The Delta Courier (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 11, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 12, 1935 Page: 7 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Delta County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Delta County Public Library.
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Tl)ESDAY, MARCH 12, 1935
Edwii\ Balnvc
aiadl
WJl „
ynt
WNU Suivlc®.
SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS
u —
David Ransdell arrives at New York from South Africa, with photo-
graphic plates for Dr. Cole llendron Tony Drake culls ut the Hendrona’
apartment. tlve llendron, with whom Tony is in love, Introduces Tony
to Kansdell. Professor Bronson, eminent astronomer, has discovered two
planets that have been brought under the attraction of our sun. The re-
sult of the inevilable collision must be the end of the earth. The approach-
lag bodies ure referred to as Bronson Alpha and Bronson Beta, llendron
plans a "Space Ship" on which be hopes to make a landing on Bronson
Beta before the destruction of the earkh, but has not been able to find a
metal which will withstand the heat and pressure of atomic energy to
he used In propelling the Spars* Ship Tidal waves and quakes change the
entire surface of the earth. The llendron colony suffers, but survives.
Ransdell and Eliot James leave on an aerial reconnoissance to ascertain
conditions elsewhere. They are attacked and badly wounded, but return
alive, reporting universal destruction throughout the country Hendron*
camp Is attacked by a hunger-crazed horde, and half of the personnel Is
killed.
the horde were deud before the ship | der ide what It was. The nina hud
a till'll, crackling voice. Ills nalr
was snow-white. Ills features were
drawn, and his skin was yellow.
His pilot remained at the controls
of the plane, and the old man hob-
bled towajd Tony, saying as he ap-
proached, ‘Tleuse take me to Mr.
llendron."
Tony stepped forward. ‘Tm Mr.
Ilendron's assistant. VVe don't al-
low visitors here, perhaps you will
tell me your errand.
•'I’ll
other.
was above the buildings.
Llendron lifted It live hundred
feet farther, ami the blast spread
In a funnel below It. A thousand
died In that Instant, llendron
ceased to delate the ship. Instead,
he lowered It a little, and the pow-
er of the atomic blast which was
keeping two thousand tons of metal
and of human flesh suspended over
the earth, played upon the ground—
and upon the flesh on the ground—
as no force ever released by man
before.
Half on hour later, llendron
brought the ship down.
• ••••••
A pale delicate light carried away
the depths of night. From the nutnb
ness und exhaustion which had
seized It the colony roused Itself.
It gazed wiih empty eyes upon that
which surrounded it. The last bat-
tle of brains against brutality had
been fought on the bosom of the
earth. And the Intelligence of man
had conquered his primeval ruth
lessness. But at what a cost! Around
a table In the office of the labora-
tories a few men and women stared
at each other; llendron. pale and
slinken, Tony In shoes and trousers
white bandages over tils wounds;
Eve staring from him to the short,
broad-shouldered, silent form of
Some Change Noted in
Rules for Politeness
"You are expected to rise early and
be dressed neatly, to exercise before
break last, and To retire to rest when
the family In which you reside de-
sire you to; and you must consider It
see llendron," snapped the j a pr,,ac|, 0f politeness If you are re-
quested a second time to rise In the
Tony realized that the man con- ! ,norn|nK nr r,.tire in the evening,
stituted no menace. "Perhaps," he > “Your deportment must be grave
said coldly, "If you will tell ine aj,,| while In the house of God,
your reason for wanting to see Hen- an(, yo(| mu8t n.member that all light
dron. 1 can urrange for the Inter- | con(luct a place of worship is of-
vlew-” tensive to well-bred people and highly
The old man almost shrieked, displeasing to your Maker and I’re-
"You can urrunge nil Interview! I aPrver,
tell you, young fellow, I said 1 "Every hour during the week must
CHAPTER IX—Continued
—16—
r"\Ve will defend the enclosure as
long as we can, Tony," llendron
said. “But when they are in—If
they get In—no one is to throw
himself away fighting them aimless-
ly. They must be delayed as long
us they can he; but when they are
In. we gather—all of us that are
left, Tony—here."
••Here?"
"Inside this ship. Hadn’t that oc-
curred to you, Tony? Don't you
see? Don’t you see?"
