Stephens County Sun (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1941 Page: 1 of 5
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^Rainfall of
1.42 for March
Puts Stephens
County in Fine
Spring Shape
County Edition: BRECKENRIDGE AMERICAN
.W<*
Devoted to the Farm and Hftme. and to Every Legitimate Interest
of Breckenridee and Stephens County
V01 . Kl KVFA'
BKECKliN KIDGE, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1941.
uScRVER
jl
! dairy cattle
j WAR AND LABOR
IIS®?W
j TURKEY SUGGESTIONS
ill
WM
SEEN OR HEARD
STEPHENS county is primarily a
beef cattle county, and <1 -1 £
Clubs arc demonstrating in a big
Way iwhaij can bo done toward
feeding put calves and building up
herds, bin 'there is also an annual
£ cash crop to be had from dairy
cattle, if properly gone into
A meeting of the dairy cut tic
improvement eomrnitt.ee of the
Chamber of Commerce will be hchl
Tuesday evening April at the
Burch hotel, beginning at, 7:30 o'-
clock tii which all interested an.
invited.
y*r this ti)inK improvement ol
dairy cattle in the county will
be discussed, also the annual dairy
products convention at Fort Worth
on April 9-10,
James Alexander, and S. Monroe
Copeland are eo-ehairrnen of thir
committee The general idea, as
lias been ■expressed' a number ol
times, is not to thrust a lot of
growers and ranchers into tho
dairy products business as a main
source'of ■ >me, but to have n
good dairy cattle on every ranch
and f'irm, and these handled in a
manner that will pity good divi-
dends. PiQperlv handled a few
good milch cattle will furnish ;>
steitdy income in the form ' of
.weekly checks, it is declared.
4
*
WHEN the L'nit.ecl States turned
to all-out aid for Britain and j
ordered manufacturing on a huge
scale, labor, mostly CIO groups :
started striking. About thirty.!
plants «er" involved with billions'
of dollars worth of orders.
A medial ion board was appoint-
ed with the hope of quickly settling ;
these strikes. But apparently ac-
tion has not been fast enough to j
suit William K. Khudscn, now
chief of defense forces, and Navy !
Secretary Frank Knox. Yesterday
they issued a flat order to one or,
more plants, employers-and work-
ers, to get back to work, or else 1
The or else implied that in ease
they did not (■lie government would •;
take over, and -se? lo it thai the;
work gels oul It was something
new in the annuals of our federal
government.
"|T appears there are,many who ,
(H not fully realize the s ri-.
ousness of the situation in which
the .United Slates has placed itself.
Whatever we may think about iv;
wc are in a position that we mus. !
see to it that England wins.
Else, if England .♦ down, w
must Withdraw into our continental
shell and keep spending billions
for defense against Germany, taxo*,
for which will make what vc pay-!
ing now* nothing bv way of com-!
parison.
Also to keep up to the militar;,
standard that will keep off the a
variclous Germany that will hang
over us, like the sword of nam.
aeles will mean privations thai j
will lower our standard of living I
maybe until the life we lead now. ;
although much we may have grunt-1
bled about it. will seetn like the!
paradise of the past, England muc
win.
STEPHENS county turkey grow-
ers have taken a page from
the of experience. of cattle
raisers" and are improving the iual-
ity of turkeys, says W. R. Lace,
county agent.
A few years ago very little se i
letion was practiced and protluc-1
lion of turkeys was comparable t<; j
the hit-and-miss methods of the
beef cattle business of 23 years
ago, However, a few years ago
growers adopted the example of
the cattlemen in breeding up then
iflihcrd sand introduced the broad
breasted turkey. Only two farm-
ers, Ernest Curry arid Will Ran.v
^dell, experimented with the new
type at the outset, but other pro-
ducers sjpee have found that the
broad breasted specimen not only
improve the quality of their stock
Abut also are go'od feeders,,-nature
Continued on Paqe Two
Public Invited
To Grid Party
Here Tonight
l.'umc Between liuckaroos j
And fixes Announced
For May I
I -kenridge football fan - and ,
j t ie ptibl'c in general are'invited to;
: I*" footliall preview, free of charge
; > inch is to be shown at the High
' School auditorium tonight, begin
ning at 8 o'clock. j
Players of the 19 U squad .a ill ;
! IK1 introduced by G. B.Morris, dis-:
trict rule changes discussed by j.
| Percy Howell. Gus Gallagher. C. i
Arthur .lean, and D. Donald Deere.!
