The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 54, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1940 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Lampasas Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lampasas Public Library.
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I
_ i
* r.
•r
■ i
THE LAMPASASLEADER
I
■
88
L_
way of beating the I
.....*
1
B
1
t
“I
He
J
1
I
I
I
" 'r
prevailing
economical
at
most
i
If
not provide vitamins needed by
growing chicks..
I
I've padlocked the office door.
she re-
'i
There'll be a greater pos-
“What did you think?”
■j
lamp.
I
ry
was
“I do like her,
Rural Briefs
Mary’s very fine.” John dropped
as a lib-
good con-
I
Gay said, smil-
4
I
I
experiment station.
I
J ’
r
i
-
.. •
tat'
or-
HA
I
id a tick-
trend.”—
liberal,
loss;
labor,
the boss.
shyster,
Uy blue,
nto con-
s best,”
'ear the
lace in
zer, and
er who
eopatra
i lot of
Ivelope
atrnos-
of the community, and old people
themselves are realizing that their
conceded that the trouble can be
traced to the glands.
Finds ‘Filtrate Factor.*
“She tells me that her husband is
in Manila.”
“Yes, for two years. Mary had a
bad case of typhoid last summer
needle through the rolled length of
knit wool.
Mary folded her knitting and
His dark eyes were
Do you want
He
the
« MACRAE SMITH CU
CHAPTER XII
GROWING CHICKS
NEED GOOD FEED
cage at
are Gar-
It gave
when the
ice card.
(
i case ot
id.”
pie idea
liynn on
frse and
Lamarr
hr
I circus
I? away.
Iidition-
Ibut the
lhed by
pwever,
pat I’m
es dec-
fa, e spe-
lt.
I years
a point
I been
pd and
It been
se Cir-
d Shu-
i matter?”
You look—"
pan cyn-
ail over
rity will
of integ-
ele- I
ined
Iwhole
kn stand
bf those
Garden
s and
I Holly-
ler spec-
fhts, but
raight.”
■
is Nazi
e that
lave.
♦
&
R *
ie around^
—
I
His eyes were
his slow smile self-re-
“1 was showing off. For-
Gay roused, opened her eyes, sat
up in the high-posted bed. A blast
of air from the open window struck
her like the stinging needles of a
shower. She slid back into the warm
hollow her body had made and
pulled the covers up under her chin.
But the blast of air had wakened
her as effectively as though, literal-
ly, it had been an ice-cold shower.
Her eyes were wide open, her senses
alert. No hope of drowsing off into
sleep again.
E I
•r.,i
Moses, vigorous Israelite leader,
was past 90 when he led his people
to the promised land.
EW YORK.—Science hasn’t yet I
1 ’ found a way of beating the
Grim Reaper, but modern research
is making great strides in uncover- |
ing causes and preventatives of
physical and mental old age.
While admitting that people who
always
pecially
late Flo
any of
vanned
a could
a bum, ,
lid look
I us and
kr they
I be air-
Uiought
bd very
er.”
CHAPTER XI—Continued
—17—
John’s smile thanked Gay. He
eyed the check and took a bill from
his wallet. Gay rose as he pulled
back her chair. He cupped his hand
Dried whey can be substituted for
dried milk at the rate of two pounds
[ *
he spouts
pre Nero,
ns” into
3
■s!
■ Who Set
■hat’s the
Bum world
Iman find-
Klf-expres-
nent. He
um office,
n subway
home to
ame patJ
f. At last
ain. Any
ind. Keep 1
wsa n 1
1
■
e right
ed El-
be Na- I
■e Fla- V
Farm
Topics
Economy Measures Are Dan-
gerous to Health.
i
beneath her elbow and they walked,
circling tables where people, dining,
glanced up as they passed, toward
and bones get brittle it “is generally arched door-way into the lobby.
your things ready?” he
asked.
Though medical men frown on
‘by accidents of youth that medi-
cal men lay great stress on pro-
tecting children from diseasej^hi
'affect the heart and other vitflvo
gans. No offer of help is held out to
"those who seek repair of such bodily
live much beyond 100 years are rare I
exceptions, medical men have de-
cided that proper care during youth '
and proper diet the rest of our lives
can do much to keep men and wom-
en living to a ripe old age.