Tony stared ut Ids chief and
straightened, the blood of hope rac-
ing hot within him. “Of course I
see!” he almost shouted. “Of
course I see."
"Very well. Then issue cloths—
white cloths, Tony; distribute them
for arm-bands, so in the dark, we
will know our own.”
"Yes, sir. But, Eve Is safe?"
"She is not hurt, I hear. You might
see her for an instnnt. The wom-
en are tearing up bandages."
Tony found her In a room with
twenty others, tearing white cloth
Into strips. At leust he had one
word with her.
Kon.v! Take care of yourself!"
|in( about you, Bref
disregarded this; said only:
F<lot hack to the ship, Tony, after
fight. Oh. get hack to the
ship!” He went out again. A bul-
let pinged on the wall beside him.
The bursts of machine-gun fire
slounded uglier; there were groans
again, and screams. With his bur-
den of machine-gun cartridges, he
returned to the post he had fought,
"That you, Tony?" Jack Taylor
hailed, ’’('iiriridges? Great I We'll
scrap those blmboes. II—1! Just
in time. I'd say. Here they come!”
"Listen!" yelled Tony. "If they
get In. dft'uy them hut don't mix
with them; each man tie a white
cloth on his sleeve—and retreat to
the ship!” And he issued the strips
he had brought with him.
From the buildings reinforce-
ments arrived—six men with guns
siting over their shoulders, and
bayonets that caught a glint from
the firing. They carried another
machine gun.
One of the new men produced a
Very pistol. His private property,
he explained, which he had brought
hlong "for emergencies.”
“IPs one now,” Tony said sim-
ply, and took the pistol from him.
lie fired It; and the Very light,
flinging In the air, revealed men at
A^fcwire everywhere. A thousand
thousand; no sense even
lnMmimating them.
Tony ngalD claimed the mnchlne
gun. He made a fiat fan of the
flashes before him as tie swung the
gun hack and forth. He was kill-
ing men by scores, he knew; hut he
knew, also, that If the hundreds
had the nerve to stick, they were
"In.”
They were In!
"Fall back I Fall back to the ship
—fighting!” Tony yelled again und
again. He did not need to tell his
men to fight. The trouble was they
still wanted to tight, holding on
here.
oratories They had first to take
the deserted dormitories and dark-
en them.
They were doing this; hut It de
laved them. It held them up a few
minutes. Room by room, dormitory
windows went black. The lights
were not being turned out; they
were being smashed and the win-
dow-panes were crashing. Yells
celebrated the smashing, and shots.
The yells ceased; some sort of
assault was being reorganized.
Tony moved In the dark. "Keep
down—down—down—down," he was
crying. “Below the window-line.
Down!" For bullets from machine
guns, evidently aimed from the
dormitory windows, were strik-
ing in.
Many did not obey him; he did
not expect them to. Yells at the
farther end of the main laboratory
told that It was hand-to-hand there.
In the dark. A charge—a rush had
been pushed home.
Tony found Taylor beside him;
they had stuck together In the dark;
and a dozen others rose and ran
with them Into the melee. The best
brains of the modern world, fighting
hand to hand with savages! Shoot
and stab and club wildly, desper-
ately, In the dark!
More and more lay where they
fell. Tony, stumbling and slipping
on the stickily wet floor, realized
that this rush was stopped. There
was nobody left In the room for
tight—nobody but two or three dis-
tinguished as friends by the spots
of the arm bands.
"Jack?" gasped Tony; and Tay-
lor's voice answered him. They
were staggering and bleeding, both
of them; lint they had survived the
tight together. Tony found the
flashlight which, all through the
tight, he had hud In his pocket, and
he bent to the floor and held it close
to the faces.
lie caught breath, bitterly. Bron-
son was there. Bronson, the dis-
coverer of the two stranger planets
whose passing had loosed this sav-
agery; Dr. Sven Bronson, the first
scientist of the southern hemi-
sphere, lav there in his blood, a bay-
onet through his throat. Beside him
Dodson was dying, his right arm
hacked almost off. A few of those
less hurt were rising.
'To the ship! Into the ship!”
Tony cried to them. "Everybody
into the sfilp!” There was no al-
ternative.
