The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 82, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 13, 1936 Page: 2 of 4
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PAGE TWO
THE TRIBUNE - TUESDAY, O^fOilTR 13th, 1936.
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LATE NEWS FLASHES
Champion Mother of
Georgia County Die'.
It Was Not Always So
Bridal Days In Oceania
Macon, Ga. — Funeral ser-
ciety. He will thus have
full scojie lor his oratory.
The Catholic Missionary so-
ciety is an association of
vices were held in St. Jos-/ priests and laity with th
eph’s church for Mrs. Minnie, object of converting England
Lee Goins Boland, “champion
mother” of Bibb county, who
had received a medal for be-
ing the mother of 16 children
and Wales. Its present
head is a convert, the Rev.
Owen Dudley.
Madrid Envoy Leaves Koine
Cardinal's Command of
Languages Is Acclaimed
Vatican City. — The re-
markable linguistic feat per-
formed by Cardinal Pacelli.
Papal Secretary of State, in
opening the International
Catholic Press congress, re-
Rome. — Luis de Xiilite-
tu, Madrid’s ambassador to
the Holy See slipped out of
the city and went to Paris,
He was in ill favor at the
Vatican because of his at-
tempts to smooth over the
Red’s war on the Church.
ceived from Pope Pius a des-1 ss«e^fflms«9S;®a: j
cription as “Pentecostal elo- rv », /->i »
quence". Without hesitan- UOUOtS Llearetf
cy, the Cardinal swung easily
from Italian to French, to
Spanish, to Portuguese, then
followed these with German.
English, and Latin.
Negroes, Entire
Family, Are Converts
Milwaukee, Wise. — Mr.
and Mrs. Ellis Jordan, Ne-
groes, and their entire fa-
mily of nine children were
baptized in the Mission of
St. Benedict the Moor, con-
ducted by the Capuchin
Fathers.
Nuns Are Given Volumes
By Protestant Hospital
Notre Dame, Ind. — Sister
M. Madeleva, president of St.
Mary’s college, announces
that the Epworth hospital in
South Bend has presented
the college library with 90
bound volumes of the Cen-
tury, Harper’s and Scribner’s
magazines, which date back
to the early 1890’s.
Q. _ Why is the Catholic
Church opposed to crema-
tion?
A. — Mainly because it
shows lack of reverence to
what was in life the temple
of the Holy Ghost. It is
a detestable pagan • ractice,
introduced by men of doubt-
ful faith. Catholics regard
the dead as ‘asleep in Christ’
(Cor. XV. 18). The practice
revived in the 19th century
to oppose Christian faith
and often to obliterate evi-
dences of crime. In cases of
dangerous pestilence or oth-
er absolute necessity Catholic
Church does not oppose it.
Q. — How dii you know
that Confirmation was insti-
tuted by Christ? The Bible
says nothing about it.
A. — Does it not? Have
you read Acts VIII. 14; Acts
XIX. 6; Cor. I, 21; Enlics. I.
13; John VII. 39? The Apost-
les are not the authors of
grace, but only the dispens-
ers of the mysteries of God.
Today the Southland may suffer from lack of indus-
try. But it was not always so.
Neither was the slavery considered a special asset
by all the owners themselves.
Writes Virginius Dabney, himself a newspaperman
from Richmond. Vn.. in “The American Mercury.” cur-
rent issue:
“It is perhaps not generally realized how great was
the progre3« of Southern industry in the Fifties.
“There were no fewer than 24.590 factories in the
South in 1860. representing an aggregate of $175,100,000.
“During the Fifties, the South quadrupled its rail-
road mileage, so that hv 1880 the total exceeded that of
Now England and the Middle States combined.
“If the South had triumphed in the War, the indust-
rial advar.ee achieved before the outbreak of hostilities
would have been carried over into the post-war era.
"And just as the commonly-held idea that the ante-
bellum South was without any appreciable industry, is
groundless, so the impression thai it was educationally
backward, by comparison with the North, is practically
incorrect.
“It is true that the Southern public school systems
were inferio-, but the colleges and universities had much
larger enrollments in proportion to the white nopulation
and enjoyed a larger total of appropriations and endow-
ment* +ha" the Northern institutions.
“The class of instruction offeredjpv the Southern cen-
ters of learning probablv was. on the whole, somewhat
inferior, although thin >s debatable.”
“It seems reasonable to conclude, then, that many of
the industrial and educational advances which came to the
North in the late nineteenth century would have come to
the South instead, if the Confederacy had won.
“ In other words, the laborious battle which the beaten
South was forced to wage in povertv and despair for sev-
eral decades after Appomattox would not have been neces-
sary.”
And as to the1 slavery. “In the earlv years of the
nineteenth centurv. leading Southerners agreed that slav-
ery was imnoverishing them, and by 1830 the movement
for its abolition was well under wav.”
As then, so today, t.hi« is the chief issue in the form of
farm tenancy, not only here but thruout the land.
As then the slavery was impoverishing the owners,
so1 today tenancy has the same affect. It benefits no one.
—Alo a Malia (Ave Maria.)—
The vicissitudes of matrimonial affairs in the Islands
where the Sisters labor for God and souls are numerous
and often fought with much anxiety and at the ex|iensc
of much energy on the part of the Missionary. In Fiji
a Father was asked to perform a marriage and. after a-
bout four hour’s rough riding over precipitous country,
found on his arrival only one of the contracting parties
awaiting him at the church. A search was made of the
surrounding bush and at last the capricious bride was
brought to earth and the ceremony proceeded. This, it
seems, is the general procedure in all the Islands. The
brides consider it “the thing” to protest violently when
the time comes to be married, acting coyly and illusively
and apparently wanting to be wooed and won very much in
the same way as any fair lady of old.