Showing of equipment will be un-
d'*r direction of Jack: Raj". Harold
Allen and John I). Walker. An
nouncement. will be made of ii;
football game between the Buck-1
aroos and Exes on May 1. and
colored films of former liuckaroo
games shown .
Practicc Delayed
Spring grid-iron practice for '11,
Buckaroos wits postponed because r
if the rain. Although 43 Vioys of
the coming year's squad received s
their .suits last Monday the prac-j
tice has been delayed. Coach Cur- j
tis says the practice will begin as •
soon as the weather is agreeable. |
Nine letter men are included in j
the coming line-up, they are: Per-
cy Howell and Johnny Walker,
guards: W. H. Jones and Gus Gai-I
lagher, second All District team
man, tackles: ends. Floppy Allen j
and Jack Ridley: and the back!
lettermen are; Jack Ray, Norman
Carey, and Garner Slaughter.
Squad Members
Other boys who suited out were:
centers: James Dixon, Richard
Rowan, Clifford Clay, and "Garth j
Gall;- vay; Johnny Walker, Percy
Howell, Ray Abbey, Virgil Riley,
Mac Spain Tommy Cruse and Mer-
lin Gilland. arc the guards: the
tackles consist of: Gus Gallagher,
W. H. .Jones, Darrell Gutherv,
Henry Dodd, Arthur Dean, Jack
Lohan, Jack Alexander. Buddy Al-
io n ami Bob Moore; ends a'tv'
Floppy Allen. Murrel Robinson.
Jack Ridley. Leo Cooper. Travis |
Hart's, Tom Lille. Aaron Mehaf-
fey, Joe licith. Walton Minchew,I
Aubrey Kit", and E. H. Alexander, I
to roam the back field next year
are: Wesley Cox. Norman Carey,
Jack Ray. Buddy Slaughter. Don !
Deer, George Louke Ed Roger-:, I
L. C. Reed. Billie Johnson, Billie ]
Pigg, Paul Campbell, and Carlton J
McM.ccn. I
People in the Nation' ; News
fM®!; * X
■■■:■:!«■;■,« 5
Ii*®#
III ' II - &
Breck Mav Be on
j
Vlilitary Highway
ilrl
Left to right. Postal Inspector Louis J. White boards an airliner for Miami, carrying an official
pouch containing the seven billion dollar British A ir Appropriation biil. At Miami, the pouch will be
placed aboard a plar.o to be flown out lo Presides t Roosevelt fishing off the Florida coast for sign-
ing. It's Dogwood time in East Texas. Miss Carolyn Swann of Tyler, Texas poses for the photcgrapner
by a larg; Dogwood tree in full bloom. — In Austin, Texas Speaker Homer Leonard signs the truck
load limit bill at the House of Representatives while Lon E. Aslup, sponsor of the bill, stands by.
Throckmorton Well
Potential Field
Patentiai report was Hied yes-
terday by Humble Oil & Refining
company's new Throckmorton coun
ty discovery well. No. 1 J, N. Me-
Krsight. 1,100 feet from the north
and 060 feet from the east lines of
section 2, Day Land and Catllc-
company survey.
'Five atida half inch casing wn>-
cemented at '1.022 feel, with a nat-
ural showing In lime for about >i
barrels daily at l.023-.t«) feet.
Treated with 5,000 gallons ol
acid, the well increased to flow at
the rale of 1,216 barrels daily, bas-
ed oh a railroad commission gauge
of 615.55 barrels in 12 hours and
25 minutes through a half-inch
choke. Tubing packer was set m.
the bottom of tubing at <1,014 feet
and tubing pressure was maintain-
ed at 375 pounds per square inch.
Body of Victim
1 )f Gas Awaited
Burial ol' J, I). Johnson
Will Be At Caddo At
Weekend
The body of J. D. Johnson, 28
until about 18 monlhs ago a rcai
dent of Caddo, will arrive in
Breckenridge this afternoon frorr,
Shamrock for burial at Caddo.
Thompson-Ki ker Undertaking cor.-
pany said today.
