaps
cau^c of man’s natural optimism,
the pleasant meaning triumphed over
the unpleasant, and humor came to
signify something wohelsome, cheer-
ful and. finally
laughable.
The element
sloughed off
a laugh" at
isn'ft humor
centennial of Mark
on November 30 is
humor, and especially
ian’s contribution to
aowces of chuckles, a
for table conversation. But not
many of his countrymen know that
Americans of his day were slow to
recognize his genius.
“While Boston was stm regard-
ing him as a western 'cut up'.”
notes Canada's Stephen Leacock,
himself a producer of smiles, “Eng-
land was recognizing him as one
of the world's great writers." What
especially impressed the British
was the detachedness with which
Twain (whose real name was
uel Langhorne Clemens) could
a situation to the
disarming good
finger on truths,
gist of all true
The word humor is taken directly
from the Latin, and meant fluid or
remember ther old adage,*
is believing.' No one, you
ays, 'Hearing is believing.’
ern
modem editor that i ....
I business to keep the^aith.”
By HARRISON CARROLL ’
King Features Synaica'*, Inc.
Copyright,
Hollywood — At
Ann Harding, her R
was postponed, so that she Could de-
vote her full energies to the court
fight with Harry Bannister for the
custody of their daughter. Jane. Ann
Kdwia HohM* Preaident
T. C Blake Manager
By Mail or Carrier, one year (out of State $6.00) in State........... .......... $4 50
Entered at Poatoffice at Brenham, Texas, as second class matter
any of
Van
in his
and Bill has
popularized it even more in his pic-,
tures with Shirley Temple.
“HARD ROCK
HARRIGAN’’
You’ve seen him fa-'-
before but never like
H<-'« the (jynamite-fisted
• of the tunnel daredevils,
fill of thrills in this one.
“Adventures of Tarzan
. And COMEDY
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Presents
Claudette Colbert
Melvyn ’Douglas
and
Michael Bartlett
IN
“SHE MARRIED
HER BOSS”
The surprise picture of the
year. Joyfully hailed from coast
to coast as the grand successor
to “IT HAPPENED ONE
NIGHT.” The story of a kiss-
less bride.
PICTORIAL NOVELTY
NEWS
If you rnisa this picture
be
is starred in "The Indestructible
Mrs. Talbot." She couldnjt think of
an-, thing else but fror little girl, and
‘ I'm kopasetic." .
It means "oka\" swell.’
the other . synonyms.
Vechten picked up the
novel. “Nigger Heaven,'666
Liquid-Tablets
Salve-Nose
Drops
James Dunn
and
Arline Judge
IN
“WELCOME HOME”
You’ll laugh your loudest
laughs as these slick “con” ar-
tists invade the sleepy home
towji to fish for suckers—-and
get hooked themselves. Fun, ex-
citement and romance.
Buck Jones
IN
‘TOE ROARING
WEST”
And COMEDY
in
the ’ expense of a hurt
any more, certainly
it is not Mark Tw-a-n's kind. His
is the sort defined
springing "not more
than the heart. It is
its essence is love,
laughter, but, in
deeper."REX THEATRE
Today & Saturday
George O’Brien
to define the word and
he happened to create it
said it years ago when
peas in a mar-
Somconc ask-
and the reply
head:
editorial from Th# Rotarian
Magazine).
/ BOV/we GWINE
KNOCK ALL. DACT
UPPITYNESS c
OUTA HIM WHEN
WE GITS 'It1
Hill Robinson
by having the
‘'kopasetic" recognized in a
miing Funk and Wagnails
dictionary. The Negro star has just
received a letter from the publishers
asking
to tell
Bill
he was a boy shelling
ket in Richmond,
ed him how he
just popped into
“It if so considered," admitted
VaJcour gravely.
“I must go around and see it. I
must be going now, Mr. Valcour.
Some day—under different ci ream- :
stances, I hope—we must have a
long chat about Art.”
“Thgnk you so much, Csptain i
Montigny. For a detective you are
immensely human.”
Montigny upon leaving the Jail
hurried downtown to Two-Sixty- ,
Eight Waverley Place.. He found i
Jimmy Kirkman at home, hard at 1
work. Jimmy was not wearing a ;
smock, but the badge of his profes-
sion was an old pair of white duck i
pants smeared with innumerable
pignjents.
“Why, how now. Captain?” Jim*
my greeted him. “More manicures ?”
“I wish,’’ said Montigny quickly,
“a key to the basement studio, that
of Mr. Valcour. He is, as you know,
in jail on a minor charge. I wish to
search his rooms, but I do not wish
him to know that I have done so. I
wish tb search the entire house, with
the exception of your floor. If you
cannot or will not let me have the
keys, of course, I shall have to pro-
qpre a warrant and proceed in that
manner.”
