The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 86, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1936 Page: 11 of 20
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RY 10,1986
DO!
Cager
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10,1936
Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
THE FORT WORTH PRESS
LIVERSIDE IS ADDED
ewest School
• Make Debut
rext Campaign
Tennis War Is On Parrots Defeat
Panthers After
Bill O'Brien, Boss of Pro Netters, Target of Latest
Attack From U. S. Tennis Group
Forfeiting Two
. Want Ad Service—Call 2-5151
PAGE 11
CLASS A DIVISIC
MUNY CAGE SCORES
MEN'S INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE.
Y. M. C. A. I SWIFT'S
fe ft pf.tp. fg ft.ptitp.
Saylors.f 3 2 1 8 Walker.f. 2 0 0 4
Alleey.t 1 1 1 3 Hudins.r." 0. 0 2 0
Mahony,c 5 0 3 10V Zandtif 0 0
Lawler, s 0 1 2 1 Hewellc 2-4 0 8
Morgan s 2 3 1 7Waco.c 0. 00
Brooks.g 0 0, 0/
Hines 1.0 1 2
Col. Bradley Points For Fifth Derby This Season;
Joey Wagner Has 13-Year-Old Black Cat For Luck
Tougl
1onighC
i ch Isn’t Named; Lester
Mentioned As One of
1 Post's Candidates
Joe Williams, has quit the hospital
and is recovering encouragingly from
| his recent operation During his ab-
- sence members of the Scripps-Howard
sports staff will pinch-hit in this
space.. 7
le Will Be (
or Locals
ivaders
College Rai
sketball sche
Austin Colle
contest on t
nes Junior gy
ded at 7:
ome has a v
able for serv
aroos.'Seve
vers are list
ther wi ma
stars of la
ing lineup w
ad Carl Day
Portwood
Harding a
uards.
be picked fr.
on Isbell, Ca
McClain, Gree
Ken Matlod
hn Flynn, Jo
ome.
By J. A. BURCH ARD
NEW YORK, Jan. 10.—All of
+ the “battles of the century"
aren't settled within the squared
circle. A tremendously intriguing
bout, without benefit of six-ounce
gloves, is being waged between
the United States Lawn Tennis
Riverside club will be Assn, and Bill O'Brien. It is gen-
to the group which already erally conceded that O'Brien, who
sides the city’s four other Class resembles an overstuffed Kewpie,
Nhools, North Side, Polytech- is winning on all fronts
Paschal. and North Side, and O'Brien supervises the profes.
======
had been originally planned ebrates its. grand inaugural at
yat Riverside in Class B for a Madison Square Garden Saturday .
1e but enrollment in one year night The new and featured face suspension,
graduate them into class performers, who last year bran- — .
iarrington said dished their racquets for the glory-asked Bill,
decided it would be best Of the ruling amateur body, are
A decided at Mrs Ethel Burkhardt
e city's newest high school
, rside, which will open its
an semester next fall, will be
Ihetted to the Texas Interscho-
%.af League's Class A District 7,
cities we have to play at clubs
that are members of the U. S.
L. T. A.
"Well, I know by this time that,
the U. S. L. T. A. hasn't the con-
trol it imagines. We're going to
play in 90 cities, and approximate-
otegen,
MainG
10.—The CI
ent to find
Louts, heav
enter its thi
1 To bouts
n Beaupre
angle in t.
ir-oid Dall
lege of Di
hand Dall
manager. Di
pound youn
mateur ran
rs ago........1
-CORES
PRESS.
11
By FRANK ORTEEL
Scripps-Howard Racing Writer
MIAMI Fla., Jan. 10.—The
Miami whirligig goes round
named “Nig,'and a Japanese gold
ring are the two symbols of luck
speeding his recovery from a re- -
cent siege of pneumonia ... A
Japanese owner presented the
husky lad with ‘the ring after
Wagner won his first race on Sun
Alley, a 5'0 to 1 shot ... He has
worn it since. ... The black cat
strayed into Wagner's apartment
while hewas riding at Rocking-
ham Park.". The following day
he, rode five winners and came
back the next afternoon with four
winners . .. "Nig” has since been ,
his traveling companion.
Marshall Field's Tintagel, Bel-
baseball club of the American As-
sociation.