Exact time of the funeral will
depend upon artiv.il of a sislet
from California, either Friday m
Saturday.
Information received from W. D
Johnson, father of deceased, wa
that his son was working for a
construction company out. of Tul-
sa. Near Shamrock he went tr
sleep in the cal. of his truck, pre-
sumably with the engine runnitr
and was asphixiated.
Deceased .was born and reare:'
at Caddo.
Other survivors include, th" sis
tor in California; Mrs. Irean Bry-
an, Los Angeles; a brother, Mil lor
Johnson, Dallas; and his widow
Mrs. Eunice Johnson. Tulsa.
Spring May Bring
Screw Worm to
estern Texas
Three School Board
Members in Race
All former members of th.
Board of Education whose terms
expire this year have announced
for - re-election; so far no o'hei
candidates have appeared, it
said today.
The el' ,-iion will, be held or
April 5. polls at the City Hall ii.
charge of E E. Coulee, hours "
to 7.
Candidates who have announced
are C. J. O'Conner, Cain Kirlt. L
C. Morgan, Holdover members an
C, K. West, James G. Haireil am.
Johnny Bates.
On the Tuesday following the
election a meeting of the boarc
will be held for formal school elec-
tions.
CHIiNESE KILLER IS B1EED
SILVER CITY, N. M. lU.Ri -Woo
D;.-k San, the hatchet-knife slayer
ol" a wealthy Chinese merchant,
who sat in the death row two
years, is free on parole.
As a result, reports are heard
thrit a tong war, blamed in the
slaying of Yee Woo, the merchant,
will flare ag&in with Woo, former
Silver City restaurant cook, the
marked man this time.
Woo, who first faced hanging
and then was resentenced to be
electrocuted, was paroled to a
brother in an unnamed C&.ifornia
city, out his intimates aay he will
be found by his enemies in a rival
tong.
Woo Dak San Went on trial for
■H >
Mft- . !■
I h;.s life twice. Although the state
presented evidence that robbery
| was the motive for the slaying,
more sensational evidence was pre-
sented. Witnesses i?a:d Woo wa-
tlte hired killer of a San Francis-
co tong.
Jury Failed to Agree
The case ended in a mistrial
with the jury deadlocked 11 to one
for his conviction. The foreman
named the juror who was holding
out "because he was against cap-
ital punishment."
The juror, who had asserted he-
had no scruples ag&insL capital
punishment when sworn in, was
committed to jail for contempt of
Continued on page four
Fall infestation of screw worm
.n the western half of Texas was
;eneral and above normal, and
n the Lc.redo area Was the high-
est ever recorded there in De-
.ember, or for any time of year.
Temperatures throughout the
.'rittre winter survival area of the
screw .worm, especially the westt-
■rn half of Texas, have been lav-
a-able for the carry-over of the
ily. Rainfall conditions have been,
md continue, fayor&bic for a con-
thorughal the states to Califor-
<y irom central Texas wes,
a mots diastrous out-break of
via}
"Prompt and thorough tival-
.icnt of all early eases will pre-
ui| the buildup of high popula-
-ons of the screwwornv fly in
he southwest and prevent losses
;f livestock and decrease the ne-
e.s.sity of treatments later in itie
■ •ason." Siddall warned.
Ai the .present if ne, tie contin-
ued, infestation is indicated gen-
erally throughout the southwest
aid development by late spring ot
i most disastrous out-mbreak ol
•crewworms is in prospect. The
ason is too far advanced to ex- i
,.;ect reduction in the fly popula-
ion through the effect of, weathe:
o :.-.i extent that losses would inn
jc expected over most of the
. rea.
Pythian Sisters
Hold Regular Meet
The" Pythian Sisters of Hrecken-
•idge Temple No 4-1 met Tuesday
-vening for a regular weekly
nceting with a large number at-
'n.-,;ng. .
During the business meeting ail
members were requested to at-
tend the meeting called Tuesday,
■vpril 1.
Attending were Mesdames Effie
Pelfrey, Agatha Chasti.-in, Mae
Pruiit. Ruby Wragg, Verba Ja:-
rett, Polly licit!, Frances Jten-
drickson, Elva Hulen, Mattie 'Ham-
ilton, Mary Pellizzarri, Mable Mc-
Kinney and Josephine Strickland
Former Resident
University Head
Rev. C Q Smith, who was elect-
ed president of Oklahoma Citv
University, succeeding Dr. A. G.
