Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 248, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 25, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brenham Weekly Banner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
Tunisia Battle Theater
»
i
s
£
A1
f
• Solatia
£1
1942 ?
Maher**.
tX
Y9^
M,d.nu
[•*
I
^^JDuirot ’
&
I
X4
of playing into his hands or to the extent of unnecessarily 'fJU'"
? ■<—i
---—
...............
—
Amedee/’
he
‘ eled upon .L.
6
JIj
“Only the sound of their voices,
*
■
At
t
4
MCI
W-Downe***
ton lots,
•A
Ll!±iKAt>
y ■ ?
TUNISIA
litor
upt.
[rp
AJ.
s
nt of our own in a position where treachery might
,riy harmful.
irtKqg<|
Capa Baa
2.^
ANSWtB TO
p*kvions pvzzta
Blngte VMoa
Clear Leasee
$8.50
the
trol
I
Wed
painful
SCHWAB SCHOOL
BUSY TRAINING
WAR WORKERS
OKU t il—*>
Double VW*
$1240
I igfcf, i .. ir i,
9
Tiarate
L R-
ISa.nl
w
Second Year oh the FiHt Front
. -nyj-»y -Ijfc-F !ccrwi*,■"» yw- ■.-''.7*S7UNK'"E*?3
^iiimj"1-^ " ~ * _________—-1-———M ryhanical
By carrier. oe.w~k lie; month 60c; year $600.
By Mau: WMhlnrton aad adjoining countie*. $3.50; Texan *5 00. out of etale IS.
Darlan in North Africa
<<JlBaja’
acaoHS
1—lance meaning*
retort*
U-Oa to right
14-Brad
U-ChU4l«b tn*
M-na*ue
-.-X
Nadhor
G«/f of Gabes
> ' mw * ■'
'■xV 'X-1 Sebriyo
BSiiig
C’kHUWNMAM IS-i
under the direction ot the Tolan
Committee and I
ideas.
Tolap took It
add
ria.
Entered aa aecond-
daaa matter at po»t-
■office. Breoham. Tex-
B ■
Dr. A. H. Howell
V»'
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
Brenham, Texan
jfr ■* .J
‘•"‘ttsfcroi.v
y Tripati
A,]
?7
MARKET NEWS
is
* ^Oricar Bronenkant
Watches
Repaired
. Brenham. Texas, AH Work Caah
c SoWegroenJ where Boot*
clothed with Carthag* for mattery of
th* Mediterranean world in 264 149
B. C., and where Borhory Pirate*.
Turk*. Arab*. Austrian* end French
hare fine* fought . Wheat, barley, \
' oof*. fruit* grave in mountain vol- A
s ley*; dote* on derart ao»e*. Maun-
s tain* yield «in«, iron, lead Pepula \
Non *1 4,750,000 include* french,
' Italian*, Arab*, Bedouin*. Area ■» C
48,313 *a. mi., about *ixe of Alabama 1
5FAX0*
>1
Mediterranean -
BETTIE COLUNS
Millinery Designing
Re-styling
Many year* of experience.
. - - .*o. 1. -
018 S. Market at Brenham, Tex.
CHAPTER XV
We all waited for Henri tb ex-
plain his unexpected statement,
but he didn't until the sheriff
prompted him.
“What makes you think yoor
father and Miss Lavinla may hatre
quarreled last evening? the law] *
oMtonC^. . ■ r_^‘ * -7^—
nS
Jxju.
if;
<■
It
What does that mean? Does it imply, as critics of the
arrangement argue, nothing more than that Admiral Darlan
is a realist; that he has concluded that the Vnited Nations
aregotog to win**
That could be, of course. And yet, Roosevelt and Church-
ill, Eisenhower and Clark are realists too. One would be sur-
prised if our realists accepted Darlan’s realism to the extent
1
Ifienating our Fighting French allies.