Gene Tunney and his. wife are
at Miami Beach for a short va
cation. They were accompanied,
by Charles and Mrs. Coe .. :
James J. Braddock is due next
week. . The Deans are also here |
for the winter .. No, not Dizzy
of the. Cardinals, but the man
mountain of the rasslin' racket
. Ed J. Tranter, president of
the Fasig-Tipton Company, which
sells thoroughbred and standard-
bred horses, emerged from his
Steers Now Hold Game And. Totals 1 1 8 29 rotain s 4 7,14
| RED HOT on.BURLESON
fg ft pf.tp fg.ft pt tp.
Carter.f. 2 1 1 5 Davisif 1 0 0 2
Parham. 2 0 2 4 Wilshire.
Shelton.f 0 0. 1, 0 Branson, c
Connely.c 6 1'1'13 Chanlor. s
Derring.1 0 2 2|M‘Alistr,g,
Heald.s 0 0 01
Mercer E 9. 0. L
Totals 11 2 9 24 Totals 726 420
BRADPON HAMPTON AST
Spurney 1 00 3 O Senterif 0 10 1
Keethly.f 5 2 0 12 Cranford.f 0 1 0 1
HStanton.f 0 1 3 1 Diek'sn.c 0,1 4 1
Half Leadership in High
School Race
and round ... . The crusade to
keep city gangsters away from
the races, a move backel by the
6 Florida Racing Commission, "has
proved, so far, % very ineffective
. . . Those flame-colored flam-
ingoes that fringe the infield lake
at Hialeah Park thrive on a diet
of rice and shrimp . . . The re-
cent "Yankee" hurricane that al-
most tore Miami off the map
didn't even budge the web-foot-
ed birds.. . C. H. (Pat) Knebel-
kamp, owner of King Saxon, great
miler, has started 14 horses at
Tropical Park and lost 13. bets
... "Only the King can save me,”
chirped the silver-haired Ken-
tuckian today as he bemoaned his
unlucky streak ... Saxon is now
on his farm getting in condition
for a come-back this year . ... In-
cidentally, Knebelkanp holds con-
trolling interest in the Louisville
Standings
W. • L.
ly 25 of our shows will be held
in membership clubs or districts.
And why not? We give them.40
per cent of the gate. When they
hold an amateur tournament they
pay the U. S. L. T. A. $25 for a
sanction and get nothing for their Coach Herman Clark's "North FafreH.c
money. Small wonder they ig-Side Steers, who last night found "nm"
nored that letter: . themselves perched atop the high
. t ., school basketball standing with a
A STRIKING example of club game and a half lead will de-
4 sentiment was afforded at fend that advantage tonight at
Chattanooga last spring, O'Brien's the J. P. Elder Junior gym
troupe had just arrived when a against W. C. Stripling Yellow
club official showed him a tele-Jackets at 7:30 o'clock. In their
gram from the U. S. L. T. A. It previous meeting. North Side eked
stated that O Brien S players were out a close win over Coach Rosco
not to appear or the club would Minton's quintet.
T 4.. Polytechnic, forced ato forfeit
What are you going to do?, two previous victories over North
PA Side and Stripling because Dennis
it would be best. tut EVHBE amareur Dogy, are We're lucky to break even on Dellis, forward has been found
I hart them off in C A Ethel lardt Arnold, an amateur tourney responded ineligible because of the eight-
1 of popping them upnext Jane Sharp and Berkeley Bell.
*vin,” he said. M
he coach has not been' an- O'Brien tour as a blow at the very
bieed. Darrell Lester.-T.C.U.‘s foundations, of the grand old am-
: American center, has been ateur pastime. The reason is
hioned as probable timber, simple. of necessity O'Brien must
pEngton refused to comment recruit his hired hands from the
lgie possibility of Lester be-amateur ranks. So he utilizes the
dig the mentor. US L. T. A. as a training school._______________-_________
overside will have a new mod. When the amateurs become suffi-T the day when an open tourha- ____-------
! gym and a practice footba ciently promment to qualify as ment will be sanctioned, but that tet avenged a 34-32 defeat hand-
iraavilable for use by this fall. | gilt-edged bi as causes him no worries.at all. With ed them earlier in the season by
1 = he waxes contra th in front of a majority of the outstanding per Coach Benny Winkelman's Panth-
l their noses. The pride of the as- formers under his wing; he ers.