Seeking causes for the death phe-
nomenon, they believe that old age
is simply a series of changes in the
human body, but no single place
has yet been discovered where its ef-
fects are first felt. Glandular de-j
ficiencies are popularly thought to
be largely responsible, and this in
turn may often be traced to dietary
deficiencies. When skin becomes
drier, wounds take longer to heal.
£
accidents until the time comes for
a quick old age and sudden end.
Sociologists are heartened by a
modern reversal of the recent trend
toward 'junking” old people as un-
fit for profitable employment. It is
now conceded that both youth and
Green, succulent pastures and
> are without equals as
growth and health promoters and as
mopey savers. The chick ' range
should provide green feed from
spring until fall. Dried grasses do
- J
Science Seeks
New Ways to
Fight Old Age
i-
</ Frenchmen still talk about Ninon
de Lencios, a lady who lived in the
days of Louis IV. Although never
beautiful, she was so witty and had
such a lively mind that men were
in love with her when she was past
80.
An Englishwoman, Jane Lew son,
attained the age of 116 before she
died in 1816.
It is because science believes pre-
■ Z x.
V - I A,
■
■ i
V 7/■
F II
damages, yet Dr. Morgan found that!
, rats which had gray hair and other >
signs of premature old age showed
improvement when the "filtrate fac-
tor" was introduced in their diet.
straight vitamin dosages,”Dr. Agnes ■
Fay Morgan of the University of
California has tried to isolate a new
vitamin whose absence from the
body is at least known to bring on
many symptoms of premature age. |
In working with rats Dr. Morgan
has concentrated on diet, perfecting
a “filtrate factor” whose absence
results in rapid aging. Among or-
dinary foods, the constituents of tliis
with the
vaccine is 7
not as likely to cause a drop in egg
production as treatment with the
fowl strain of vaccine. The vac-
cine establishes immunity in about
10 days.
Food Grown on Farms
Has High Nutritive Value
Whether food production .on the
firm for use on the farm is worth
while from the money angle has
been debated widely. Soil, climate,
and type of farming make real dif- j
ferences as between farm regions.
Looked at from the health and rfl
nutrition angle, as discussed in the
hew Yearbook of the department of I
agriculture, the case for gardening,
orcharding and dairying for homo
consumption is clearer. **
"Few appreciate fully," say the
food economists of the bureau of —J
home economics, “the nutritive con-
tributions of farm-furnished food to
the family diet—nutritive values
A CENTURY PLUS—Tony Hod- ^tuJlg\r®orri \n Dr Sarge.aPt s,ho.?ie2
anco of Now York celebrated hi»
l<J5th birthday by doin' the »hag
with his nurse. His recipe for lon-
gevity: No meat, tobacco, liquor—
or women.
I’ll have breakfast with John.
| Will you call me?”
“The children will probably at-
tend to that. You’ve made a terrific
I impression on my son, Nat. He’s a
susceptible young man. Good-night.”
I “Good night, Mrs. Adams. And
thank you.”
... - ,--- “I do like her,” Gay said when
age are needed for a proper balance Mary Adams had gone out and
; closed the door.
_ _ ; “Mary’s very fine.” John dropped
mental outlook on the world and life down on the davenport again.
is as much a part of staying young .<She teUg me that her husband is
trolled.
Hope to Boost Life Span.
Although it is recognized that a
long life is often inherited from
cestors who possessed the same
traits, some scientists actually hope
the average life span can be in-
creased to 100 years. Nor is thia I
all they promise, for a long old age
of feebleness is not conducive to
happiness. Science believes, rather,
that if mankind will co-operate it
Newly housed pullets need careful
Pennsylvania and, despite his wis-
dom, he could not conceive its com- ” • - — • -
mercial value.”
He said moves by the United
States to acquire Arctic regions
might seem ridiculous at present,
but that in the future the lands
would be valuable.
“When we bought the Danish West
Indies, now called the Virgin Is-
lands," Stefansson said, “we gave
Denmark all our rights in Green-
land. Now it is known that the
territory which was ours in Green-
land was worth many times more
than the Virgin islands."
