Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 120, Ed. 1 Monday, June 19, 1950 Page: 1 of 6
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loods, Storms Take 21 Lives
*
SCT/ITOR
B1LLAPPR0VED
PRESS CONVENTION
IN CONFERENCE
WORTH WELCOME
PRODUCTS
JR1 LAY
HITS MOTIVES
r
G FOR PEACE
BIG FLOOD TOLL
TAX BILL TEST
Effort Being
Corporations
I
& MONDAI
i he
recommendations
Ri.
in
-1
out
Smith,
rest -
| xvas seriously injured.
Elks Will Present Award Here To
Texas Most Valuable Student
Calendar of Events
“Most Valuable Student" to
Teacher Killed
Pretoria.
NHAM WEATHER
Shepperd. secretary
lire at Ute plant.
in Gauwnviiie aim* 1WL
’ I
l
I
t
I
Federal Judge Hits
Texas Schools Again
Christian Youth
Rally Held Here
At Country Club
Provides Six Months
More Of Federal
Operation
BARKLEY SENDS
GOP REQUEST
T 0 COMMITTEE
—■_ Herman Schleider,
Fayetteville Woman
Dies In Accident
At Industry
Houston Workers Had
Substitutes Take
Examination
Pope Says Banking
Not Sinful Per Se
He Questions Use Of
Senators As Grand
Jurors
the
with
2000 Forced To Flee
Homes As Snow
Melts
i d
m
i i i d i • 111 s
al <lli\ ■
Field.
Leo
Big-Time Gambler
Admits 60 Cases
operations
arc
as-
ap.
ng.
rn <
a per
TEXAN FALLS TO DEATH
STEELE, Mo, June 19. <U.F»—
nini 95
kun 70
71
bum 91
um 71
L 76
iilliji
my
an
the
F mi: pom
PRESS’’
rilling serial)
RTOON
i';
i<len1 s.
I he
i
J
/j
Vice-President In
Reprimand of 21
Senators
the exercises.
The Brenham
were Steve ------- - ...
nil Associate in Science degree, night
/tu^iimin Herman Schieider, | He n«» i**n<«i** ••• ww..
and J**njal . . oi Laws. tack <4 Bualka and pneumonia. a> firm place winner frvm the I
1 1 K'lXls,
nounrr
ollhi* <d
\ <i< .i I i'll
Tl
On Water Program c/d/J Electrocuted
In Home Accident
Margie L.indrtiss Albrecht
(Continued on page six
ONE DEAD, 7 CHARLES WIEDE
HURT IN AUTO ANNOUNCES FOR
CRASHES HERE COUNTY CLERK
FUNERAL SERVICE
HELD HERE SUNDAY
FOR MRS: FARMER
cud
and ti‘<‘
Effort Being Made
p To Raise Levy On
Cnrnnrjttinns
(
(
-k’...
Kiss For Graduate
f--
■ dead
ill
e that
of
vote, the
an earlier
'•' n Grq
t W in a ><nr
IER IS A .'
HELOK’”
d in Alien a
looking. If
ceded a wife j
■ A marveled
urn an story, uij
Funeral sen i< es
Sunday afternoon
■ Mrs.
BORGER. June 19. tV.I’i—A
freak home accident has cost the
life of a little Borger girl.
Mary Gale Syrios was electro-
cuted, while sitting on the grill
over a floor furnace. Authorities
say the fatal shock came when
she reached out and touched the
treadle of an electric sewing ma-
chine.
SAFETY RECORD MARRED
BORGER June 19. <U.E>~ A fine
safety record came to an end
Sunday at the Phillips Petroleum
Company’s Borger plant after
more than 3’4 million man hours
without a serious accident among
the plant workers, J. W. Wilcox
Liberty Bell Replica
-- -
L •'‘I. '
Br 'JJyB
A
bind Mrs. W. F. Bowen
ri Mark, have returned
turner State Park near
[where they spent their
L Mr. BoAer. reports
was able to hear KWHl
Lal. which is a distance
L 210 miles from Bren-
Id that the sign'd came
ktntied on pngp six)
June 19:
Maximum 93
Minimum 72
7 a. m. 77
Chapel Hill delivered a religious
message <>nring the luncheon. He
was introduced by Mrs. John
Brooks Watson of the Gaston
Avenue Baptist church, Dallas.
