Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 238, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1937 Page: 1 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Yoakum Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.
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V
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X
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VOLUME XXXX
5c PER COPY—238
The
in
state
thi-
and for IhWitt
ROTARY MEETING
were
»
H
SHERLEY ROSE AHLERS
. (
reparted
were
Shiner
CONSIDERATION OF RELIEF
been
APPROPRIATION STARTED
been
Yellow To Be Popular
all
I
toilet
has
been
con-
TEXAS WEATHER FORECAST
/♦
STERLING STALLIONS
Point-A-Minute
Apricots Top Dutch Cake
keeping clothing
ac-
HOUSTON, Tex. (•’’)— Rep.
state bird
vegetables
&
pre-
it
4
.1
J
KI
.4.0.
n«
v
•2,^’j
V;,
hh
A
fl
MADE
W ’
BY GOVERNOR ALLRED
I
I
I;
I.
N
NEW YORK (TP)—The
fodils that bloom in
ing of ice apparently
tected the plants from
wind and frost.
‘Cafeteria Plan’
For Crops Suggested
2025 garments
made at home.
accident
Houston,
fc.jOp
five
the
as
with
>r me.
are i
only
>m> Ahler-
Mr. and
<>n
early
short
gram,
benefit t
and to the territory.
The plan is but one part of an
extensive pn»gn»m which Standee
hopes to see inaugurated by the
8TCC this year. Stareke, lawyer
pres-
* °f
Municipalisties, he now is a mem-
I
I
of resettlement's lending powers.
AMERICANS iTMADRffl’
REFUSE TO EVACUATE
the |
the
st.[
dried.
oi^im-
I
L •
Mrs.
Elk
this
ill
...
<1
■ :
■■r
(til
working
< Inly
of Grant,
E| a
*
re
wen i
a s i f
17 are
counts.
31 girls have planned the stor-
age space for their clothing.
9 built new closets.
15 remodeled new closets.
The following articles have been
made:
17 cuptowels
9 aprons
6 coatg or wraps
34 wool or silk dresses
115 cotton dresses
133 undergarments
19 renovated garments.
In the 4-H garden demonstra-
to dear snow
foreman. Ver-
ident i-
i.P) —
birth.”
told the
the of—
inqiiired :—
LLANO, Texas (**)— A new
w „ record for rainfall in this
her of the executive committee! 47.84 inches, was made in IMS.
and also ia a member of the Tex-1 The largest monthly precipitation
as State Planning Board.
E8TACIA MORGAN,
Demonstrator.
Louisiana.
ex-
STARCKE SUGGESTS
LOCAL COMMITTEES
TO AID AREA WORK ranch
grand
I llmann ot
B?
ed as
857
New York City,
r over howling j
Kansas is over basketball. Al-1
I in me tn gur/ien ueuwMini-
tion, the following results ha^M F
000 Jersey bowlers. Newark alone'been obtained:
planned their gardens of gre^x L
1 sanitary
been built.
the
The mattress demonstration was
also given the women and 61
mattresses have been made.
The 4-H Club Girls’ reports
show that:
the present
Smit h
a plan
volunteer parole
status; legislating
ratification child
the i labor amendment.
on ! ----------------
" EIGHT MEN KILLED BY
ting beds, rose gardens,
i plantings, foundation
[ and entirely planted
the
dis-
belt
and .
AUSTIN, Jan. 13 (.P)—Orville
i Carpenter head of old age assist-
lance said today reinvestigations
reduced pension rolls over thir-
teen thousand effected saving of i
ninety seven thousand dollars
I monthly.
TEN STRIKE FOR BOWLING
NEW YORK (A>)—New Jer-|
sey, with the American Bowling
congress tourney scheduled Jlarch
9- April 30 in
is going as crazy
0 as 1 —----
ready 815 5-man teams from New
Jersey have entered the tourna-
ment. There are more than 20,-
000 Jersey bowlers. Newark alone I KRTCI1 UUWMMWU .
L* is aending 200 tdhms of maple-1 56 out of the 60 girls on:
r ‘ --- . .---
Mrs. Deii Brers of Leonardville
Kas., mother of nine children,
says she is “lost.” It’s the first
time in 35 years she hasn’t had
a child in school. Her youngest
graduated from high school in
1930.