He predicted that weather observa-
tions in the Antarctic would make it
possible to determine weather con-
ditions in Australia a year or two
in advance, i
where bars of sunlight striped the
dim ivory-toned paper and minia-
ture rainbows, reflections from glass
stoppers in scent bottles on the bu-
reau, moved quiveringly. The storm
was over, then, the blizzard which
John had predicted. He would be
here tonight if the roads were
cleared. But that would be—How
many hours away?
She glanced at her watch, then
plunged her arm under the blan-
kets and quilts. She should get up
immediately. Mrs. Houghton had
told her to sleep as long as she
liked. But there was no servant
except the dour angular woman they
called Huldah and she didn’t want
to make extra work.
She must get up. The household
was stirring. She heard footsteps
along the hall, Debby's lovely young
voice raised in spirited discussion,
Explorer Sees Wealth
In Antarctic Regions
Vilhjalmur Stefansson, noted Arc-
tic explorer, believes that the United
States is wise to acquire territorial
rights in the Antarctic.
The vast "down under” continent,
he said, may prove to be a valuable
source of petroleum, radium and
food and that in the near future it
would become valuable for long-
range weather forecasting.
He said the value of the Antarctic
could not be ascertained because no
one could look into the future.
“Who would have known a hun-
dred years ago that Canada some
day would become an important
source of radium?”Stefansson asked.
“Benjamin Franklin was a wise
man, and he was smart enough to I
make a good-sized fortune. But he I
knew about petroleum in western I
Strong winds blowing against
farm buildings tend to move them
off their foundations. Braces that
will hold the buildings down and tie
them to their foundatiqns are of
greatest importance in
struct ion work.
Vaccinating poultry
pigeon type of fowl pox
"Do you?
amused and tender.
I children, Gay?”
“I’ve never thought of it espe-
cially; but now, after seeing Skip-
py and Nat, I’m sure I do.”
“I’d be awfully jealous of them.”
I He drew her close to him. "I have
to touch you to be sure you’re here.
Downstairs in the office I couldn’t
make myself believe it. But you
are, aren’t you? This is—you.”
“Darling! John!”
____________“This afternoon,” he said after a
.mature death is caused so largely moment, “when I came in and there
i. — .. .. . wasn’t a letter from you, I was— I
' - -- • thought—”
“What did you think?”
“What I always think; that you’d
forgotten me, changed your mind—”
"Idiot!” She laughed softly. “I
couldn’t hold out any longer. Three
days ago I flew from Palm Beach
to New York.”
“Flew? Literally?”
“Literally. What’s the
she asked in alarm. *‘v‘
as anything else.
Cite Franklin’s Work.
Historians point to innumerable
cases where people have done^ their
most notable work at an advanced
age. Benjamin Franklin was serv-: I
ing the United States as ambassador
to France when he was 79. and sev- |
eral years later was making some >
of his most important scientific dis- 1
coveries. i and two girls.
I
»
If an auto or tractor must be run
inside a building,, pass the exhaust ”
fumes to the outside with a rates
spout and elbow.
Adding yeast to the fattening ra-
tion for lambs was not found to ba
i a profitable practice at the nitesto
avnoriment station.
caugnt ner. iney stooa on me
pavement in the light washing out
from the hotel.
i “I'm sprry,
thought—”
“You were right.’
penitent, his slow
proachful.
give me.”
Gay laughed as John approached
the open door of the seeoi»d-floor
By C. M. FERGUSON
Unfavorable feed prices start
poultrymen figuring economy meas-
ures, but the calculations should not
be carried to the point where econ-
omies in the feed bill jeopardize the
health of chicks.
Milk is essential in the starting
and growing rations for chicks and
that its reduction below recom-
mended amounts is almost certain
to result in trouble unless some ade-
quate substitute is provided. Milk
1 is one of the best sources of vita-
She’s not
very strong and the tropics are en-
ervating. Those two kids are a
handful.”
"They’re darlings. I helped her
put them to bed. I want two boys
Their eyes met.
she said. "I
and cannibalism. Liberal feeding,
plenty of green feed, and a libera)
supply of oats in the ration are sug-
gested methods to prevent losses.
• • • v ■■
Average com yields in the United
States for the past three years have
been five bushels an acre hightel
than yields during the preceding 10« ~
year period.
pretty well, then, and Uncle John j
told Mother—” ‘
A clock in the hall struck a series
of strangling notes. Debby slid down
from the sill.