Creeping on hands and knees,
from wounds or from caution, and
dragging the wounded with them,
the men started to retreat to the
spare Ship. Women were helping
them. Yells and whistles warned
that another rush was gathering,
and that this would be from all
sides.
Tony caught up In his arms a
yc'ung man who was barely breath-
ing. He had a bullet through him ;
bift he lived. Tony staggered with
him into the great metal rocket.
The second rush was coming. No
dcubt of It. and It would be ut
terly overwhelming. There would
he no survivors—but the women
None. For the horde would take
no prisoners. They were killing the
wounded already—their own hadlv
would see llendron. and that's all
there Is to It." He came abruptly
closer, snatched Tony's lapel,
cocked his head, and peered Into
his face. "You're Drake, aren't
you, young Tony Drake?”
Suddenly Tony recognized the
man. He wus stnggered. Before
him stood Nathaniel Borgan, fourth
richest man In America, friend of
all tycoons of the land, friend in-
deed of Heiidron himself. Tony 1
Kansdell, whose hands, blackened. ■ had last seen Borgan In llendron s ul)(] roonj carefu, of vour hooks and
ugly, hung limply at Ids sides house in New York when Borgan c,othp8 attentlve t0 ecoIU)„,y tn all
whose gorllla-llke strength seempil had been Immaculate, powerful, ^ ^ expenses
self-assured, and barely approach- ; •_'
ing middle age. lie now looked '
senile, degenerate and slovenly. “GOOD READING"
"Aren't you Drake?" the crack- ! ^ ^
be fully occupied either in useful em-
ployment or rational amusement
while out of school; two hours must
be employed each day In close study
and every hour during the week must
i fully occupied.
"The truth must he spoken at all
times, on all occasions, though It
might appear advantageous to tell a
falsehood.
"You are expected to be polite In
your manners, neat In your persen
to have deserted him; Smith, the
surgeon, stupefied In the face of
this hopeless summons of his call-
ing.
At last llendron sucked a breath
into Ids lungs. "My friends, what
must lie done Is obvious. We must
first bury the dead. There are no
survivors of the enemy. If others
are gathering. I believe we need
fear no further attack. Doctor
Smith, you will kindly take charge
of all hospital and medical arrange-
ments for our people. I will re-
quest that those who are nble to
do so appear immediately on the air
plane field. I shall dispatch the
majority of them to your assistance,
and with those who remain 1 shall
take such steps as are necessary.
Let’s go."
* inly three hundred and eighty
persons were counted by Tony as
they struggled shuddering to the
landing Held. Almost half of them
were women, for the women, ex-
cept In the ease of Individuals who
joined the fighting voluntarily, had
been secluded.
Tony, with ten other men, a piti-
ful number for the appalling task
that confronted them, went down
ling voice repeated. Tony nodded
mechanically. "Yes,” he said; “come
with me."
llendron did not recognize Bor-
gan until Tony had pronounced his
name. Then upon his face there
appeared briefly a look of con-
sternation. and Borgan In his shrill,
grating voice began to talk excited-
ly. "Of course I knew what you
•’vre working at here, Hendrea,
k»*»w all about It. Meunt to offer
you financial assistance, but got
tangled up taking care of my af-
fairs In the last few weeks. 1
haven't been able to come here be-
fore, for a variety of reasons. But
now I'm here. You’H take me with
you when you go, of course.” He.
banged his fist on the table In s
Idznrre burlesque <>f Ids former ges-
tures. "You’ll take me all right,
nil right, nrul I’ll tell you why
you’ll take me—for my
MATTER FOR THE
CHILD TO DECIDE
Supported by The Parents’ Maga-
zine, which prints the charge that
may Influence adult thought in re-
gard to juvenile reading, Josette
Frank necuses the nation's fathers
and mothers of Impoverishing their
children's literary diet—letting them
starve In the midst of plenty.
“Mother does not always know
best, and no book Is a good book
for a child If It fails to Interest
him,” emphatically declares Miss
Frank, her conviction born of experi-
ence in the Child Study association.
“There Is ample reason for doubt-
ing parental Infallibility on this
point when we realize how often
parents have changed their minds
as to wdiat Is and what Is not good
money, reading for children," says this au
"Talebearing and scandal are odi-
ous vices, and must be avoided
neither must you flatter your com-
panions by remarks on their beauty,
dress or any slight accomplishment.