“Keys? Of cpurse you may have
thekeys.’’exclaimedJimmy. “Things
looking bad for that little snipe Val-
cour ?’7
Montigny made a deprecatory
gesture. “Merely a routine proce-
dure, Mr. Kirkman. There is no one
upstairs?’’
“No. Fritz Runkel—Thurber's oc-
casional room-mate, you know—is
up at Woodstock. Mr. Coultney is
out.”
Jimmy found the duplicate keys
where his wife, who was away at
present, customarily kept them.
They l)ung on a prominent nail in
the butlers pantry, and each key
was tagged.
“Most tenants put on new locks
when they move in,” Jimmy, ex-
plained, “but we have to have du-
plicate keys becausfe there is a maid
who does the cleaning for ail apart-
ments.”
“So I understood," observed Mon-
tigny. “And an unauthorized per-
son, perhaps desiring one of these
keys, might Appropriate it, have a
duplicate made, and unobtrusively
put it back, might he not?”
Jimmy looked perturbed. “Well, I
don’t know about that My wife and
I are here practically all the time.”
“But you entertain ?” *.
“Oh, yes, we have a gang here
occasionally for a party,” Jimmy
admitted dubiously.
Montigny' took the keys and pro-
ceeded first to the basement. He was
busy for half an hour conducting a
systematic search of Valcour’s
apartment. He took down numerous
pictures that were hung upon and
stacked against the walls, and .ex-
amined them, front and back. He
inspected the unused telephone with
its broken mouthpiece.- He could find
nowhere the new mouthpiece which
Valcour had said he had.
In Douglas W. Coultney's apart-
ment on the second floor Montigny
, found little to attract him, though
he searched thoroughly, even in the
’ bathroom. There was, however,
upon the glass shelf beneath Cpult-
, ney’s shaving mirror, an item that
; interested Montigny. It was a ring
’ set with an Egyptian scarab, the
i carved stope encased in a frame-
work of gold and hinged in the man-
ner of a locket, so that both the ob-
‘ verse and reverse sides of the beetle
could be inspected. On the flat neth-
er side were inscriptions which fixed
1 the date and dynasty of the scarab.
> “Amenophis.” muttered Mon-
; tigny.
1 H,e placed the ring carefully in an
envelope and pocketed it.
He repaired then to Glenn Thur-
. ber’s apartment on the top floor, but
. forbore to do any searching there,
i Instead he used Thurber’s telephone
CHAPTER XXXIII
Montigny passed him the paper
and Valcour read the item greedily.
He did not like it at all The few ’
words it contained were pitched in 1
a very ironical key.
“It is an outrage,” said Valcour 1
gloomily. “They have me charged ,
with disorderly conduct and resist- ;
ing an officer, when all I intended 1
was a harmless public protest Was
the thing I did any worse. Captain, <
than haranguing a mob in Union •
Square—a thing they permit every '
day?”
‘‘Only technically worse, 1 sup- 1
pose. What I wish to,know, Mr. 1
Valcour, is why, when you have :
twice been under the" suspicion of 1
the police recently, you are fool-
hardy enough to invite arrest in 1
this manner?’ ,
♦ “Twice?” repeated Valcour, star-
tle4 "Only once, sir. You don’t ]
mean that they thought I had any- 1
thing to do with the—the Elder- j
bank case, do you?”
“Everyone in your house is under '
suspicion. If I were you, Valcour,
I should steer clear of the police. '
They often have an ugly way of
looking at things. Did you burn ail 1
your paintings?”
“Oh, no, sir. Only two or three.
It was not really a large fire— '
J merely a gesture. I was desperate,
' sir?! was in n6ed of money. I had 1
not been able even to pay my tele-
phone bill, and only yesteday I
might have made a sale if the com-
pany had not discontinued my ser-
vice.”
“So? How was that?”
' “Why, this shop on Eighth Street
—the 'Art Mart—tried to telephone
me. They had had an inquire. Some
one who had seen rAy Goldfish Sur-
rounded by Blue in their window
had eome back, perhaps to buy it.
But they could not get me on the
telephone. They sent ground a mes-
senger, late in the afternoon, and I
at once let them have my Goldfish
and four other pictures, my best
ones. But this morning they told me
the customer had not returned. He
had bought something else. It was
heartbreaking. I was miserably dis-
couraged—I had one of those terri-
' ble fits of despondency to which
every true artist is a prey.”
“Very disheartening," said Mon-
tigny. "Did the telephone people
take away your instrument when
they disconnected it?”
“Oh, no. They merely discontin-
ued service.”
“When they restore service you
must ask them to give you a new
mouthpiece. The old one is broken.”