‘°C Smith ( but to sociation, to say nothing of its figures he'd be doing the U. S.
. bank account, is certain to suffer L. T. A. A. a favor to let them
la ctain I lohors whenever O'Brien takes the rub-compete in an open battle. What's
1,. -- • ber band off his check book. % . more his players won't take part
a riding to E. S. Farrington, city
I "tic director. ,
will
O’Brien supervises the profes-
Team—
North Side :
Paschal ....
Stripling .
Poly ......
. 3 0
.2 2
1 2
Pet.
1.000
.500
.333
3 ’ .250
Rogersc
Borlaw.s
Conelly,g
Melugin.g
Tester. c 1
McKees 4
Wallace.g 0
IJ
Fort Lauderdale winter home to |
see his first race since last Oe-"
Totals 10 5 12 25 Totals
5 8 6 18
MRS. CATDONA WINS
Mrs. H. V. Cardona won low
gross in the Fort Worth Wom-
en's Muny Golf Assn. play yester-
day at Meadowbrook. Mrs. Hen-
ry Bacon was the low net winner
with Mrs. M. H. Hamlin winning
blind hole honors.
mont Park futurity winner, had
his first breeze at Hialeah Park,
George W. Loft, whose Pap won stepping three furlongs in 38 sec-
tober . , , Former Congressman
on the Balmont futurity in 1917.
and later raced Donnaconna and
onds. . . He’s the early favorite
| at 3 to 1 to win the Florida derby
On Watch, makes trips to the pad- ... Friends say Damon Runyon
dock before each race to look ’em
is ill at his Hibiscus Island home
. There are about 20 farriers
On.
Col. Bradley believes he'll win working at Hialeah and Tropical
the Kentucky derby for the fifth____
time this year . . . Joey Wagner their
Parks . . . Most big stables carry
says a black cat, 13 years old.
own skilled platers—men
who shoe the race, horses.
responded ineligible because
the official. "I already have a.
The U. S. L. T. A. regards an$450 advance sale for your show.
What do you think I'm going to
semester rule, gained some of
do?"."
It is a matter of record that
the Chattanooga show was a huge
that disadvantage back last night
by. drubbing. Paschal, 27 to 16,
to knock the Panthers ‘back into
second"place. North Side, given
| the decision over Poly, was ele-
And Chattanooga is still vated into the top spot without
a defeat.
O'Brien doesn't expect to see. In winning over Paschal,
Coach Luther Scarborough's quin-
success.
a member of the U. S. L. T: A.
ed them earlier in tl season by
The Panthers curbed the scor-
ing of Long Lon Goldstein, the
C
W.to.ollke
-======-=
I ted Press "* * . in the national professional cham-
ANGELES. Jan. 10. — An NATURALLY, the amateur ten-pionship unless O’Brien gets his i
Tenational field of 224 golfing T nis moguls would like to re- advance
amtaries teed off on a soggy move the O'Brien menace. But it’s good business," he ex-
Angeles 4 ub.c ) irse between ti ( have been singular" unsuc-: plains. .
ers today in quest of $1500 .cessfui and are likely to remain ( int make any money without |
% prize money of the 72-hole
iAngelesopen—emmpionship:
A: his moguls would like to re-2
move the O'Brien menace. Buth s coed -
they have been singular” unstc. plains “The pro championship
that way in the future - my boys in the field. r like to
—fhty-re-ffrting-befow thre-benight all associations amateur or
now,” says O'Brien, “but it won't professional. We res getting the
help th m : 1 ney, and that's what counts
upset. o Brien referred, to a form let. After all, I'm not in. this thing
for my health.”
1st every big money name in
awas present.
savy rains last night upset. . O'Brien referred, to a form let-
mivored ter dispatched by the U.S. L. T
rs assumed a light edge on. A. to all member clubslast .
1 course. Until-fast night ex onth. Eliminating the prelimi-iSO it would seem.
. had narrowed the list of fa nacies, the letter wound • 1931 to !‘. starring Bill Til
yes to 10.led by MacDonald follows: -
who has won the tourna ‘ "Resolved; that the U. s. L.