In order to Increase their vanity.”
Commenting on these oldtime rules
of politeness, a modern woman writer
caustically remarks;
“Heaven deliver us! But this Is
only a part, dear reader, of the list of
rules for the current manners of stu
dents at the first ‘Academy for Young
Ladles’ to be opened In New England
—at the beginning of the last cen-
tury. It is a museum piece that I can-
not deny the readers of this col-
umn.
“They were not making It easy,
these New England ‘educators,’ for
young ladies to have ‘good manners.'
"Of course even In this highly
frivolous, wasteful, wicked day, we
believe In being quiet In church. In
keeping ourselves and our posses-
sions clean and neat—and telling the
truth when It Is not too Inconvenient!
It Is the manner in which even these
reasonable demands are expressed
and their implication of how young
people should he dealt with that
gives us a precious sidelight on those
days.
"The prize, by honest vote, would
go, 1 think, to this one: ‘Neither
must you flatter your companions by
remarks on their beauty, dress or any
slight accomplishment. In order to In-
crease their vanity’ I Today’s ‘well-
bred young lady’ would regard It as
better ‘manners' to never overlook
an opportunity to remark on her com-
panions' beauty or charm—and
wherever possible within the bounds
of conscience to say something pleas-
ing and heart-warming to those
whose hand she touches In this fleet-
ing journey on which we are for a
short time together.
“ ‘Other times,’ says the French,
'other manners.’ For my part. I
prefer those of our limes. What say
our readers?”
0*). Boll Syndicate—WNU Service.
Win out.
WITH A
CLEAR
WHITE
SKIN
End freckles, blackhet
Be lovely! Have the flawless, satin-
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how freckled or blemished your com-
plexion, no matte,' how dull and dark,
Nadinola Bleaching Cream will bring
you flawless, radiant new beauty—al-
most overnight. Just smooth it on afc
bedtime tonight—no massaging, no rub-
bing. Instantly Nadinola begins itm
beautifying work. Tan, freckles, blaek-
heads, pimples, muddy, sallow color
vanish quickly. Day by day your skin
glows more love'v -creamy white,
smooth, adorable. No disappointment#,
no long waiting; tested and truated for
over a generation. Your money back if
n< t delighted. Gel a large box of
Nadinola Bleaching Cream at toilet
counters, or by mail, postpaid, only UOc.
NADINOLA. Box 21, Paris, Tenn.
When all else fails. I’ll have my
money. 1 ask only that you spare
my life, that you’ll take me from
this awful place, and In turn go*
Big Job of Clowning
The biggest window cleuulug^
In London began when five men
started their annual task of washing
the glass roof of Waterloo railway
station. It required three months
time to clean the 22,400 squares of
glass, an area of about 13 acres.
SAVES MORE TIME
and WORK
than a ♦10022
WASHING
MACHINE
Coleman mi'xi1 'v. Iron
No Hsating with Match*! or Torch...No
Waiting.. .Lights Instantly, Liko Gas
I) EDUCE your ironing time one-third
^ , . , your labor one-half! The Cole-
man Self-Heating Iron will save you
more time and work than a $100 wash-
ing machine! Iron any place where you
can be comfortable. No endless trlpa carrying
iron fiom atove to board. Operating coat only
*/;(J an hour. Helpa you do better ironing,
easier, quicker.
See your hardware or liouaefumlahlng dealer.
If local dealer doesn't handle, write ua.
THE COLEMAN LAMP A STOVE COMPANY
Dept. WU306, Wichita, Kan*.; Chicago. III.; Loa
Angelos. Calif : Philadelphia, Pa.; or Toronto,
Ontario, Canada. [4306J
thorlty, recalling that it is not so
lonj; ago parents regarded story
hooks with suspicion; then grudg
Ingly approved painfully pure tales
and only lately countenanced litera-
ture which addresses children as reas-
oning people. “There nre no best
hooks for children, only best hooks
for the particular child. What is
real meat to the girl of twelve may
he ‘applesauce’ to the boy of the
same age. Nor Is there a law of
heredity that makes children like
what their parents liked before
them. Our Jane may find ‘Little
Women’ boring or ‘Gulliver’s Trav-
els’ dull.”