“It struck nine, didn’t ft? Then
it’s half past eight and I’ve got to
scram. I wish I could stay "With
you.”
“I wish you could.”
(TO BE CONTINUED)
the arched door-way into the lobby.
“Are your things ready?” he
Do you need to go up to
your room?”
“Send a boy. I’ll check out.”
— “I’ll take rare nf that.’.’ x
“No, John. Let me."
“You’re my guest.”
“But, darling—” Her eyes fell
from his face. “All right,” she said
slowly.
From the divan on w’hich she sat
she watched him cross the lobby
to the desk, holding himself stiffly,
his shoulders erect. Though she
saw only his back in the dark tweed
, suit, she knew how his face looked,
a little grim, the jaw line pro-
I nounced, his dark eyes brooding.
How silly of him. But how thought-
| less of her, perhaps. She must be
I caretui—She must-remember—
| When he came back to her, a
bell-boy followed with her luggage,
j John took her loose fur coat from
4he boy, held it, apologized for hur-
rying her, but avoided her glance.
. They went out through a revolving
door. Cold wind struck them with
unanticipated force. She was blown
in a staggering half-circle.
I caught her. They stood on
of whey for each three pounds of
milk removed. A gallon of skim
milk can replace nine-tenths of a
pound of dried milk, and skim milk
furnished as a drink for the chicks
can replace all the dried milk in
the starting ration.
Poultrymen who are mixing their
own feeds should get prices from
feed dealers on 10 or more of the
ordinary ingredients and then cal-
culate which combinations are the
and
prices.
Sometimes the women went, | • .
too. My great-grandmother who I i sunshine
was named for did. I’d have liked
that."
“But,” Debby continued regret-
fully, ‘‘as they May on the radio,
’Time marches on.’ The place is a
back-water, now, and no mistake.
There’s no fun. except in summer.
You can’t make Mother leave,
though. She’s had plenty of chances
to sell the house. We could get
enough for it, even in the condi-
tion it’s in, to live comfortably some-
where. The summer people are all
crazy about it, heaven knows why.
John thinks—” She broke off with
an apologetic laugh. "I certainly
am running on. It's fun to have
someone to’ talk to. You’re even
better looking than your pictures,
Gay.”
“Thank you," Gay turned from
the mirror, smiling.
“I used to watch for pictures of
you after John went to your debu-
tante party. They have the swank
magazines at the beauty-shop and
Miss Sophie let me cut them out to ___ _______ ____ _________ ____
send to John. I thought he hked you-1 ^rth more than the amount of
j money involved and not ordinarily
I purchased even when there is plenty
1 of money. If, as studies indicate,
relatively more farm families than
city and village families have diets
that can be rated as good, this must
be attributed to the use of home-
produced food."
In a typical year, the bureau of
agricultural economics estimatesr
farm families produced approxi-
mately 11,250,000,000 worth of food,
and fuel for home consumption by
the farmers themselves.
4:. i
the scrap^ of a shovel on the pave-,
ment outside. Summoryng all her
. courage, she threw back the covers,
huddled her 'dressing-gown about
her shoulders, slipped her feet into
satin mules and dashed across the
room to lower the window.
If John were here, she wouldn’t
mind. Gay assembled fresh under-
wear and toilet articles in prepara-
tion for a dash to the bath-room.
She hadn’t anticipated being ma-
rooned here three days without him.
She had anticipated none of the con-
tingencies which had arisen, noth-
ing beyond seeing him, being with
him again. He would come tonight,
surely, and take her back into Port-
land. There was only today to get
through, Feeling more cheerful, she
opened the door, made a quick sur-
vey of the situation, then hurried
along the hail and down two steps
to the bath-room.
When she returned to the bed-
room, partially clothed beneath her
dressing-gown, she found Debby
there.
“Good-morning.” Debby turned
from one of the front windows that
over-looked the street. She was a
vivid, restless, appealing young
thing, Gay thought, dark like John,
with dark eyes and crisply curling
dark hair, standing slender and
straight in the dress of dull red wool,
her hands in the pockets of the
jacket.
“Good-morning,
ing.