T: A is opposed to recognizing"
--trtni-chdiee-ro ren-me or dealing whi any individual
( when the tournament en
May night..
or individuals whose promotion
of tennis matches or . tourna-
Parrots' high-point ace, but they
let, the rest of the crew. get un-
der the basket too any times.
The scoring for Poly was evenly
divided with Durwood—Horner
leading the attack with seven
points.
The box score:
POLY, .PASCHAL
-.---------------ftpLLp.-- Du
Gldstn.fo .2 T 1 5 Bngsly,f 1 0 3 2T
Parks 1 1 0 3 Hofman0030
Lewis f 1 4 Cunghm.f. 0 1 0 1
Crowley f 20 2 4Fortnbry,c. 00 0.0
Brownc 2 0 4.4 Farisc 1 1 0 3
Catheys 000 0Thmpsn.g 3 1.3.7
MeCir s 0 0 0 0 King.- 1 1 23
den, grossed. $182,000 . The fol
| lowing year Tilden and Nusslein
took in $96,00 0. In 1933 Tilden
and Albert Bilks totaled $12,
, ‘ Hornerg 3 1 .0 7 M‘Rbrts,g 0.0 0 0
Brien s
Totals 6 4 11 16
conton.....
40.0 oD
MS CM
. eqva. nt: A
in %. sS
Co. Pws
eta y. toge".
:$8=**00
Casts codslinrar %
AD
O. POD
gap
Fucwotet
cotteyop ed
y sec o,
. so. RO &
at T
‘‘T
as
a A@- .
. tet i sho ,
—eot—ao--
i ne.
We're sorry you lost your hat on that Sugar Bowl trip and -
_____we'll gladly sell you another one, but the main point in this
little item is to urge you to buy a complete outfit right
now for the Rose Bowl game next year for you’ll probably
——be-making the frip-with the "Frogs." If you buy right
now a new suit, topcoat, and pair of shoes, as well as a
hat to replace that one you lost, YOU WILL BE.ABLE TO
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE BIG SAVINGS -
Samy Himes, Riverside ope
Her: Via Qhezui,aa-4*
pion, and Horton Smit w 1o
red the Mia i Biltmore and
Gena tournaments, also were
-
e first re 18 vm°
laved today with the second
ments is for the purpose of
making money-for themselves,
for with any or anization form.
ed to exploit the game for'the
niary benefitof anyone
connected with the manage-
tent rich association.,:
you 0 I
1 00 0. Vines and Tilden set a new
high of $243,000 in 1934. Last
| year, with George Lit and Lester
James, Stripling :
And Jennings Win
Stoeffen as the ace attractions,
—the-grand intakeas$169.200-
The U. S. L. T. A .has eauseto won from
| weep when it
William James defeated Dag-
• .....A
emi-Annua
3 ■
J 6a Fa ICe
I records.
-gett,29—to-414—Jennings Avehue
2 Riverside, 21 to 20,
surveys O'Brien's and -Stripling Junior beat Elder,
From the amateur ranks 16 to-11. in the junior high
school cage race: yesterday..
BHE has "plucked Tilden. Frank
Hunter, Ellsworth Vines. Henri
Cochet, Lot Stoeffen, Bell. Bruce VAIL., T
Barnes, Keith Glendhill EmmetV olley Ball Loops
N'S W
Bather predictions tod ,
A clearing skies for play t
hoon and tomorrow.
y u V 0 wave | Pare, Bobby Seller, Al Chapin,
th d reader to know who | Mrs. Arnold and Miss Sharp.
Open Play, Tonight
They thought they'd .
, for in many of the
And he declares he's just get-:
Recreation Department volley
| ball leagues will start action to-
night at 7 o'clock. Two loops
| were recently organized for win-
ter play, ‘ . - :
• Tonight's schedule:
ting warmed
Inenberg To Be Garden Virtually Quits Boxing
On Local Mat Bill -----
Kilpatrick Blames New York Commission For Policy
Ms Sonnenberg, former world's —--------------
weight wrestling champion
sappear on next week's—mtxnie----------
a at the North Main. Audi- NEW YORK, Jan. 10.—Boxing
ATS 20% OFF
"t hi Promoter Cy Fox an- in Madison Square Garden, once
Pared last night. His opponent the world's greatest fight center,
1 ot been selected. .
alarge crowd saw last night's
enrbout card, featured by
[ hy Larues win over Nick
Larue won the first fall
Hitch was unable to return
second.
rs othe Jimi
d Bill Venerable, Dick staht
, from Firpo Wilcox, Pat
, en drew with Fred Marrassi,
was reduced virtually to a minor
sport today with the announce-
ment of the Garden's new policy
of only occasional fights during
the rest of the winter season.