Like the horse In the old adage,
evidently one may lend a child to a
good hook but cannot make him
read It. This being tlu truth, how-
ever much It may hurt. Miss Frank
sanely concludes that about nil par-
ents can do Is to make available to
I heir children the best there Is In
the world to read and let nature
take its course.
Hiitory Repeated
In building a war memorial on
Montfaueon, In the Argonne, the
workers discovered the foundations
of an old castle built In 1070. This
fortress was destroyed and recon-
structed in the Eleventh, Thirteenth,
Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeenth
centuries. It was also the scene of
an American attack on an enemy po-
sition in 1018.
Beit Thing! Are Neareit
The best things are nearest:
breath in your nostrils, light in your
eyes, flowers at your feet, duties at
your hand, the path of God Just be-
fore you. Then do not grasp at the
stars, hut do life’s plain, common
work as It comes, certain that daily
duties and daily bread are the
sweetest things of life.—It. L. Ste-
venson.
“Fall Back! Fall Back to thg 3hip
—Fighting 1" Tony Yelled Again
and Again. He Did Not Need to
Tell His Men to Fight. The Trou-
ble Was. They Wanted to Fight,
Holding On Here.
A faw obeyed him. The rest could
not, he suddenly realized; and he wounded nnd the eampg wounded
* a . 1 L « J mm ,1 T n mno
find leave them, dying. Jack
TaySr was beside him, firing a
rifle. They were five altogether
tviio were falling back, firing.
Figures from the black leaped
fit them, and It was hand to hand.
Tony fought with a bayonet, then
with a clubbed rifle, madly and
wildly swinging, lie was struck,
and reeled.
“Gome on!" cried Jack Taylor's
voice; and with Taylor he ran In
the dnrk. They reached the build
'ags. Tbe dormitories sprang Into
^it; windows shone, nnd spread
pinatlon which showed that they
deserted and were being used
h.v the defenders of the ramp
to light the space already aban-
doned
The attackers could not shoot out
hundreds of globes so simply as
they had smashed the searchlights.
And they could not advance Into
that Illuminated area, urder the
machine guns and rifles of the lab
that they had captured. Eliot James,
a bullet through his thigh, but saved
h» the dark, crawled In with this
information. Tony carried him Into
tie ship.
They were all In the ship—nil the
survivors. The horde did not sus-
pect It. Then they suddenly seemed
to realize that the ship was the last
refuge. They surrounded It. tiring
af It. Their bullets glanced from
its metal. Somebody who had gren-
ades bombed It.
A frightful flume shattered them.
Probably they Imagined, at first,
that the grenades had exploded
seme sort of powder magazine with-
in the huge metal tube. Few of
tl ose near to the ship, nnd outside
It. lived to see what wus hnppen-
Irg.
The great metal rocket rose from
the earth, the awful blast from its
lower tubes lifting it. The fright-
ful heat seared and Incinerated,
killing at Its touch. A hundred of
to the field and began to gather up
in trucks the bodies there. Not far
from the cantonment, on what had
been h lumber road, an enormous
Assure yawned In the earth.
All that day they tended their
own wounded. Many of them per-
ished.
In those nightmare days no one
spoke unless It was necessary. Life-
long friendships and strong new
friendships had been obliterated,
l/oves that in two months had flow-
ered Into vehement reality were
ended. For two weeks abysmal
sadness nnd funernl silence held
them. Only the necessary ardors
of their toil prevented mnn.v of
them from going mad. But at the
end of two weeks Tony, returning
from an errand to the Assure where
the Inst bodies had been entombed
by a hirst of dynamite, stood on
the hill above the encampment nnd
saw that once again the grass grow
green, once again the buildings
were clean nnd trim.
When be stood there his atten
tlon was attracted bv a strange
sound—the sound of an airplane
motor, nnd the plane Itself heenme
visible. It landed presently on their
field, and Tony was one of several
men who approached It. The cabin
door opened nnd out stepped a
man. There was something familiar
about him to Tony, but he could not
Avoirdupois in Demand
Current prices for wives in Cy-
prus, Mediterranean Isle owned by
Britain, range from $100 for a slim
wench, to $500 for a buxom girl with
plenty of curves. The buying and
selling of girls for marriage is, of
course, legal. The girls are the
(laughters of Turkish parents, who
sell them to the highest bidders, usu-
ally Arabs from Palestine. A docu-
ment has to be drawn up and
stamped, and duty is paid. In the
case of divorce, full recompense
must be given; but In virtually every
case the girls ure contented.—Grit.