K- k
vic-
The
SPntdue maple coursters boasted
four players who usually scored
three or more field goals per
game. Jewell Young and Johnny
Sines each made, on the average,
nine points.
(MM) parcel post station.
The building will be two stories
shots at him. J. T. Hardy fell down. My husband
car he came in, and left, and somehow I managed t
ear back to the house. My husband was home w he
1 do not know and never did learn whose ear my
that night. I am sure that nobody was w'th my
knew my husband was shooting at J. T. Hardy. I
how my husband learned where I was, or
think he was just driving around looking f<
the first time 1 was out with J. T. Hardy.
Witness my hand at Cuero, Texas, this 12th day of January
1937, at 1 :20 j’. M.
VU 14.45 inches in October.
* .>• . ■ -l x ' j
He said the cost of putting
the act- remaining benefits of Federal
f the past year and stated | ^(W‘>al Security program into ef-
projects of iheiK‘ct approximately four million,
hundred twenty four thou-
dollars annually, would not
[approve law making them avail-
nut i I revenue provided to
pay appropriations.
Reported conditions of
l.'tS ANGELES, Calif. Jan. 13 1
• I’l— Eight men were killed to- . i
in- da> when struck by freight train .
backing up in darkness at Sima, ”1
eii-’hty-fivp miles west of Laegas
Nevada.
I Crew
[from tracks.
Anderson
AS WE SEE IT J- J- MIKULIK AND PARTY
(By 0. S. MORGAN)
A MOVE was launched last
** night at the Fire De-
partment annual oyster ban-
MADRID, Jan. 13 (A^-Thirty
four Americans, living in the
United States embassy, declined
today to leave Madrid despite
warnings that building might be
closed. Evacuation of Spanish
population being made at the
rate of eight thousand daily. ,
The following is the statement made by Mrs. Lydia V.
Terry, to oilicers and court officials at Cuero Tuesday after-
noon. Her statement was made following a lengthy questioning
which started shortly after her husband, Willis C. Terry had
taken his own life.
at .
Monday :
Texas
0,1 department. He had resided
;Yoakum Tor about five years.
I for
were mader
hoards were
Recommendations included: ex-
tension of social security to blind
cr ppled mid dependent children
and others entitled to aid; reg-
ulation t<> conijiel reduction of
utility rates; tightening drivers
i license law . et feetive
NEW YORK (^)— Reefers
promise to be among the most
I
several
YOAKUM DAILY HERALD f
Yoakum The Home of the Tom-Tom The Hub of South Central Texas
ADVOCATING A “LIVE-AT-HOME” PROGRAM THROUGH DIVERSIFICATION ON THE FARM AND IN BUSINESS INTERESTS IN THIS SECTION
Home.
Funeral services
the Salem church.
He Is survived by his wife and
small son, and one brother, and
’two sisters of this section.
hallehsvillFboy is
KILLED BY EXPLOSION!
WILLIS c. TERRY laid to ,COPY OF STATEMENT MADE BY MRS TERRY ^1- firemems oyster irecommendations
— BANQUET WELL ATTENDED TO LEGISLATURE
been formed ami other chambers j farm here
of commerce have notified Starck leading
they plan to take similar action, i ments, but Warren Wright
Under the plan the personnel of twilling to spend it.
the committee will be composed of I ed nearly $100,000 in acquiring
business leaders who are most the two stallions. Chance Play
directly interested not only in'and Bostonian. Moreover Wright
their own civic
Subscribed and sworn to before me
nary, 1937.
HOWARD P. GREEN, Notary Public in
County, Texas.
Signature of Mrs. Terry witnessed by: E. A. PALM EH.
iHfWK. *t Mi
annual oy-ier banquet I
• given to the business men and!
inactive members of the Y oakum j
■ \ olunteer fire department was!
held last night at the old Texas-1
BLOW \<\ ILLE. Texas
want to record :i
orctitino Mireles, 71,
recorder, whereupon
perfunctorily
child
‘ • Mine, ’' replied t lie
21 clothes closets remodeled.