Lawrence DeFriend, chaplain
of the Gideon Group of Houston,
served as master qf ceremonies.
He was assisted by Anton Dc-
Fricnd of Brenham. „
The evening message was de-
livered by Rev. R B. Thieme. Jr.,
pastor of the Berachah church,
Houston. After the sermon, prayer
meeting was held at the First
Baptist church, Chapel Hill.
A barbecue chicken banquet
was served by Mr. and Mrs. E. H.
Shaufler. Recreational activities
included group singing, volley
ball, baseball, and swjmming.
Out-of-town guests attending
were: Ronald Kind. Dayton. Ohio;
June Werner. Bellville; Geneva
Goodman. Bellville; Robert Har-
ris, Bellville; Jean Harris. Bell-
(Continued on page two)
VATICAN CITY, June 19. <! •’»—
Pope Pius says there’s nothing
sinful about banking.
He told an annual conference
of Bank of Rome employees in
Vatican City that he could not
endorse the belief that banking
is "stained with sin by its very
nature.” -v
But, he said. It is the duty
of the church and all Catholics
to inspire the banking system
with a “genuine Christian spirit."
been barred
> service for
HOUSTON. June
I hey V C
t rov C
r
wi
1* ;•
iV
of a new rent control bill today.
If the measure gets a final
- Fekfly from the house and senate.
| it will go to the white house for
signature.
A committee from both houses
[ has agreed to 4 “six and six"
| rent bill, six months of federal
[controls and then for the next
irnmuni •
ties could decide whether to eon-.
I tinue them.
In the house ways and means
committee, the way was cleared
for a crucial issue in the tax bill.
By the switi h of one
1 committee reversed
MINERAL WELLS. June 19. <VD
—A Lipan teacher. Harold Ward,
38. was killed yesterday when
his pickup truck overturned on
U. S. Highway 80 about 25 miles
southwest of Mineral Wells.
NEW YORK. June 19. <V.P>—
Kingpin Bookmaker Frank Erick-
son pleaded guilty today to a 60-
count indictment for bookmaking
and conspiracy.
He appeared in New York to-
day before a Special Sessions
Judge Nafhan Perlman, who set
June 26 for sentencing. Judge
Perlman continued Erickson's
$10,000 bail.
Erickson's operations across
the country are said to bring
him 12 and-one half million dol-
lars a year.
WASHINGTON, June 19. <1 l’»
—The house ways and means
committee took another step
today to make up for losses in
government revenue which
would be caused by excise cuts
in its tax bill.
The tax writers voted this
afternoon to hike corporation
tax rates to put another 433-
million dollars a year in gov-
ernment coffers.
The tax boost approved to-
day increases the present 38
per cent maximum to about
41 per cent on corporations
which earn more than $167,000
a year.
'Having been urged
I have decided
my < andidiu y
county clerk,
bv
avis Phiili]
Wiede was
(arm
pS- fin t-ngTTlt
r * opacity of
[ besides the < row. and
r told it is more maneu-
.it 15.000 feet attitude.
Ich it is designed, than
lighters. The planes
bout $1,000,000 each.
|11.000 persons arc em-
1 a 1 the plant, which is
ly building new B-36's
I'nited States govern-
put it is rebuilding all
rrev iously produced, so
key will have the new
horsepower regular cn-
hnd the jet engines, too.
comforting to find vve
Dually building these
i planes for defense at
[when the safety of the
Is threatened. We were
a’ it takes so long to
build, and test new
[that all planes we used
Id War II were actually
Id before the war start
I tune we may not have
time to get ready, so
Ilad to see these war-
[built in time of peace,
[we ll never have to use
number of
; t o a
----- like the bathtub, vv
Tn o County Students 11
Cct Houston Degrees
local■ -- -----------------
J-Jwifon Residence :
’’ Filled Willi 'Stolen j i
. vol I
WASHINGTON. June If). 'I I'1
jThe last wrinkle was ironed out
Lifelong Resident [
Of CountjrA^ltS'
For Support
June IB:
St. Paul's Women s Missionary
Society meet at the church at
8 p. m.
J une 20: ’
Wesleyan Service Guild will
have pledge service' at ’Firsf
Methodist church at 8 p. m. Out-
going officers will be hostesses.