How did it happen that Admiral Darlan was in North
XAfrica at the psychological moment when we struck—in
position to assist us—bearing Petain’s credentials as head of *<
all French fighting forces, on land and on sea? fl
Could it be thal Admiral 1,-eahy, the President’s chief of w
staff, who was our ambassador in Vichy for the principal
L. reason of his long friendship with French military and naval
chieftains, know* what lies behind Darlan’s sudden conver- M
i *
PITT8BURGH, Pa.—(UP)— fhe .
oldeirt industrial echool in the «
state of Pennsylvania is operating ’
on an ’around the clock" ached- 1
tile to turn out skilled workers re- i
quired to meet the occupational
needs of one of the busiest defense
centers tn the country. / 1
The venerable Schwab voca-
tional high school, situated in
nearby Homestead, is humming
with high speed war machinery
day and night, training workers
as planers, milling machine oper-
ators, lathe and drill press, opera-
tors, flame cutters, scarfers, heat
treaters, layerouts, welderst and
power saw operators . — under a
program sponsored by the Federal
Securities Agency and supervised
by the Office of Education.
An outright gift to the people
of Homestead by the-late Charles
M- Schwab, former Bethlehem
Steel corporation president, pre-
sented In 1003, the school has but
one object—to “provide boys and
girls with a working chance in
t,. Mfe," and to "teach that work is
Hg . ennobling, that to be able to do
nothing is disgraceful.'’
Among those studying at the j
school have been 100 trainees who
were selected from relief rolls and 1
placed in mill jobs, thereby reduc-
ing relief costs. A supplementary
course at the -school also has pro-
vided over 206 skilled workers to
the local labor supply.
The Schwab school was one of
the earliest ip the country to in-
.Hammea LM
yVNafcaal PAh
CLOOOCD NOSTItILS
OMMkO PROMPTLY!
Whan • ««M start*—spread
Mentholafum inrid* noetril*. In-
stantly it reteaad* vapor "Mba*
tholationn" that « Mt*
oMonit 1) Thin <nit thick tnurua;
fl Boothe tnembranoM; S> Help
reduce awollen paMSgea; *) Stim-
ulate nasal blood supply. Estrs
Prout A Priup* quick relief! Jar*Mt
buzzing arc»MK /
Placing a sheet of paper In the
machine, J began to type,
first, I made only general notes
ct evehts, bttt gradually, I found
till, fitting page after page.
I had ’reached the point where
the sheriff discovered Lavinia’a
suitcase in the luggage compart-
ment Of Dudley’^ car, when I
foohd that 1 had Cached the bot-
tom of my last sheet of paper.
That ’was ho place to $top; I had
to flhWh. As I knew there wa*
a box pf paper bn LkVintah w*rft-
inf desk downstairs 1n the sitting
room, I decided to go down and
help myself. >
fltaftg ihy lamp. 1 opt my
door ks quietly as I dhuld, and
Started but. Most of the rooms
oh the upper hall we're in dark
ness, but a chihk of light showed
under one door, the one to Gas-
t6h Dupres' rdom. Xs I passed
It, I thought I detected the mur-
mur of voices. --------
MBv going downstairs and get-
ting the paper 1 needed, I start-
ed back to my room. This time,
a* I nPAred Gaston's door, the
,> ■ —----------—--------
fl-Bin*
zl-Candy
M—*»t>> Ionian *0*
*i Wan** nlcknamr
St—Coad* sold again
SS-POM
U -Old torn, of >o
**-*'• roe
|S—Thins* o»*piared
ged and rose. "But Tm goin’ to
let my boys go on searchin' that
swamp and, if they find anything,
I’m goin’ to make an arrest!’’
With that, he strode from the
by women. Mrs. Amy Gil-
d-year-old Sacramento mo-
ther, has been employed by
California State Highway PAI
a* broadcaster. Mrs. Gillem holds
h restricted Federal Communlca- -
tk . (Commission U: ' r>
< ----------------
bus effort. "After Lavinla had
____me site' wasn't g<Xng tsi .-<•__-m-
, ... - I ry me, I felt as though L didn't* ley. “Souftfl's Rif If they
Xo. 6 J^re^ham^ 11.51 p. m. j want to 8ee ftny one for a while,
[ so I started to go to my room.