269 foundation patterns were
from injuries in yesterday’s wes-
tern air transjmrt crash near
Burbank. He was second fatality
among thirteen aboard. James
A. Braden, Cleveland business-
man was crushed when the ship
fell. Pilot Clifford Owens, A. L.
Loomis, passenger, < Imaha, Neb-
raska, were critically hurt,
others were injured.
Explorers wife suffered
mission.
TACOMA! Jan. 13 (-P)— Of-
, i ncio ill .-'HIIKT mill oi < <i moil i hi:.,. , , , . , •«
activelv I- 11 leers hunted a long kntie today
, . the Sinner cemetcrv. I he lioifv l , ,
ilevolp-; .I .i !is 1111 important <'lu<> to the iden-
■r , 'was prepared lor burial. I>v tiiei ,
i e\;is .area. 1 ’ • |t>!.v "> < harles Mattson s kidnap-
t"|- the or 11 ' ’1'''' ____ killer. It was used to stab the
com in 11 tees in j boy m the hack l>efor<> he was
citv to work 74 YEAR OLD MAN 1 slain by a blow on the head. 1m-
oruai.ii/iition. I FATHER OF TWINS portance of knife in hunt was
and j ----*---- shown by officer's attempts to
• 's.' BROWNSVILLE. Texas i -T)— prevent wound being known.
»|“I
for i F|
I cit y
ficial
“Whose
will be making some im-jdening Demonstration and
provements of some kind. If [Wardrobe Demonstration,
one business house is im- j The domen accomplished
proved and made more mod-j following in
ern, another business man j r" ‘
and probably several will1 counts.
follow suit. If new schools or[ 70 kept the clothing accounts'
other improvements are made for the family.
the ancient and shabby con- 18 new clothes closets
dition of many other public built,
buildings are so magnified
that they become public nuis-( - -
ances, more or less. All of made,
ffhich simply indicates that
ara^normal, red-blooded
*TO THE peculiar con-
diticns prevailing during
ed concrete with a Texas lime-
stone and face brick finish.
-—■■■ ■ ♦ x.---—■“
eral citizenship.
that the city commissioners'
would like to see a new sta-
tion if the funds were avail-1
able and we feel sure any fttFUtll LAVAGA UU PORT ARTHUR, Jan. 13 (A>)
plan for providing the funds! --------- i—Lewis Reckaway, Hallettsville,
’""“Id be ’"eleo’red. ! HALLETTSVILLE, Jan. 13 —ill. M. Schell, Elton
* | The Wardrobe Demonstration and 1"°>kmeii in oil still killed in
i Yard Improvement Demon- ' plosion at Texas Co. Refinery
classed as a “disease.” Ifistration were carried with 15 'lay. Three others injured,
neighbor Jones paints his women’s home demonstration --------
house oi buys a new car, it, clubs during 1936. The 5 4-H ■« inr DCMPHIU GDI I
will not be long before you'Girls’ clubs worked on the Gar-[ULU Abt itNolUN KULL
thf REDUCED OVER 13900ft
the |
their wardrobe work:)
82 kept individual clothing ac-
has been reported to crops ori
trees, except those broken1 more
down by the heavy weight of [ami
were held at
A number of committees have [cost money to make his Calumet
one of the nation's
thoroughbred establish-1
but Warren Wright is j
He invest-
FOWLER, Kas. (TP)— W. A.
Long, western Kansas ranchman,
has submitted a “safeteria plan”
of crop production control anil [ native
soil conservation to the U. U
Department of Agriculture.
Long termed his 9-point pro-
gram a “cafeteria plan’’ because
it enables a farmer to choose the
method he desired to earn allot-
ment money.
EAST TEXAS— Warmer to-
• .ght, cloudy, probably rain east,
-outh tonight, Thursday warmer
northeast, southwest Thursday.
[ WEST TEXAS—Partly cloudy
: w armer southeast tonight Thurs-
day partly cloudy colder Pan-
• andle.
| * -
Although apples are usually j
used to top a Dutch cake, dried j , Eagle, retiring congressman
apriocots are just as delicious. Mix L thp eighth Texas district,
them with brown sugar and cin- j W(>un(| up jjjg term by breaking
namon. I ground for Houston s new $2/6,-
to
their
AMERICANS HELD PRISONERS
IN CHINESE UPRISING
MANKING, China, Jan. 13 (TP)
—Threats of open warfare be-
tween the Chinese government [
and Communist reltels imperiled |
Americans held vir-[
Sianfu today,
was blocked
seeking to estab-
communist yovernment. It
was feared foreign residents may
be held hostages to prevent bomb-
ing by Manking planes.