Lions Club meeting at the
<f>untry club at 7 p. m.
June 23:
June 22 10 to 11:30 a. m.
Liberty Bell replica. Courthouse
Square.
June 25:
Sunday school teachers’ rally
<>( Brenham Conference. Zone if
1A.L.C.) at Behburg Lutheran
church, 2;30 p. m- __
“The Most Valuable Student ] local lodge, having been Judged
Award" of the Texas Elks State [by the committee in charge aS
[Association will be presented to [the “Most Valuable Student" to
I Miss Onida Ann Spencer of Free- represent Brenham Lodge in the
Has port. Wednesday, before the' state contest.
membership of the Brenham] She was valedictorian In a (lass
Lodge of Elks, at their regular of 137 graduates of the Freeport
meeting which convenes at 8:00 High school in May, 1950. She
PRETORIA. South Africa, June p. tn. also received the D. A. R. Award
]9 it p>—Doctors in Pretoria. Miss Spencer was sponsored by and the American Legion Award
South Africa, say Field Marshal the Brenham Lodge of Elks No. Jn Freejiort.
emeritus.‘Jan-Christian Smuts has suffered 979 in the State contest where outstanding
-------1 slight setback in his fight for she won first place as the “Most church, and extra curricula ac-
; . [Valuable Student” over some 38 tivities. She has been a member
A medical bulletin says the 80- entrants. This award consists of of the Student Council each year
$300.00 scholarship to be used through High school and has held
DALLAS. June 19. H I'—A 35-
I Terrell man was ac-
of the cidentally etectiAs'iited this morn-
t the Dallas airport, Love
WASHINGTON. June 19. tl’T)—
Vice President Alben Barkley
cleared the way for a,, second
senate investigation of the Amer-
asia cast' today. But, at the same
time, he publicly rebuked the 21
Republican senators who pro-
posed it.
With obvious reluctance, Bark-
ley sent to the judiciary commit-
tee a resolution by the 21 Re-
publicans for a separate Amer-
asia inquiry by the judiciary
group However, there is no
surance the committe will
prove the resolution.
In a rare reprimand from the
presiding officer's chair. Barkley
obliquely questioned the motives
of the GOP senators and the
“wisdom of the whole Amerasia
inq uiry.
The vice president noted that
he had been sitting on the
resolution because of work by
the Tvdings sub-committee and
because a New York federal
grand jury recently issued a re-
port on the case.
The grand jury report called
for a further investigation but
said there was no evidence of
dereliction of duty on the part
of any federal official. -
Barkley said the resolution for
a new investigation “may or
mrfy not be “a reflection on the
Tydings subcommittee. He add-
ed bitingiy that under senate
rules he was not permitted "to
look into the motives of the sen-
ators sponsoring the resolution."
[The vice president said congres-
i arc author-
| iz.ed on the theory they will lead
to legislation and that he "al-
ways had questioned the wisdbm
of the senate "acting as a grand
jury," to investigate the epnduct
of public.officials." . ,
E. Wiede today an
I Ins candidacy for the of
county clerk of Wash
aunty, and said he in [slx months individual
put on a vigorous cam
an effort
air toppled ther-
the cast. and
York a record low
Above is pictured ’he replica of the famous Liberty Bell which
the'will be on displav in Ilrenh.un Thursday morning from 10 to 11:30
o'clock, in connection with the piesent Independence Salo of I'. S.
Savings Bonds To weaome the bell, the Bienham Concert Band
will provide music on the north side ol the courthouse, and a brief
ceremony will lie held. Bankers will be on hand to accept orders
for bonds.
EORT WORTH, Jone 19. GT.P)—A Federal District Judge
ruled in Fort Worth this morning that Independent School
Districts must provide equal facilities for negro students,
rather than transferring them to other districts. *
Judge Joe B. Dooley of IL S. I ’
District court made the deelara | « « ir/TOTP /Tr’r’I/’Nr1
lorv fudgment. against the l-lu I I Ml IV I I ILL II L
less Independent School districts A * 1 Vvl Vzl 1 Iv/lj
The ruling has statewide signlfi jimnirnrsn
cance. because the practice of WUllMlZ CDL L,|DL']j
transfers has been in common III Jlll\ I L 1111^1*
usage.