Brenham 2H3. pjn. Out in the hall j ran jnto my
M ~ \ father and told him what had just
I happened. It made him angry,
i and he said he was going to talk
to Lavinla. As I started upstairs,
he went into this room, where I’d
left her."
. "Did he tell you
what they aaid?”
Henri shook his head,
didn’t tell me anything."
The sheriff turned back to Pat-
sy. "You say you heard C—
Keith. Just what '^1
old you hear?’’ t Alrrl
Lx; Mot Of -od»
[ -T. Roihoodi J
t.pa
I'
troduce manual training, and «t-
’ traded many Students through its
foundry, the first in any ktate
school. After a period of decline,
the Schwab school was changed in
1017 from an industrial school to
A vocational high school.
According to C. F. Wintersteen,
principal of the school since 1923,
the machines used in the school
are the counterparts ui actual
machinery used In mills. Winter-
steen disclosed that workmen
from courses tahght at the school
will be picked for the new super- |
detense plants now being con-
structed nearby. . ,
a-month grocery clerk in Brad-
dock, Pa., to one of the world’s
leading industrialists, has left be-
• and British forces thrust liom Algeria to take,
* EDSON S WASHINGTON COLUMN
HETCT EDSON
NEA Service Washington Correspondent
'I1 HE ho»i of congressional investigating committees which have
bcm rWTUff * StfOTSbns" to"f5dlt TdrTfafcs m u*e War pro-
duction effort probably have been more confusing to the folks back
home than the.war itself. Take the one subject
iof manpower. Half a dozen committees have been
investigating what’s wrong with the manpower sit-
nation—House committees on Migration. Agricul-
ture, and Military Affairs, Senate committees on Br fl
Defense Contracts, Education and Labor, Military
Affairs. They have all heard pretty much the f
same witnesses j»ivin« the same testimony hi’t for
ail the mlTiiorrs ura* Haw been spilled,
the manpower problem still hovers around like Mi
What has happened about investigating man-
nnww hs« h-rnna— ' ' ^ nthsr part O* *u
small bust-
ness, conversion, iron and steel, price fixing and
so on, But it is notable that every committee in-
vestigation has in the long run come up with one Edm
principal conclusion—that lock of cerrtral authority
has done more to slow up the^war effort and cause confusion than
any other one thing.
• This great truth has at last dawned on some of the good congress-
men and, great to relate, it seems now that something will be done
about it. i
■pviDENCE that this is so comes
from the fact that the Tolan
Committee on Defense Migration
in the House has joined forces
with members of the Senate com-
mittees on Education and Labor,
Military Affairs, Small Business
- Utaf Truman Co-- in- -. -
vestigating the defense program, ( vestiga
to sponsor one piece of legislation Labib,
which is intended to tighten up
the loose nuts on the Washington
war production machinery by es-
tablishing a hew top, superduper
Office of War Mobilization, With
a $20,000-a-yenr director in
charge who would be supreme
boss of war production.
For five congressional commit-
tees to get together on anything
is almost unprecedented tn con-
gressional history. Most of the
credit for putting this over should
probably go to mttd-mannered
little John H. Tolan, 65-year-old
Minnesota-bom lawyer.
Die bill to establish the Office
of jVar Mobilization was prepared
rtion of the Tolan
H represents Their
When the draft was made,
olan took It to Senators Hartey
i. Kilgore of Beckley, W. Va„
1 Claude Pepper of TaHahassee,
l Wffgore Is on Military Af-
fairs and Trumad committees,
while Pepper is chairman of a
♦- Win* cap
•—MuMr*l not*
S-C*l>M*e dl«he»
1—Hardened
S—Snund of raindrop*
#-An»
W PlSpre
if—Hold* »w«»
U-Worker
IS—a->h*p*a worm
IS—Reb«i i*l«nt>
IS: Thr»»h»r
13 Mor* dl*mfl*d
JS- Uprl«tn*«
2* flp*nl*n dining hntlr
as—mum,
in Support
13 - Po*m«
IS-Pltl tableland*
rt-Co»rte farm b*«k*t«
S»- Brlrtle-HM par*
J* -Bleat /
40- Wide ring* 4
41— Ovt**Mnt«r
43-Ornamental pool*
4*-Latte ape
4S-F0M
W-Hanging ornament
*1—Kind ot French Win*
W—Ohaglot tmra bj
Oaula
M—MoeeaMn
over to the Ja]
■, tow&iu mo. ■
* Why. then, do we suddenly accept Datfan as an equal, an
ally, an agent of our own m a position where treachery might
^W^'fffiiurticularly harmful.