*ep clean and Healthy
Pierce’* Plen**nt Pellet*. They
liver, bowel* and *tomach.—Aa\
Dr.
regulate
v.
out to my plane, go out to tho
plane that Is waiting there for you
Look Inside.” Suddenly his voice
sank to a whisper, nnd his head
was shot forward. “It’s full of bills,
full of bills, thousand-dollnr bills,
ten-thousand dollar bills—stacked
with them, bales of them, bundles
of them—millions, llendron, mil-
lions! That's the price I’m offer-
ing you for my life."
llendron and Tony looked at this
man In whose hands the destiny of
colossal American Industries had
once been so firmly held; and they
knew that he wns mad.
They sent Borgan away with his
pilot and his plane full of money;
and the last words of the Hnnncier
were pronounced In a voice Intend-
ed to he threatening as he leaned
out of the cabin door: “I'll get an
Injunction against you from the
President himself. I'll hnve the
Supreme court behind me within
twenty-four hours."
(TO BH CONTINUED.)
Powerful Spider
India boasts a species of spider
that Is so powerful that It can en-
mesh a full-grown lizard In Its weh
and devour It outright. Live insects
enught In the Web .attract the llz
ard, which Is In turn enmeshed. The
spider has a leg-span of about throe
Inches.
Hotel in the Air
The new Zeppelin, which Is under
construction In Freldrlchshafen. Ger-
many, will carry the equivalent of a
two-story building, with 25 bedrooms,
a dining room. 45 feet long, nnd bag-
gage room large enough to hold auto-
mobiles. The craft will be COO feet
long nnd more than 120 feet wide nt
the center.
Fox Hounds Lost in Sand
During a fox hunt In Lleyn,
Wales, hounds ran a fox Into the
sandhills. Three valuable dogs dug
so deep into the sand that they were
covered and were lost for three
days. After many hours huntsmen
nnd farmers succeeded In tunneling
nearly 100 feet into the sandhills,
finding two of the hounds alive.
Immense Damage by Rata
Damage by rats to property and
products In the United States
amounts to about $200,000,(KM) annu-
ally. Itnts affect a larger percent-
age of the population than any other
pest in existence.
Nothing New About That
A naturalist tells us that certain
birds can summon a whole flock
within a few minutes. We've watched
them doing it just after we’ve sown
seeds in the garden.—Istndon Hu-
morist.
Sleepless Goldfish
Goldfish, like other fish, do not
sleep. They have no means of clos-
ing their eyes nnd they derive tbe
rest which comes to higher animals
during sleep hy merely remaining
quiet.
Old English Custom
The members of the house of com-
mons, London, must remove their
hats when coming In, going out, or
making a speech. In short, when-
ever they are on their feet. But
when seated, hats are worn.—Col-
lier's Weekly.
Worth Remembering
To open a fountain pen that has
Stuck through being screwed too
tightly wind a rubber hand tightly
around the part to he unscrewed to
give a good grip.
Rival Musicians
Nothing Is so annoying to a mnn
singing his own praises as to he
drowned out by a man blowing his
Dwn horn.—Boston Transcript.
Helping the World
The blessed work of helping tho
world forward happily does not
wait to be done by perfect men.—
George Eliot.
MAKES DULL CARS LOOK
LIKE NEW AGAIN!
It’s marvelous the difference Simonizing
makes in the appearance of a car. It brings
back all the beauty and lustre your car had
when new. Not only that, but Simoniz
keeps the finish beautiful. So always insist on
Simoniz and Simoniz Kleener for your car.
MOTORISTS WISE
HAVE YOU HEARD THE
NEWS/ THE REGULAR
PRICE Of CALUMET
BAKING POWDER (S N0W |
ONLY 251A POUND/
<9
SIMONIZ
Y€S / AND THE
N€U> CAN IS SO
EASY TO OPEN !
5
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The Delta Courier (Cooper, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 11, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 12, 1935, newspaper, March 12, 1935; Cooper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth983511/m1/7/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Delta County Public Library.