The new policy is the out-
growth of a feud betweenthe
New York State Athletic Commis-
sion and the Garden over. a
heavyweight bout between Hank
Bath, Fort Morgan, Colo., and Red
..beat. Billy Burman, Baltimore, originally
w. Lee Myers drew with Har sc eduled for tonight. The com-
dell and Pat Swanson de mission refused to license Bath
1 Pat Lindsay. and his manager, Jack Kearns,
1 hi House Nelson
a T A 4org A
I and in retaliation the Garden call-
ed off the whole shew.
"The commission apparently is
trying to drive the Garden out of
boxing," John Kilpatrick, Garden
president, said. “In trying to de-
velop new boving talent we al-
ways have had obstacles to hin-
der us. The ridiculous and high-
handed action of the commission
Major. League.
7 P M.—Water Department vs. Alford's
Creamery.‘ 4 o
P. M.—Baptist Seminary vs. Seminary
Hill
/ P. M.—American Airlines VS. W. P. A.
Hotsliots.—.—.-----‘t
Minor League.
7 P M. Bureau of Public Roads vs.
Rockets.:
8 P M.—Pire Department vs. Baptist :
Seminary.
9. P. M -American Airways VS, WPA.
Junior Cage Loops
To Open Saturday
3.50 Hats Reduced to... $2.80
5.00 Hats Reduced to........$4.00
This includes our entire stock of hats with only Stetsons and
new spring. hats excluded. ‘ Snap brims, semi-hombergs, wide
bands, bound edge, raw edge, light fans and grays, dark
browns, blues, oxford mixtures.
on Bath and Kearns is the last
straw,
JONNARD RELEASED
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 10. -
Bubba Jonnard, veteran Texas
League catcher, today was re-
leased by the Philadelphia Ath-
leties. He was engaged in 1935
as a pitchers’ coach.'
Play in the Recreation Depart-
ment's numerous junior basket-
ball leagues will open Saturday
morning at Recreation Hall, ac-
cording to Dickie Dixson, director
of boys' work. All boys desiring
to enter teams are urged to have
their clubs present not later than
8:30 o'clock Saturday morning.
Finish Judges May Miss Race Res ult by Shutting One Eye to Aim
h Who Decide Winners of Turf Events Go About Business In Calm Manner; Close Finishes Do Not Excite 'Em
Suits and
...........0/0
COats
9
By HENKY M'LEMORE
United Press Correspondent.
.MI, Fla., Jan. 10, — He
actually works little . more
‘. Line these markers up—the
rod and the stripe—and you have
the imaginary finish line. We
tried it as the horses pranced at
"a second a day and he has
nen to help him.
Aousands damn him every.
- andthousandssing his
th of his decisions, and he
half a dozen or more a
makes thousands of dollars
Tome, and takes thousands of
a(s from others. 1
tlis a race horse judge.
the starting gate..
"Don't shut one eye,''. caution-
| ed Galliger. as we sighted as
-though looking down a gun bar
rel. "That's fatal. It's a two-
eye job. If you'll try one eye,
then the other, you'll find that
you don't get the same result.”
# * e
out the flying silks, the flying
numbers — anything to identify
them. But in the second we tried
to think, they were down smack
in front of us, crossing the pay-
T/E did, and he was right. The
right eye moved the mark on
len the thoroughbreds pound the finish pole a foot to the right
the finish line, muzzle to of the rod, and the left eye moved
off line.
• * -
WE stmr were trying to figure
YY out the winner when. Galli-
ger. Shea and O'Brien “turned
around and, comparing the three
figures they had scribbled across
the top of their programs, found
their results the same:
Laughing Sun, first; Great
Haste, second; and Bellum, third.
It was a nose to nose finish
but the three wise men with the
camera eyes had caught it as
quickly and apparently as easily
as though lengths separated-the
thundering thoroughbreds.