“You should have waited.” Deb-
by’s voice was lovely, low, with con-
tralto cadences, spirited, alive. “I
meant to come in and lower the
window." She picked up Gay’s
dressing-gown as it fell to the floor.
“This is beautiful, but you must
be frozen. And that nightgown.
Nothing but satin and lace."
“I’ve never been in Maine In the
winter before." Gay opened the door
of the wardrobe. “That’s obvious
from the clothes I brought, isn’t it?"
she asked, laughing.
"Wear this gray one." Debby
stood beside her, interested tn the
contents of the wardrobe. “It’s an-
gora, isn’t it?" Her slender, olive-
skinned hand touched the soft ma-
terial appreciatively.
two Keys to a caom
LIDA LARRIMORE
WNU SERVICE
"That’s the warmest.” Gay took
the dress from the hanger.
“You’ll need it.” Debby went to
perch in the deep sill of the window.
“You can’t keep this old house
warm. It’s as draughty as a barn i
and there aren’t enough radiators." 1
“It’s a marvelous house, Debby.” i
Gay’s head emerged through the
neckline of the gray angora dress.
“I should think you’d be awfully
proud of it.”
Debby’s dark eyes flashed.
hate it,” she said. “When I have
a house of my own, there isn’t going
“You like modern furnishings and
decorations?” Gay drew on gray
woolen stockings, laced gray suede
oxfords, crossed the lacings around
her ankles.
“Do I!”
“You’d be interested in my moth-
er’s apartment in New York. It’s
modern.”
“John told me. It’s a pent-house,
isn’t it? I don’t suppose I’ll ever get
to New York,” she added gloomily.
“I can’t persuade Mother to go to
Boston even.”
“Would you like to live tn Bos-
ton?”
“I’d like to live anywhere but
here. Portland would do. But you
can’t pry Mother away.”
“This is her home,” Gay said,
interested in John’s younger sister,
sympathizing with her restlessness,
thinking how unlike John she was in
temperament, though, physically,
there was a resemblance.
- "I suppose it was fun to live here
once,” Debby went on, sensing, Gay
thought, her sympathy and interest.
“A long time ago, I mean, when
the men went on voyages
brought things back from China and
India.
I “You aren’t very convincing, John.”
| She rose from the chair beneath the
You can have breakfast
anytime you like,” she said, smil-
ing at Gay. “John has his pretty
early.”
can avoid death by disease or other
rice hulls, eggs, milk and
vegetables.
r* •
that overeaHng ^is not^conducive ^o siona.1 eth!c“. wou,d . me to
longevity. It has long been a prov-
erb that gluttons “dig their graves
with their teeth,” i
rats allowed to eat all they wanted
actually did experience shorter lives
than those whose diets were con- j
stabbed a needle through the bundle
of wool. "There'll be a greater pos-
sibility of Miss Graham's liking me
if I disappear tactfully now.”
t “Don’t run away, Mary J’
i Her small brown face twinkled.
“You mustn’t go flying around in
the heavens, Gay. That will be
one more thing for me to worry
about. Suppose something had hap
pened—”
“But nothing did happen. We
reached New York safely and un-
eventfully.”
“I like it here.” Her eyes moved
around the warm comfortably-fur-
nished room. “I like Mrs. Adams
and Abbie and the children. How
long may I stay?”
“As long as you like. But—'
hesitated. ________
* * WhatTJofin ?Ti""' “
“I called Mother tonight. She s
expecting us in Rockland tomor-
row. I’m free for the afternoon and
evening.”
“But I can come back here with
you tomorrow night?”
“I think Mother will expect you
to stay with her for a day or two.”
“You—carf’t?”
“I can run out at night after office-
hours and back early in the morn-
ing. It isn’t far.” His eyes searched
her face. “You don’t mind, Gay?”
“You’ve never told me.” she said
hesitantly. “What does your moth-
er think of this—of us?”
“She was surprised, of course,”
he said guardedly. “But she’s got-
ten accustomed to the idea. She
loved your sending flowers for her
birthday.”
“Yes, she wrote me. I remember
the date because I helped you buy
a birthday present for her in New
York.”
“It was sweet of you to remem-
ber. She's eager to meet you. My
sisters, too. And Granny. Granny's
all for romance.”