Attorneys for the National As- | PAD PAVE PV In^'MlRaUons
sociation for the Advancement of 11 V/I\ Pz>I\Pi
Colored People claim that the
Euless ease will set a pattern fori
about 1100 Texas school districts
and wjll apply as well in four
other states.
The Euless case arose at the
end of the l!M8-'49 school term.
Trustees of the school district
< losed dow n the negro school be
cause the building was run-down
and in need of extensive repairs.
The trustees arranged for negro
students to be transported to and
from Fort Worth schools for
and dresses and
[coats. The police say a lot of
| them still had store price tags.
General Smuts
Uncomfortable Night
has been killed in a 40 foot
fall from the scaffold on a water
[tank at Steele, Mo. The victim
was James Fred Brown of
Mineola, Texas, an employe of
[the Dixie Tank and Bridge Com
pany of Memphis.
HOUSTON, June 11. H T)—The
III. S. Civil Service Commission
Isays 11 Houston post office work
ers have been fired for Civil
Service examination frauds.
Besides being fired from the
postal service, the 11 persons
have been barred (uun any fed-
eral ^service for iP three jsenr-
period.
Four former Houston
workers and four other
i < i j _—— -------
Dallas Votes Today
GAINESVILLE DOCTOR DIES
GAINESVILLE. June 19. <UF)—j
A veteran Gaineaville physician.
Dr. Rtifua C. Whidrion. to dead
|d ()’(’<,ii
| KI M' i/l’HI
| and
RANCIS
1,1
KANOS"
TEST STORY I
[ OF HIE «u|
tale of a taJa,
. who adoptfd
|.ooie and drove
Its. You'll rena
, as long as ja
Imoio
pen'
I ' 'r "nJ
L.l.k \\h
hawk
I'l'c' tm. olor)
[it "I A.'ncri.aJ
llled ■ ,0J
kntmi . Of t|J
natioi. greate^
ptci
cartoon
KWS
The Pacific Northwest hail I
the next biggest death toll, sev-
en. But the floods responsible for
the deaths were brought on by
warm weather that melted moun-
tain snows. Warmer weather and
[thundershowers are predicted tor
‘the Northwest.
. One of the critical areas is
|Southeastern Ohio, where flash
floods bit seven towns, causing
one death and at least 10-mitlion
dollars damage. Two-1 hous’a nd
persons were forced to flee their
hbmes. Now the towns face a
critical water shortage because
of widespread damage to water
purifying systems.
The Brenham Country Club was
the scene of a Christian Youth
Rally Saturday.
The Rev. Frank Plaezck, pas-
postal ,or ,h<* First Baptist church of
persons
also have been barred, in the
same ease.
■The announcement, out of
Washington, gives no names. But
the Civil Service Commission
says the frauds arc classed as
felonies and could be punishable
by fines or imprisonment, or
both.
Thirteen of the 15 jjersdns em-
ployed now or formerly by the
Houston post office were mail
carriers and two were clerks. The
report docs not make clear the
connection of the other four.
The Civil Service Commission
says the whole affair stems from
impersonation, ‘that is. having
someone substitute in clerk-car-
rier examinations.
^Painter Loses Life
H'hen JCire Touched
Coining Here
i
born Mi't' l1 1 holds loot worth manv thousands year-old
She mov- of f|o||ars. They call i't one of the cident; "
Texas in ! largest collections of stolen goods ing at I
"■J ' South Texas at Field.
I Leo Richards and four other
dingy painters were working on a
tall hangar at Braniff Airways head-
quarters. Richard
when
a
(BY UNITED PRESS)
Twentv one persons ai
[from storms and floods
wake ol an Arctic wa
swept the country on the eve
summer.
[ The co
1,1 | niometers
1 i brought New
of IS'j degrees for June IS. Sum [
trier begins officially on Vv'ed- I
nesd.iv.
The cold wave is blamed for I
widespread storms that plagued
the east. The New York area had [
the biggest death toll, nine
drownings in Long Island Sound ;
and one in Great Egg Harbor In ,
let'. New Jersey.
Pacific
COLD TOPPLES
THERMO METERS
TO NEW LOW
—
Nine Drownings In
New York Blamed
On Weather
; Six a iimmobi I, ■
[ot them fatal, marked
of the week iratllc scent
around Brenham.