Williamson, resigned ..once was
presiding elder here and well
remembered by many of Brecken-
ridge.
C Q Smith, Jr, his son, until
last year was a teacher in the
Breckenridge school system and
Buekarop footbal lscout. C. Q. Jr.
went from here to Goose Creek.
Raise Food and
tie Paid for It
County Agent Tells How
Special Offer Cart Be
Earned In County
Raise and store .iood for the
family table and get paid /or tid-
ing it.
That's the opportunity offered
Texas cotton raisers who que- ily
for a cotton stamp payment undet
the supplementary cqUon-progriSTi
tor 1941 by reducing uieir cotton
acreage.
i'eriormance of a food prcduc-
tion and storage practice, will en-
title any cotton farmer who earns
a cotton stamp payment lo . a:,
additional -13 special pi--..mail. The
iood storage payment will De-
made from a special fund of :.U3,-
uUO.OOO of the Agricultural Ad-
justment Administration apptopn-
ation.
In order to qualify for such
payment, the food products must
have been grown by die producei
on the larm for consumjiuon bj
the producer's family, Dewey is
tla- lies,' Member of the Stephens
County A.C.A. Committee, aaiu.
The payment can be earned by
.neeling one or notli of the U«-
;osv.ng requirements:
(ij Perform, at least three o;
She items listed beiow for con-
sumption When they are not. otii-
erw.se available on tire farm:
(a) Produce and store .100
quarts of canned or frozen foou-
stuff's; or the . equivalent thcreoi.
ibj Produce and store 'M
bushels of Irish potatoes, awee
tjol.-i.oe-., or other root 11 ops.
tc) Produce and store M busri
els of edible, dried, shelled cow-
peas or beans; or their equivalent
in shelled Cowpeas or beans,
bean's.
(dj Produce and store 5 bu.^:.
els of unslielled peanuts.'
i,el Produce and store 15 gal-
lons of sirup.
(ii) Produce and store lf
bushcis of cereal grains other tliae
corn. '"
12) Store at icast 3C0 quarts ol
canned or frozen foodstuffs, oi
the equivalent thereof.
In no event may a landlord, ten
ant or sharecropper receive eredi.
for more than S3 for carrying ou
this practice, regardless of th'
iiumuer of tarms in which lie
interested, Mr. iiames said. More-
over, no payment will be made un-
less performance under this prac
tice is in addition to iiis usual pl -
duction of food, as indicated by
his certification on the applica
Hon for payment.
East - West Military Route
Is Designated Over
South Loop
Steps being taken in military
circles toward designations of miliv
tary highways indicate movements
toward Breckenrdge being on c
north south military route, but. the
east-wesi route swinging frorr
Weatherford via Abilene.
A *1942 federal-aid highway pro-
1 ram for Texas exceeding $15,000.-
000, practically all of which will
be apnlicd on roads impc.-tant to
national defense, has been appr -
eel by the United States District
'Highway Engineer's effiee here
and sent to Washington for final
approval.
The action was revealed Wed-
nesday by J. A. Elliott, federal dis-
trict engineer, who said recent ad
ditions have raised total mileage in
th" state's proposed strategic mil-
itary highway network from 6,500
to more than 7,000 miles.
A call to Mr. Elliott Thursday;
morning by Earnest Maxwell, man-
ager of the Chamber of Commerce
.vas to the effect that Brecken-
ridge may, be- on a mil tary high-
way from Fort Sill. Oklahoma, to
San Antonio via Brownwood. Tilts
route is now being studied by en-
gineers of the 8th Corps area.
Iiisrhway 80-A,through Brecken-
ridge east and west is being pushed
by West Texas.counties for tourist
t'ravel to Carlsbad Cavern
Churchill said "Jugoslavia has i
found its soul" in the revolution
against pro-Nazi leaders.
City Brought Into
Passport Plea
Causing much comment here
Thursday morning was an article
which appeared in Hie Fort Worth
Star-Telegram Wednesday even-
ing.
The article said in pari. "Mrs.