United States embassy has
sought unsuccessfully to evacuate
Americans.
YOAKUM, TEXAS, AFTERNOON OF WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1937.
Max Stareke <>l Segu:n,
ident of the South Texas ( hambe
. <>f Commerce and wh
S. Paulus, . ,
. . 11 11 !■ 1 * i mteiested in
short talk lull oi eloquent i
and kindiv spirit, paid Hi, , .
, • .. . ... I has -.iigoested
to the meinorv ot little*, . .
, ... . . i , : iranization of local
Jean Ruin, granddaughter |
,, .. each South leva-
I). Meister, one ot our
. . .. . . . w it h t he regional
at the close <4 which i
i Stareke, mayor ot Semi n
1 prominent lawyer and bankei
, ent Imsiast ie in his ta l et' in
a*‘d . . . .
great future development
South T«-xas.
Jan. 13 (TP)—Gov-
Allred told the Texas Legis-
today he would not ap-
the liberalization of the
old age assistance until the pre-
sent plan was tried out.
He said last legislature auth-
oi i ed assistance to needly only,
and fried oysters with drinks, I aiding erroneous impression was
[pickles, onions and crackers. i created when people voted pen-
| A short program hour was i
l enjoyed, with President Morris "hen only approved
| Woolsey of the t ire department, I H,l(l Federal law provided for aid
presiding. Mr. Woolsey presented 11° "aged needy.”
i past president A. N. Turner w ho U'‘ s»bd the <
made a short report on
1 ivities <>
that one of the |
department for the coming year I three
| would be a new department build-isa,*d
| ii'K. I
H. S. Panhis followed Mr. | able
.Turner on the building of a new i
department building and called !
attention to the bricks now <m sound,
[hand for that purpose. He urged I
'that something he done about this|
I matter. I. E Hassert also made a
'short talk and stressed the im-,
jxirtance of having yood equip- illation t
i inent and modern facilities tor utility rates;
[taking care of such equipment. I license law. effective regulation
j Other short talks were made of trucks ami buses in interest
by L. W. Sheekles. II S. Erady. "I safety, enabling laws create
I Ernest Hamden, Perry Davis ami new pardon board, trial court pro-
[Jim Morrow.
An invitation was extended 1
all to become members o
department and to
regular monthly
[the se<
im mt li.
I
Only two members ol
Rotary Club were absent iro n
(regular meeting held at the
Regis at noon today. The liinch-
1 eon was delicious. One of th(. two’
^absent members was Ed. Palmer, i
i who is detained at Cuero by hist
work ae fgreman of the grand1
jury, and one member of the Club;
was heard to voice the wish that
Ed. would com(> on home. The ,'
member did not admit uneasiness;'
'just expressed tin- wish that Ed. ;
would conn* on home.
The new song books were put
in use for the first time, ami it
is sate to predict that they will
add a great deal to tin* enjoyment
of the meetings.
After the singing of
songs following the luncheon. Dis-;
triet Attorney Henry
in a
word
MARTIN JOHNSON FATALLY l^o."
INJURED IN PLANE CRASH
• | tin* members of the club, by a|
IjOS ANiiELI'.S, ( alii, Jan. 13 [rising vote, expressed their sorrow
(A*)— Martin Johnson, explorer at B(qtie Jean s passing, i
and big game hunter, died today 11|1(>j1. sympathy with her sorrow-
ing relatives.
As the regular program feature
of the day, Dr. Emil H. Marek
gave a most interesting and in-
structive address on the prolonga-
tion of human lit e. The doctor j
said that scientists are agreed ;
that a human being ought to live
to be 105 years of age, and told
us how it is partly our own
fault that so few of us reach
anx'thing like such an age.***
Cuero, Texas, January 12, IT37.