Two minor weekend a
in Brenham involved To,
CIS.
An auto driven by Lloyd KoL |
ingt Bienham. collided with an
driven
of Fl
at
DALLAS. June 19. d'I'i—Tax
pavers vote tomorrow op a 14
[million 800 thousand dollar bond
issue to improve and expand
Dallas’ municipal water system.
Mayor Wallace H. Savage has
called upon vrVe’rs to approve the
bond issue. Failure to expand
the water system, Savage says,
will mean a water shortage for
Dallas in 1951.
I it.II les
Ibiiiin c
ol
inglon
tends to
pnign m ,in effort to win thet
nomin.jtion in the July primary. |
by
to
for
recent I> , decision. It decided to drop any
the resignation of lent in ex< ise taxes on cheaper
>s." ho said. I brands of cigarets.
born and reared on [ Now. the committee starts
ening mishap ni ! 11 l,,rnl w“*hington oounty. |Working on <i proposal to boost
<md h is cfliuat ioti at the I corporation taxes, to make up
Bienham high school and Blinn for the billion dollar reductions
college. Since that time, he has | m excise levies. If the lawmakers
lived in Brenham. He served as[,|ont balance the tax bill Pfesi
clerk and agent lor the Railway , dent Truman says he won't ae-
Express Agency, and for the last|c(pt it.
several years has been associated The recommendations of a
.with the Wiede Service Station, [senate subcommittee have wills-
He says that he feels that he let] some anxiety south of the Bor-
is well qualified lor the position, (Continued on page two)
.and-promises Jo f£ive prompt and J _________
*...,., ,<■ ’-.c- .-«-i vo’e-il't-ieeix-w.-- L-1 . --'wa'-' ' ** '
“I solicit the votes of all the.
I voters of Washington county.
Goods DlSCOVered isob|ect to the action of the Dem-
ioeratic primary," he said.
J- '•< 1
WxX:. X. 1
Channel swimmer Shirley May France, gives her boy friend,
Francis McMahon, a congratulatory kiss after his graduation from
high school at Somerset, Mass. Shirley and her party will leave for
England aboard the Queen Elizalieth where Shirley will make her
second attempt to swim the English Channel. (NEA Telephoto).
>1 liiled with .
auto driven bv M.ie Findli
negro, of El Paso. The wick
occurred at the intersect ion of
Alamo and Kober slrecls at H): 10
p. m. Sunday. No one was in-
jured.
A Sa turd a.v
the corner ol Day and T ilth street
involved Clarence Al’irechl and
Karrv Dickerson, negro, of Sealy.
An elderly woman passenger in
were ■ held the Alblei lit ai, or,, bile wa
, uwin.K.' ....ccc. at 2 o'clock [slightly in jured.
Tll<7 ’,a'.!S J.'.'i'i'a' Ifor Mrs. Emma Smith Farmer. |
SI. of Brenham, who died Satur-
day at 12:25 a. tn. in a local I
| hospital.
r tl^e week end, we at-
I thii 71*t annual eon-
n of the Texas Press As-
on. held in Fort Worth,
the largest attended con-
n in the history of Hie
Ilion, with ‘150 registered
ill parts of the state. The
ivs were filled with in-
practical addresses
connected with
r industry.
i humor thrown in here
here to spice the pro-
In the latter category
havton Rand of Gulfport,
I whose remarks at the
Ib.mquet Saturday night
Mt put his listeners
Is A barbecue al
■ home of Amon Carter,
ler of the Fort Worth
liegram and known na-
jy as "Mr. Fort Worth"
In entertainment high
It the convention. Carter
Bic hundreds of guests a
B West Texas salute bv
■ Tis six shooict into
Ku ilie head table.
ent ire conv ent ion w ent
1 to the Swift & Co. pack
Lt in North Fort Worth
luncheon, feat u ring
ly the best steak any of
hors had ever eaten, w as
A tour of the plant fol-
I during which we saw
pro< essed or on displav
Leal hundred products
[this company nianu
^Urs from the cattle sheep.
Texas producers send
a revelation to sic
IWi ’t is being produced in
^|x\rh Texas labor. Sat
tl.e ■ (invention went to .
nsi>!idated Vujtee Air-
. northwest of Fort
’ were luncheon
impany in the
^B-i onditlonc^l cafeteria,
^■■n made a tour of the
■There we saw the huge
lirimbors being produced
the assembly line. The
■ .ire so tug the-V .ire
■ sidewavs along the as-
■ line.