V. E. Smith, the former Vera
Grace Williams, of Breckenridge.
daughter of Thomas H. Willia-ms,
merchant, there, is trying to obtain
a passport to return t.0 the Fat
East with her aviator husband."
Reports from the Retail Me. -
chant < Association show Mr. Wil-
liams formerly operated grocery
store here at C05 W. Walkei
street. He sold out and moved lo
Weatherford. Mrs. Smith was a
nurse at the Westside hospital.
First records of either were made
here at the Retail Merchants in
1921, it, was said.
Pythians to Dine
Attention was called today to
the meeting and dinner tonight, be-
ginning at 7:30 o'clock at the
Knights of Pythians JlalL
Third degree .work ;vvil\" be en-
gaged in and all members are ask-
ed to be present.
Sen. Sebastian
Dies at Ft. Worth
Information was received here
today telling of the death at Ft.
Worth of Senator W. P. Sebas-
tian, former Breckenridge resi-
dent, and senator from this dis-
trict.
Telegram received by Will
Black of Breckenridge said lie died
at 1:30 o'clock Thursday mortrng,
;-:id funeral services will be belli
Friday, but the hour was not giv-
en.
Mr. Sebastian: in Ins late 80s,
had been - bedridden for four oi
five years prior lo his death. One
son. Temple Sebastian, survives
inn. it Was said.
There wfs rejoicing in Greece
too, where it was thought Jugo-
slavia and Greece now will figlu
the German threat shoulder ;<i
shoulder. The coup, it was believ-
ed, may make possible realization
of the British ambition to set up
a Balkan defensive bloc of Jugo-
slavia, Greece arid Turkey.
Russia was mum but there was
suspicion the Soviet may have
given undercover encouragement
to anti-German groups. One ol
the chief factions in the coup was
the Serbian Agrarian party, whosa
leader haw been Jugoslavia minis-
ter to Moscow and quit his post
| to come home after receiving word
| of the Axis pact.
Matsuoka met with Hitler in
Berlin today after conversations
with Foreign Minister Ribbentrop,
which, it was reported, resulted in
the usual "full agreement". It
Was suspected, however, the over-
turn in Belgrade may cast some-
thing of a- pall over big demon-
strations of the Axis-Japanese ac-
cord. which Nazi propagandists re-
peatedly said should be most close-
ly observed in United States.
Budapest heard rumors that
Foreign Secretary Anthony Edei.
may visit Belgrade shortly, pre-
sumably to attempt to bring .Jugo-
slavia into a united front against
Continued On Page, Five
U. S. Aid Offered
In Slav Coup
WASHINGTON, March 27
—The United States today promis
ed help to New Jugoslav govern-
ment under i he lend lease ;.-ct In
any fight it chooses to make a
gainst aggression.
Acting Secretary Sumner Welles
announced he had sent word to the
newly constituted Belgrade gov-
ernment. He requested the Ameri-
can minister to convey a-surances
lo the new govrnnient there.
County Agent
Will Be Glad
To Tell How
Earn Cotton
Subsidies
NUMBER 25.
Jugoslavia left the Axis camp today with tt Belgrade coup which
may change the pattern of Germany's plans for a Spring blitzkrieg.
The coup swept from power leaders who '18 hours ago signed a
pact at Vienna and put in its place & pro-British, anti-Nazi national
cabinet under the boy King Peter, 11, ruling for the first time in
his own right.
German officials in Berlin, in the midst of elaborate propaganda
ceremonies for Japan's Foreign Minister Matsuoka, had no comment.
Rome charged the Belgrade
coup Was managed by the British*?/
in an attempt to reverse Jugoslav-
ia's signature to the Axis pact. In
London there was rejoicing led by
Churchill, who pledged all Brit-
ish aid to the new government,
and predicted it would repudiate
the Axis pact and resist any Get -
man aggression against its border j
or honor.
WEATHER
West Texas- Fair tonight. Fri-
day somewhat warmer.
Stephens County
Also in Plan
REA Power Use
Value In Dam Closed To
Permit Ditf Lake To
Begin Filling
Valve controlling opening ;n
Possum Kingdom dam now- has
been closed and water will begin
to impound lo form the huge lake
there, according to rainfall in
"West Texas.