I, Mrs. Lydia V. Terry, of Yoakum, Texas, voluntarily m '
ot my own tree will make this statenu-nt w'th reference to t? ■■
death of J. T. Hardy on December 8, 1930. About 7:45 1’. M.
on that date, I picked up J. T. Hardy close to Kircboff’s store
in my car. 1 had a date with him for that evejiing. \Ve rode out
the old Cm»io road near to the tannery, where we turned aroun I
to head the car back towards Yoakum, and then I parked t! e
car. We had been there a few minutes when my husband, Willi-
C. Terry, came up in another ear and stopped close to us some
where, I don’t know just when*. He came up to the car J. T.
Hardy and I were in ami opened the door and told Hardy t<>
come out of there. He, Willis C. Terry’, fired at Hardy wh le
Hardy was still in the car, but apparently missed him. The
is a bullet hole in the top of the ear where this bullet
thru. Then Hardy got out of the car and made a motion
reaching for a gun, though I feel sure be had none, ami my
husband took hold of him by the throat and fired several more
got ill the
o drive m;
n I got there,
husband u>ed
husband. I
don't km v
whom 1 was. I
Thi- was not
All of this work was done at
the small expense of $155.85. Cut- [ Reefer Feature Detail
screen
plantings
yards in
LAFAYETTE, Ind. (TP)— Be-’each community having a club are JM>p„|ar daytime coats during the
re the 1937 Big Ten race open- results. ■ conijng season. Fine detail wii!
distinguish the better types. One
blue grey model features triple
rows of stitching at the seam-
and around the collar.
Little Shcrlcy R
faut daughter of
Henry Ahlers, who reside
street, passed away
( morning following a
ness.
The little girl is survived by I)H|
I her parents, by one brother. John tied.
Henry. Jr.; a grand father. John
Alder of Shiner, and a grand QCIDPU CRD FillCC IICCR
! mother, Mrs. Frances Ullmaim of wCAnUll lUll RRIiL UOlU
t „ v . J STAB MATTSON BOY MADE
jires-I I he time tor tin* services have I
i not been announced but will be
r I
hebl at Shiner with interment ml
the Shiner cemetery. The body I
'was prepared for burial- by th
I leek M i n’t tia rv.
fore the 1937 Big Ten race open-
ed, the Purdue basketball squad
averaged 47 points per game.
4v * Running along at better than a
51-Purdue maple coursters boasted
ermakers won by an average
tory margin of 19 points.
leaf and yellow vegetables
meet the requirement of
families.
124.892 pounds of
were produced.
3,516 quarts were canned.
623 brined, pickled or
served
1,450 pounds stored or
17 pantries were built
proved.
asked the re-
to swallow i
i <
, months
the |
I louse
now j
j campaign to
• billion.
Chairman Buchanan, of ap-
propriatioiig committee, said over
six hundred fiftv million Will g<>
work* Progress administration,
jLEXlNGTON, Ky. (TP)-It may |eighty millio;
to resettlement ad-
ministration, twenty million to
treasury department, thirty five
i million to other goverhmental
j agencies. He declined to com-
ment on what action committee
would take but he may attempt
. k . - - ’ ' '.'7\ ’cut amount favoring elimination
1 only in and Bostonian. Moreover YVright; - ... ...
ic development but owns the young sire, Hadagal, and ;
in the development of the region is one-fourth owner of the $245,-1
at large. The committees will act 000 imported French sire, Bien- j
as contact groups between the heim II.
local organizations and the reg-1 ---... -
ional chamber, seeing that the Colorado’s official
local group derives all poaaible’ig the lark hunting,
advantages provided by the ser-;
high and constructed of reinforc-|' ices of the regional organization. and banker, has made material
“ *’ Mutual understanding and co- contribution to the welfare of
ordination of effort between the his city and state. He is the
local chamber and the regional mayor of Seguin and is vice pres-
chamber, resulting from the pro- ident of the Lions Club and of
is expected to be of vast the Seguin State Bank and Trost
each city concerned Company. Immediate
ident of the Texas
INJURED IN CAR ACCINENT i REST IN SALEM CEMETERY I
----------------------------------------------- I
Joe J. Mikulik and children,
Kenneth and Joyce, of Texas
quet to get a new fire de- City, and mother-in-law, Mrs. L.
partment building. No one c. Kuhn of Yoakum, were injured
denies the fact that one is in an automobile '* 1
needed. It is not for US to Atcola, near Houston,
Say how it should be financed as they were returning to
or to offer any criticism be- City after being in Yoakum
Willis C. Terry, 35, who took [
his own life Tuesday morning I
shortly before 10 a. m., was laid j
to rest in the Salem Cemetery at l
3 p. in. today.