■gbt of a I story build
W< were amazed to learn
till'' bomber now has ten
H—-<iv„ ojeuJar - cMgineji. I "J1
it Tdrs a I'.
S 1,000 [by Rev. John W. New, pastor of
I the First Baptist church, at the
lehai'el of the la'on Sim .uk fu-
neral home, with burial follow |
ing beside her late husband in1 ]|OL'ST<>N. .lune 19. 'IT’ Po
the -cemetery al Independence, i s;)v n1(.y'v (' Ull< <»\
The following served as pall- itreasure trove that will make]
bearers: Floyd Sykes. Charles ^Ij Babi and his band of thieves
Parker. Sr.. Charles Parker. Jr.., |ook like a bunch ol pikers.
Garrett Gaskamp. Jack Smith,: iliv(.ntory has been taken,
and Jesse 11. Parker. [ffot the cops say that the house
Mrs. Farmer was l„:. ** "
13, 1866 ,m Atlanta, Ga. Slic mov- [of «.|oi]ars. They
cd with her parents to "
1885. settling at Independence. ever found in
The same year she was married [onc time.
to W. D. Farmer, who died in [ .p|ip |0()l u ;is found in a
1930. She continued to live at [cottage. half-hidden by
Independence until 10 years ago ( a more trees in a quiet
when she moved to Brenham. [dential sector.
She was a member of the First Tu() m(,n atK] tw<> women
Baptist church of Brenham 1°r: being held for (piestioning.
many years. [no charges have been filed. 'I he
Mrs. Farmer is survived by )lousc apparently has
A 21 -year-old construction work-
was killed |
35 foot scaffold touched
2.100 volt high tension wire
but overhead.
The other four painters were
........... liecn used knocked to the ground, but none
only one grandson, W. A. •‘'iirrncr | recently only as a warehouse. i
of Houston, and a number of, j( was fu||v furnished, even
nieces and nephews. [to a baby bed. But the baby bed. |
fulI of the i
choice items ranging from
expensive perfumes to luggage,
cigarette lighters and automo-
'bile clinks. Also. there was
[rather an extensive wardrobe of
HOUSTON, j"^!) iSpD-Two [clothing-suits
Brenham area residents were
awarded college degrees at the
L niversitv of Houston's spring
commencement exercises^
The 1265 members of the larg-
cst graduating class in the his.
tory of the University received
h ir degrees from Dr E. E. Ober-
,'opzer. who retired at com
mencement to become the I nf
versitv's first president
John Ben Shepperd secretary a
of state, addressed the gradual- life. _
‘'"■ '"■’i Smu..
Joseph Kmiec. Chapel, rence of <-----
He has l>een fighting off an at-j previously been awarded (50.00 been active in Yaeen*. athletics, [at the age of 63. He had practiced waa burned seriously in a flash
&
th. wc
Ito >1 the
She has been an
leader in school,
slight setback in his fight for she won first place as the "Most church, and extra curricula ae-
[Valuable ----------22 G.IG— 2.'.. 1—
------1 "had a recur a
coughing during the in furthering the education of an office in student council for
the recipient. Miss Spencer has the past three years. She has
nrovIoukIv hern awarded &.VIIS1 hern active In V lpcm athletics
(Continued mu page five).
J
) CARTOON
N EWS
show 2 p. m.
*
■i
16> w
Brenham Banner-Press
BRENHAM-.
' The City of Hospitality
,UME 85
i
JAY
ASPipJ
AT IC |
11
Member of the United Press, the Greatest World-Wide News Service
SPOT IM J
TOWN,
the WEATHEE
EAST TEXAS—'Partly cloudy
this afternoon, tonight and to
morrow, with widely scattered
thundershowers in the eai»t and
extreme north portions Not much
change in temperatures. Mod
erate southeast and south winds
on the coastj,
ICSUb^^----’---------- BRENHAM. TEXASJVIOXDAY. JLINE IT 1950. NO 120
WAY OPEN FOR NEW AMERASIA PROBE
ST
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 120, Ed. 1 Monday, June 19, 1950, newspaper, June 19, 1950; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1356395/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.