True. Darlan surrendered Algiers to us with a minimum of
ryteiatahep Thereafter he ordered all Vichy troops in Africa
to cease fighting against us. Then he radioed a request to
the French fleet to leave Touton and join the Anglo-American
forces. He appointed as a military leader for North Africa
one 9f the few high French generals who commands univer-
sal respect from anti-axis'peoples, Gen. Henri Giraud.
rgpnqurk
at the
Mardl Gras—that those who talk-
ed about murtfer never did it. The
axiom might hold true in moat
cases, but I knew as certainly as
I had ever known anything in my
life that, when he had threatened
to kill Gaston Dupres just now,
ant exactly whst he said.-
With a sort of alckish feeling at,
the pit of my storhach, I sat down
.in front of the table where I had
left my typewriter. < And then I
made a startling discovery. The
typewriter was no longer there!
(To be continued)
(The characters in this serial are
fictitious)
Patrol Employ*, Woman
SACRAMENTO, Cal.— (UP) —
Another fie’d of endeavor long
dominated by men has been in-
vade
lem,
have been talking about you.”
Dudley took a step forward, his
fists clenched. "Why, you rot-
ten—” - •
Then, Amedee intervened.
"That’ll do, Jeff,” he said to
the sheriff. "I won't have you
suggesting that Lavinla was in-
volved in any sort of scandal. If
afterwards that’s the line you’re going to
take, well find her by ourselves."
“No—he I Jeff Wilkes raised his eyebrbws.
r"You mean you don’t want me to
~ arrest this man Keith after the
them story he’s told?” t
" ’ — r-let him alone.”
rlghT”" frite soenrrBhrUg-
U*a
---(la pip*
El Ayaicna -'T- .tX
vlrtn"*"' y.,
U<rMAKITHl
Matmota Mtv
In any event, there is this to be considered, that presently
' \the ■ advantage of having outef'”'4:pg leaders of
both factions of the French on our side.
Unquestionably the people of France will be confused.
They are tola by the home radio, which they know is Nazi-
4.artaT\'ff’
i move. But they are told by Darlan, who they know has en-
joyed the chief of state’s confidence far more than Pierre
-Z Lival ever did, that Darian npeaks in the name of the aged
marshal.
We believe that the confusion must resolve itself into a
strong suspicion on the part of the French public, that only
I .aval really is pro-Gennan. This decision inevitably would
strengthen the anti-axis cause, would tend toward French
I -unity in our interest, and might mean the difference between
success and failure when and if Anglo-British forces seek to
mil tfp the Rhone valley to Berlin.
L I Dr. A* H Howell f rahroad schedtle
Wo. la leaves Brenham 12:l/ p.m.
Santa Fe Southbound'-
| Wo. 15 leaves r
Xo. 5 leaves Brenham 5:03 a. m. |
Southern Pacific Eastbound
No. 42 leaves Brenham ®:18 p. m.
No. 46 leaves Brenham 3:34 a. m.
Southern Pacific Wewtbonnd
No. 43 leaves Brenham 10:45 a. na.
No. 45 leaves Brenham 1:18 a. m.
! No. 45 leaves Brenham 1:18
Do you read tne classified col-
umns regularly? It wfll pay you
manpower sub-committee of Ed-
ucation and Labor. These two
senators went over the Tolan ‘
draft, made a Tew suggestions,
and then agreed to sponsor the
measure in the Senate, Tolan
then turned over to Pepper’s sub-
cr—h^npre ste# «<-Jn-
sstigators unaer Dr. RobertTK.
, a smart and also mild-
mannered young economist.