Galliger greeted our marvelling
with a laugh.
"Huh, that was an easy one.
Stick. around and we'll show you
some really close ones,"
(Copyright. 1036, by United Press.)
18.50 Topcoats
22.50 Suits or Topcoats
24.50 Suits or Topcoats
27.50 Suits or Topcoats
29.50 Suits or Topcoals
34.50 Suits or Topcoats
39.50 Suits or Topcoats
14.80
18.00
19.60
22.00
23.60 ,
... 27.50
31.60
2
Ce, neck to neck, and thou-
wonder who won, he must
| v. for he puts the numbers.
And they pay off on the
rers.
i watched him work y.ester- . .___.. ________. _______-.
“n his little pagoda sort of the race the match one at Louis-
| , pitched hard on the finish | ville between Zev and In Memo-
oat Tropical. Park. Rather riam. It was a hell of a finish
natehed them work, for call—and Tony voted for Zev. There
Pmne shots in a horse race is a was a devil of a ruckus oer the
where three sets of eyes are decision and when they asked
Y than one. Tony about it he said he couldn't
22 * ** be wrong for he had drawn a
0 Tropical Park judgesperfect bead with one eye. I re-
Whea, O'Brien and Gaflixer— member the Louisville writers
it from what is really a little made a lot ofTony's remark, and
e porch on the judge's house. pointed out that as the track was
| it a foot to the left.
"And that difference would be
a length in a race,' Galliger said.
"I remember the classic example
of a judge sighting with one eye.
The judge was Tony Wallace, and
e front of the porch are paying for two-eyed
small steps, and when the should
s went to the post Twe
ed- the fourth srace)
lined up on the steps like forgot us in their work.
judges, Tony
_____| get but he'r pay.”
The field had hit the head of
the the stretch now, and the judges
No
ers • Galliger on the hot Broadway columnist ever peeped
“‘Brien behind him, and" more intently through a keyhole
i on the top step. than they Cid across the finish
fitting the porch vertically, line. ( Fifty yards from home and
n perfect line with the black | three horses were running so close
) on the finish pole acrosstogether a topcoat would have
rack, was a steel rod covered them. We tried to pick
VAL
MXST 200000:
ENJOY gay shipboard life—and shore
C visits at four colorful ports on these /
gala carnival cruises to the Caribbean. ,
First visit brilliant Miami, America's Rivlero,
with its marvellous beaches ond-foseinal-
ing resort life. Then, thrilling ports of the
West Indies-strange, intriguing Haiti,
with its vivid native customs ... beautiful
Jamaica, Queen of British Colonies in the
tropics . . . sparkling, romantic Havana,
with its old-world atmosphere and gay,
modern tempo. Every port a thrill,.. every
moment on shipboard a delight.
from GALVESTON
JAN. 15,29 FEB. 12,26
MAR. 11,25 _
MIAMI • HAITI • JAMAICA • HAVANA
Sail on the popular S. S. Algonquin,
connecting at Miami with T. S. S.
Iroquois, famed for southern cruising.
— On the roturn tip
connection is again 13 DAYS
made at Miami with s. .
the S. S. Algonquin to 1.15
Galveston. 7 iivup
CLYDE-MALLORY LINES
R. L. Carnrike, C.A., 801 Commerce, Ft. Worth. Tel. 3-3351 or Your Railroad or Tourist Ast.
BOYS SHOES
Regular $4 values in A
sturdy leathers. All sizes $
but not in all styles. , A
Stripling quality clothing that is value-full at regular prices! Ex-
cellent fabrics, distinctive tailoring, correct fit. Here’s your
opportunity to buy gbod clothes and save money. Only staple
blues and grays excepted.
en s Walk-Ov
Shoes Reduced
6.75 and 8.75 Walk-Over Shoes .....
8.75 and 10.00 Walk-Over Shoes ...
.... 5.95
... ...7.95
At 5.95: Brown or black calf, piggrains, brown or gray suedes.
At 7.95: Black or brown seal, black glazed kangaroo, main-
spring arch shoes. . %
Men's Store ... Stripling's First Floor
Th
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Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 86, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1936, newspaper, January 10, 1936; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1672548/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.