“I don’t think I’ll feel strange
with her. Your mother, I mean.
She's Uncle John's sister.”
He was silent.
“Is she like Uncle John was,
friendly and wise and amusing? I
have imagined her being that way.”
“Mother is rather reticent,” John
said slowly. “She’s never gotten
over my father’s death. And then
her life hasn’t been easy. My fa-
ther died when I was twelve years
old. He left very little. She made
a great many sacrifices to send me
to college and medical school. She
worshiped my father. We, Sarah
and Debby and I, have been her
whole life since his death. You
won’t be offended if she seems a lit-
tle—reserved?”
There was silence for a moment.
Then Gay said, “Can't we spend
tomorrow afternoon and evening
with her and then come back here?”
“I’m afraid she would be offend-
ed, but if you don’t wait to go . . .”
“I want to do what is courteous,
but I’d rather be with you.”
“I’ll come at night. If you were
here I couldn’t be with you during
the day.”
“But I like it here.. It’s friendly
and impersonal. With your fami-
ly—” She made a helpless gesture.
“Oh, you know how it was in New
York. We quarreled. People got
in the way. We weren't happy un-
less we were alone.”
His bright pleading glance dark-
ened.
“We can’t ignore Mother and my
sisters.”
She sat for a moment, silent, look-
ing down at her hands. Then she
lifted her head. “I know. It’s go-
ing to be all right. Don't look so
despondent, darling.”
“Of course it is.” His face bright-
ened. “You’re more adaptable than
1 am and the situation is less com-
plicated.”
“I’m not timid about meeting peo-
ple, usually. There isn’t much of
the shrinking violet in my tempera-
ment. How shall I act to make the
proper impression?”
"Just be yourself, Gay.”
“With no—modifications?” Mis-
chief glinted in blue sparkles be-
tween her thick dark lashes.
“Certainly not.” His voice was In-
dignant. “You’re so sweet and gay
and generous, really generous. Or
perhaps I mean tolerant. More than
I am—”
“I haven’t much character. I can’t
seem to get agitated about most of
the things that people think are im-
portant.”
“That isn’t a lack of character.
It’s poise, self-confidence, knowing
what you want and how to get it.”
“I know what I want, but getting
it isn’t so easy.”
He dropped his head to kiss the
soft hollow at the base of her throat.
“Mother will love you,” he said.
“I hope so." With her hands on
his face she lifted his head. “But
if she doesn’t, it isn’t especially im-
portant, is it? It doesn’t matter,
does it? Does it, John?”
His head dropped against her
breast. Her arms went around him,
holding him close.
“No — No,, darling,” he said.
“Nothing matters except that you’re
here."
min G, which promotes growth, and
it is doubtful if the reduction of milk
below 5 per cent of the starting ra-
— lion ever is advisable._____________________
Even with 5 per cent of milk In
the ration, some source of vitamin
G must be provided as a substitute
for the portion of milk omitted.*
High grade dehydrated alfalfa meal
which has a rich green color and
contains at least 19 per cent pro-
tein is the first substitute. Low
grade alfalfa meal will net furnish,,
j much vitamin G.
The protein lost from the ration
; by the reduction of its milk content
I should be provided by a protein car-
rier which is low in minerals. Soy-
bean meal with 41 per cent protein
1 can be used. Mineralized soybean
meal or meat scrap are not satis-
’ factory substitutes for milk in the
sthi tnig ration-----------------------
Dried whey can be substituted for
tervnte J
RCUS
again, . ’
aid. It
gs. It
» mod- !
id and is)
empta f|
s, give i,j
K
and Dr. Sargeant thought it unwise
for her to go with him.
Mary Adams’ voice continued, then
broke off as John called in from
the hall.
: “The last patient gone?” she
asked, glancing up from needles
that flashed through scarlet wool.
filtrate factor are believed to be ' “rve Padl<*ked the office door.”
contained in yeast, whole rice and went to Gay, settled comforta-
ma bly in a corner of the davenport
and dropped down beside her.
Science has certainly determined ! do you ^!nk that Profes’
cut the telephone wires?
“I shouldn't hesitate,
and"'labo’ratory PUed bri*klV. and stabbed an amber
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 54, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1940, newspaper, May 8, 1940; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1285741/m1/3/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.