IT is Lamb who will serve as
1 counsel for tha combined
committee hearings on the bill
Twenty of the biggest war con-
tractors have been invited to send
representatives to Washington tc
testify, and thte congressmen have
indicated they are more interest-
ed tn hearing what these people
outside the government have to
say about Washington’s war pro-
duction machinery than they art
in hearing any defenses Of thfc ei*
isting fifth wheel mechanisms
Trqm men now in Washington, I
If the bill should go through in
it* present form, it would nteke
anrsxic reorgnnizauons ann cen-
tralizations of authority th tfte
erfrttog tetup. It wduld efttM-
hate dotlar-S-yeai- men fetftMrty.
It would combine manpowte- and
selective Service 11 would put
Army and Navy contract letting
under one heed.
■
W'
6
... prided , ___
this afternoon. You're going to
pay for the blow, my fine fellow!
I’m giving the whole story to the
newspapers first thing tomorrow
mz—Lavinla'-.d'sappearance,
and all the rest of it—especially
the rest of it.”
I had stopped beside the door.
I know the admission make* me
sound despicable, but I simply
couldn’t have moved from that
spot until I had heard Amedee’s
answer. And I heard it.
I didn't wait for any more. I
scurried into my room. Useless
gsaa—*raa—Moaoai— 1 -------
t ’ a Srossword
I
"" IttMT T1 ■•Wcv?S“^onffuJE"‘“Wa"
graduates of the school appreci-
ate. Said Schwab, “There is one
thing I discovered very early—
that It would be well to make my-
self indispensable. ... A man
must .be-w|da-ai|igke and up-to-
date. His future "depends rrtost-
ly on himself.’’
voicc„
said L j -
‘'tec. gave hiir - »tare. i ±
might “Vou'vc nothing to tharilT'iifte for
—I didn't do tnat for you.”
Soon afterwards, we all went
upstairs, simply because It was
Impossible to remain in one an-
other’s company without talking
about Lavinia's disappearance—
and none of us wanted to discuss
it any further that night. U.^ J
already had too many
scenes as the result of it.
I knew I wouldn’t be able tb
Sleep yet, and so, when I reached
my room, I tried to read. How-
ever, when I discovered that my
mind wasn’t registering a thing
upon the pt’teed page befora^me. to
f-lalA &lde^rhy ‘book anu“t<5t out two nights 1>efore
my portable typewriter. I thought
that, if I wrote down everything
that had taken place during the
past forty-eight hours, I might be
able to discover some clue to
what had become of Lavinla. At
least, it would stop the whole mat.
ter from 1
bead.
! r| HE position of Admiral Darlan in North Africa, as pro-
Ji tector of French interests there with the approval of
American military authorities, surely is paradoxical. No won-
der everybody is puzzled, many annoyed and at least some
fla bitterly resentful- ' ]
We have always regarded Darlan as pro-Nazi, and his in-
flpence as very bad. He coolly turned French Indo-China
Japanese. He had never made any corresponding
ird us.
Fresh eggs, 34c.
Fryers, 20c and 22c.
Hehs, .18f .....
< Old roosters, Sc
Turkey hens, No. 1, 2«c.
Turkey toms, No. 1, 24c.
Butter, 2fc tn 30c.
Country lard, 12c.
Sr^Xam^tterfat, No. 1. 43c *
Sour cream butterfat, No. 2, 41c
Sweet cream butterfat, BOc, (de.
“verral to plan0.
' (XVI’ITIIW
Ona year ago tooay middling
cotton sold in Brenham at 15.50.
Two yean* ago, 9.50.
Three years ago, 10.50.
Mlddliqg, 18.00.
Strict Low Middling, 17.00.
Cottonseed, rtraet price,$46. ba-
ida V. S. standard grade.
CbTtbnseed hulls, $11.00.
, Cottonseed mFsl, ton lota, I39.M)
per ton.
Cottonseed meal, less than toh,
$1.12 per stick.
Whole pressed seed,
$35 oo per ton.
Whole pressed seed, leHfc than
toh $1.90 per sack.