Valcour’s eyes widened. “Why,
Captain I It is positively uncanny,
the way you notice and remember
i such little details. Why, yes, the
mouthpiece is broken. I have a new
one somewhere, but I forgot to put
it on. But what’s the use?” he
added disconsolately. “It lodks now
as though I’ll never be able to afford
a telephone again. All my friends
have deserted me." 4 »
"No one offers to bail you out?”
one. I sent a message to
Roger Duane, but I have heard noth-
ing from him. He’s a success now—
II understand he has been offered a
big contract—but he can’t remem-
ber his old friends. And I put him
where he is, too.” Valcour’s tone
was bitter. “I was the one who got
i him in with Mrs. Elderbank — I
stage-managed him, I pushed him
I up.”
“Indeed? I did not know that. He
. is very ungrateful. And your
friends at Two-Sixty-Eight?”
"It does look like Jimmy Kirkman
or Mr. Coultney would help me out,
doesn’t it?” bemoaned Valcour.
“They don’t seem to care whether I
j stay in jail definitely or not.”
“Well, you are having your pub-
licity,” Montigny encouraged him.
“Perhaps it will make you famous.
Perhaps your pictures will sell. This
Goldfish you sent to the art shop—
that, I believe, is your masterpiece?”
the Vendome
and Norman
“Merely • theory I am pursuing. 1
should like also to obtain all fac-
tory numbers appearing on all parts
of the telephone instrument from
Mrs. Elderbank’s bedroom — you
have it there at headquarters. Could
you do that for me ?’’
"Absolutely. In a jiffy. Hold
connection.”
Montigny held connection, smok-
ing placidly, until the numbers were j
called out to him. Then he thanked
McEniry, hung up his receiver. *
snipped the telephone wire, wrapped
the instrument m paper and left the ,
apartment
A taxicab took him to the branch
office of the telephone company,
where he made known his identity to
the manager.
Thistgentleman, one of the brisk
and efficient type that corporations
breed for executiveship, knew all
about the telephone business.
Montigny unwrapped the instru-
ment he carried and explained his
mission. “I wish to ask the impos-
sible, sir,” said Montigny cheer-
fully. “I wish you to tell me whether
this mouthpiece belongs properly to
this telephone- -whether it was the
mouthpiece furnished originally
with the instrument, or whether it is
a new one lately attached, say with-
in the past week or two. Also
whether the mouthpiece of another
telephone, of which I have the sei-
rial numbers here, properly belongs
to that instrument?’
. The manager smiled. “Now you
have given me a job sure enough,”
he admitted.
He unscrewed the mouthpiece
carefully, using, at Montigny’s sug-
gestion, a Sheet of clean paper so
that his finger-tips would not touch
the article. He get out a small read-
ing glass and examined it minutely.
“These mouthpieces, Captain, are
manufactured by the million," he
said; “for the new dial phones as
well as the older type. They are
standard equipment, identical in
size, shape an£ style—”
“And chemical composition?" in-
quired Montigny. “Is there any va-
riation there ? ”
The manager shook his head.
“None, I am afraid. 1 shall have to
make some inquiries to determine
that, but I think they are all of the
same composition. Meanwhile, there
is a small hope. This mouthpiece,
you may have noticed, has a tiny
star embossed in the center of the
perforated circle. On the other side
it has the almost microscopic fig-
ures, ‘4’ and ‘H? "
“Yes, I
mouthpiece on the other telephone I
referred to has no star but an as-
terisk, and the very small figuret,
‘B’ and ‘3? ”
"Yes, those'are factory serial res-
ignations. They may denote, rough-
ly, the time of manufacture, perhaps
the year or the number reckoned in
thousands or hundreds of thou-
sands. We may check those num-
bers With the serial number of the
telephone as a whole and the num-
bers of its parts, and thus we may be
able to learn—I am not promising,
mind you—whether that mouthpiece
was put on ..the instrument when it
was first assembled, or whether it is
a new mouthpiece, which any sub-
scriber may have tor the asking. It
is the most breakable part of the
telephone, you know. A child knocks
over the instrument—the only thing
broken is the mouth."
“And that is precisely what I wish
. to learn," said Montigny eagerly.
"Whether it is a new mouthpiece—
’ and how new.”
j ne usea i nuroer s teiepnone (To Be Continued)
for a consultation with Inspector cwruia. im«. s, z<iwu> d. Tornnoa
McEnirv by kim rwuuw SnSleaU. la*
"Beyond being its foremost hu-
morist, he was consistently one of
the, nation's best informed citizens, j Anc
It wasn't what he heard’which • malic j
him that. It was what he saw—what
he read.
“The content* of the newspaper of
today may Safely be-believed. It* ad-
vertisements arc to be trusted no
t”ian its ' editorial coliim/is..
this is simply because the mod*
merchant realizes as does, the
it's plain good
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 194, Ed. 1 Friday, November 8, 1935, newspaper, November 8, 1935; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1173014/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.