Milton Daniel, on his return
from the board of directors meet-
ing at Temple where power from
the dam was sold to the govern-
ment rural electrification admini-
stration project, said the project
eventually would include Stephens
county in rural lighting, plans.
Announcement made at Fort
Worth according to morning dis-
patches said that construction win
begin immediately on a $1,550,000
high voltage transmission line to
distribute electricity from Possum
Kingdom Dam to 13 rural electri-
fication projects in North. East
and Central Texas was made here
Wednesday by E. D. H. Farrow of
Itasca. <
Farrow is president of the new-
ly-formed Brazos River Transmit
sion' Electric Co-operative, Inc..
which closed a ocntract at Temple
Tuesday with directors of the Braz
os River Conservation and Recla-
mation District under which it will
distribute the total energy output
of the Possum Kingdom hydro-
electric plant.
Mr. Daniel said one line is con-
templated eventually from Sey-
mour to Breckenridge, to Stamford
and to the military camp at. Abi-
lene. Immediate activity was desig-
nated as being in a group of Cen-
tral Texas counties.
-4.
Dr. Bos we 11 Will
Preach in City
Dr. G. C. Bosweli. Weatherford
educator, who has become associat-
ed with Texas Wesleyat College
as field man and professor of his-
tory will fill the pulpit nt. t.'ii-
First Methodist church here next
Sunday morning and evening, il
.was announced today.
Dr. Bos well comes here in the
absence of Dr. C. R. GraJ who is
holding a meeting at. Hillsboro.
WH AT S0L0NS ARE DOING
AUSTIN, March 27 ,« By lop-
.leavy majority, the Texas House
Wednesday ordered an investiga-
tion -if labor union practices in
Texas, vesting a committee with
iroad powers of inquiry. The vote
rvas 1 OS lo 13'.
Declaring allegations of job-
selling, unjustified strikes and sub-
itantii.-l increases in union dues
had been made, Representative
Leslie D. Lowry of Beaumont, au-
: hor of the resolution, asserted la-
bor was entitled to an impartial
investigation and the people should
know the facts.
Representative Ennis Favors of
Pamp£> predicted, that unless tlii*
House reversed" itself and passfd
the Governor's 926,800,000 social.
security appropriation bill he
would run for a third term anil be
elected.
The Senate passed to the Gover-
nor a bill prohibiting sale of con-
vict-made goods in compcti'>on
with those made by free labor, ap-
proved another House bill creating
a new court for Nueces County
and continued work on a bill pre-
scribing license rate4s under the
new truck load limit law.
Pay for Guardsmen
The Senate also passed, with
minor amendment, a House biil
providing full pay for legislators
who f.-re members of the National
Guard in active military training,
and still another House bill p 'o-J
Continued on Page Three I
Government Orders
Plants to Work
The shadow of an impatient gov-
ernment fell across defense indus-
tries stymied or crippled by labor
disputes, today.
The All Is Chalmers company,
Milwaukee, and United Automobile
Workers CIO was ordered by the'
government to re-open at once h
plant, which had been working on
"S45.000.000 worth of defense orders
when closed 65 days ago.
Willow of Utah
l^or Wooden Le/js
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah. ar.r;
'Hah has never had much reputa-
tion as a lumbering state, but it
produces one type of tree ncr.v
much in demand.
That is the black willow - .anil
't virtually supports the wooden
leg industry.
According to experts, the Utah
variety of black willc- v is highly
prized for the manufacture of ar-
tificial limbs because of "its low-
pitch content.
The wood is cut here to approxi-
mate sizes for thigh, shin or knee
replacements. Then it is shipped
cast to manufacturers, who age it
three years before producing the
War in Europe
Year Ago Today,
March 27.1040
By United Press
Soviet Russia recalled its am-,
bassador to Paris, Jacob Surilz,
at the request of France.
Moscow demanded that Brit-
ain release two seized ore-bear-
ing ships. /
Losses in the war at sea were
Norwegian freighter Come! a,
Netherlands freighter Saba,
British steamships Castlemoor
and Rossington Court and tank-
er Daghestan, «
• /
U'
-a . ... - ,
'' liPl lit;
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Hall, C. M. Stephens County Sun (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1941, newspaper, March 27, 1941; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth131064/m1/1/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.