•a-'**Sou*
AjhcAiaouAN
i^X*Gdmo
x-’*5b«.tU
Cewbi
aSidi Nich_^_
I Foam
JTeteMi
Uairot. *U
Maginot
Line''
by AMELIA REYNOLDS LONG
•Mr, fev DaMJhMtofr —
mostly, Patsy answered. "But
they seemed awfully intense, as
though they were angry. Then
I heard Mr. Dupres give a kind of
ugly laugh, and say, ’So that’s
who the man was! I’ve often won-.yteoom.
dered’.’
"Did you hear anything moret j^aaseil *^'-'
i ij.in.ejwr..- ____ TL I walked-away so'that F W*»n.
Rehr! continued with an obvi- wouldn’t. ~ I didn’t Want to. eaves-
drop." , . .
When he wa* gone, Dudley
'Thanks,
weakly.
voices behind it were louder.
J heard him say, "No, my dear |
Amedee. There was a time when .■ . .* ?■ j. .
----- ...ded when you .truck me 7™ .'^ Xm
But it is notable that every committee in-
principa) conclusion—that lack of-central authority
part
«—Ftrtonn
44—Toward
M—Magati**
1-BWxtanc*
|^aka in V. t. atata
4 Bronchitis
CreixnoMton rtiteires promptly be-
cause it goes right to the Beat nt the
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
MU* Tell rout drWKiM w eelt you
Se^diST’mSSiKa.’U”;
gntekly allay* th* cough or you are
Are you one of thoBe'todlVtotial*, wflb, wTuft yrti come home |
from church, picture show, or a celebration of any kind, have
a bursting headache? if bo—you should have your eyes ax-
• amfoed, and Mkaiy a property -J$d pair of giMM
relieve that condition. Don’t neglect your eyes!
Dr. R. H. LENERT
fipartalla* g^ya, Ear, Nena aad Throat
Office over Tristram Pharmacy
; ' * Office Hten: 9 totta.
' ■ BRENHAM, TEXAS •
II
*,and
BANNER-PRESS, Inc.
Get Your ScraJ) Into the Scrap!
ReVtef fur JNberiet
bJ^^/fH^trriEX
DTMDB8* (Sr ®OOvbM5m **riwwwlOl
<*) beipa eisar eoM ring
ged nasal passages. MQm J
recUonstaxoMer. VA'fM
most elaborate assortment,of
Do Your Christmas
Card Shopping Early!
We strongly urge all those who want personalized
Christmas Cards printed with their names on them td
come in at ohee and make their sek'etion. ■ \
Because we are greatly handicapped by a shortage
of skilled labor, due to the war, we Shall need more
time in which to print your cards.
Therefme, please place your orders now for De*.
We have just received a
Montag’s
BRING US TOUR
SCRAP IRON
METAL-BVBBEB4K>NE8
fifOBEST PRICES PAm
We are co-operating with
the War Production Board
and your scrap will whip
the Japs.
Sam's Auto Supply
Phone Tttl Brenham, T>x.
cemter delivery so that you wfll face no disappofnt-
printed stationery.
Writing Papers and invite
tafc'A, :
7 -
•> .r.Ari<
BRENHAM BAJWJER-PRI
• ■■
pf*!4’” c -1
MENTHOIATUM
K
4 1
■*. BBBB BHB ■B'ZZl Wf"WaWnBB7X’”VBaBMBaaMI
■aaaaaaaa
I aaaa^aafla^aiiaflii
1 afl^aaama^aflfl
a9flaflfl^MflflflHl^filfl
!■» aflaaflfl^HflaaiNa
aaflMflfl^flflflflflflfl
saaaa^aasflBai
m^aflaflfl^aflflaa
daawaaaaM^afla
aaaa^aaaa^aaaa
waaaaaaiaaaaaa
MMHwiww JJaa vaaa
QUICK ccurwr
FOR
HEAD COLD
MISERY
I
/
■K
4
■■ *
■
*
ta-iraM
SHBBgg?
EaWaSJHu
BE JU ES jJSSS
H131-; .JiuL’JGJ K’-Iitf
Siiiifll
SISSI
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 248, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 25, 1942, newspaper, November 25, 1942; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1355164/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.