Mr. Terry was for many years!
an employee of the highway de-1
partment in the road maintenance [
— — -----—----------- - - ---j ------ ...--------- ’ d . — . -
cause it has not been built, the sa/i mission of attending the y
but we do know that the funeral services for Mrs. Mikulik. I ^“ "^y prepared
bricks for the building are; Mrs. Kuhn suffered a broken burial by the Beck Mort and
; J | interim nt was made under the
house and we understand Wtts confined to the hospital at I direction of Kubena Funeral
that it will only take about , Houston. The extent of the in-
$5,000 to build a modern one.. juries suffered by Mr. Mikulik
We do believe, however, that and children was not revealed,
many of the obstacles in : In a telephone conversation
the way of a new building . with Everett Moore of Yoakum
could be eleminated with a [yesterday, Mr. Mikulik stated
little concentrated effort and that Mrs. Kuhn was the only one
the cooperation of the gen- seriously injured,
eral citizenship. We know -------♦--
’ I
- HOME DEMONSTRATION WORK1
feel sure any REPORT ISSUED LAVACA CO,
ling the funds ----•— — ‘I—Lewis Reckaway,
would be welcomed. J HALLETTSVILLE, Jan. 13 —1H. M.
tMPROVEMENT might b e! the
■ -1 i • ,, »«i .
LYDIA V. TERRY’
12th dav <>f Jnn-
demonstrations:
12 sieve boards
8 new ironing
the recent freeze, no damage made.
More attractive, better fitting, I twenty
suitable, more
~ better cared for clothes I
the ice. The ground did not marked a change in the appear-[by Insurgent
freeze and the heavy coat- ance of the
pro-
the
* ’ Box or girl ?''
For- cordcr after pausin''
Develop- his surprise.
1 ” [ “Both.'' Mireles shot at
>er of vital -tatisties.
elderly •
I
of seven
dollars for
was
AUSTIN,
ernor
lature
Louisiana Power Co. office build-1 Prove
ing, w ith about 200 plates bring i
serx ed.
The large number present wen*'
served plenty of oyster cocktail '
; erroneous
I created w hen people voted
also!s’"ns f(,r all over sixty five years
I assistance
illations giving
hoards. Ix-gal :
t the fire ' red stricting; 1
at t end
meetings held
nd Mondax night of eac
and
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (T)
4 onsideration of appropriation
seven hundred ninety million
relief in next
.....’..a was begun before
—subcommittee today
congressional groups planted to
• increase amount to
SAN ANTONIO. Jan. 13
matron of South Texa- I\
inent Committee by each chamber [
of commerce in the South Texas ; keej
area, suggested by Max Stareke speechless,
of Seguin, president of the South Mrs. Minles. 35. had pnsent-
Texas Chamber of Commerce andjed him with twins, a boy and aj
outstanding sectional leader, is'girl, a few hours previously,
planned to bring about cordina-1
tion of effort between the local 1
chambers and the regional body.
one
economical [ tual prisoners at
has | Efforts to leave city
’ t.S ! '
farm women in La-llish
vaca County during 1936. There
has been a decided improvement
in the choice of colors, in
fit of the clothing and in
tinctiveness gained through
fastenings, sleeves, collars
cuffs.
The women in the county have
shown profound interest in im-
proving their yards. The novely
> shrubs found have been
S. widely used in this work, which
is as follows:
1 1 lawns have been sodded.
465 nursery shrubs have
planted.
1667 native shrubs have
planted and are living.
65 shade trees have been plant-
background for homes,
roses have been planted
daf-'and are living.
the spring | 16 walks have been construct-!
will be reflected in the coming ed.
Beason’s dress prints. A number :
of patterns have already
shown in which yellow is
predominating color.
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Morgan, Cena S. Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 238, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1937, newspaper, January 13, 1937; Yoakum, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1295204/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.