In the Solomons the relatives of one of the girls at
the Mission came one afternoon and made all arrange-
ments for a marriage to take place next day. The bride-
to be was given very little option as to whether she appro-
ved of her future husband or not and the preparations
went on apace. The morning dawned, the feast was
prepared and the Missionary was about to commence the
Nuptial Mass when some bright-eyed member of the Con-
gregation made the discovery that the bridal was missing.
The “bride-hunt” ensued and as usual took a few hours
until at last the delinquent was found up a tree sobbing
and moaning and declaring she did not waftt to be married.
The Father and Sisters induced the disappointed relatives,
as well as the much more disappointed feast-makers, to
use no force—a thing which was unheard of before the
introduction of Christianity—and all dispersed, sad and
empty.
Some hours later, while enjoying a well-earned siesta,
the poor Missionary was slowly but surely brought back
to consciousness and made to realize that it was no night-
mare but the sound of very veal sobbing that was being
wafted to his ears from the precincts of his verandah. He
immediately came forth, to find the prospective bride of
the morning still performing and on his demanding stern-
ly the reason for her behavior and continual weeping was
told witli childish indignation that he had refused to per-
form the marriage ceremony. She was waiting to be coax-
ed. Her flight really signified consent. It is an upside-
down life in these primitive lands.
The Best Deterrent For Crime
Would they have done these
Blind Lawyer Passes Exams j things without a command
, from Christ ?
—John Wiltbye in America—
Kidnaping no longer exists, because kidnapers know j
they will be caught and punished. Hence most of them
have turned to less dangerous forms of crime, and the j
others have retired into a state of innocuous desuetude.
Chicago. — Although lum-1 (). — We brought up our
dicapped by blindness, Edwin 1 son in Catholic faith, sent
Cramer, a 1936 De Paul: hini to Catholic school. He
alumnus successfully passed i is a good hoy, but after he
the recent Illinois bar exam-1 started to work he lost his
ination. He attended reg-
ular classes at De Paul for
three years. Competing with
other students not laboring
under surilfar disabilities, he
stood high in his law classes
and was active in the Junior
Bar association moot court
trials.
2,000 Converted, Unity
faith. Why?
A. — His knowledge of re-
ligion and faith were not
deep enough, he neglected his
religious duties (Mass atten-
dance. receiving sacraments
often, prayer) and was in-
fluenced be loose companions
to contract evil habits.
Q. — When did the name
‘Catholic" start to he used
League’s 19-Year Record j in the Church?
A. — The earliest recorded
use of the word is in St.
Ignatius Martyr letter about
the year 110 A. D. It dis-
New York. — The Catho-
lic Unity league of the Paul-
ist Fathers here reports that
it has been responsible for tinguished the Church from
2,000 conversions through others that preached only to
chosen people. The name was |
well established in use by
the year 200 A. D-
correspondence in the 19
years it has been in exist-
ence. This report is made
by the Rev. Bertrand L. Con- _ . _ _
wav, C. S. P., spiritual di- ! Subscribe ror The Tribune j
rector of the league. In the 1 to*day, only $1.50 per year,
course of the 19 years. Fa-1
ther Conway reveals that th° |f()yy Tq ($6(1(106
league has lent a total of 146.!
725 books, of which 14,483
were lent in 1935. Last i
year, the league seni out.
12,970 letters to inquirers.\
The league sends books to 1,-
Varicose Veins
tub Orally Upward Toward Ibe Heorl
it Blood in Voiao Flows Thol Woy
As a deterrent, punishment, speedily inflicted, has worked.
I seriously suggest that the same process be applied
to murderers. Murder is common in this country be-
cause it is fairly safe to blow a man’s head off, and never
be inconvenienced by the police. I must note an exception:
do not murder a man for hisinsurance. If you do, the in-
surance company will push the case, and vou may be han-
ged. But murder, with this exception, is profitable
and fairly safe; as an avocation, it shows a mortality rate
much lower than that of mining, drilling, or fishing for
cod. The murderer has on his side an anathetic public,
from which juries are drawn, the lazy district attorney,
and the shyster, flanked by his professional witnesses and
gangsters. Should the murderer be a membe»- of the
so-called weaker sex, every editor in the vicinage will
marshall a staff of sob sisters to present the case to the
public beforp it gets lo the jury; if ever it gets that far,
frequently, it does not.
Hence, few murderers go to the gallows. As for
the life sentence. J. Edgar Hoover vouches for the fact
that in the United States, the life sentence for murder
lasts just forty-three months and fifteen days. If you
wish to crack rock longer, steal an automobile.
Of course, the best deterrent for crime is a good
home and a religious training for the ch''ld. The home,,
with wife in it. and husband who appreciates the tremen-j
dous extent of her work, and tries to help her, together
with a lot of children who both plague them and make
them the happiest people in the world, is the foundation
on which civilization must rest. Yet there are other deter-
rents, and one is punishment. But it must be inflicted.
No medicine, corked up in a bottle, can do its work.
Nothing is ever lost by being generous with Our
Lord. He holds in the hollow of his hand all the gifts
of time and eternity. Blessings that we have received
should bo extended to others who have not received the
Faith. Help, therefore, by prayer and alms to spread
the Kingdom of God among the redeemed but unenligh-
tened multitudes of the pagan ; world.
October 18th, is Mission Sunday the world over. Your
alms and prayers will go l'ar and get hundredfold reward
once when all other moneys will be lost.
Shiner
The parish picnic here Sun-
day was most successful as
far as the attendance and
cheerful dispisition of the
the dispensers wished to-see.
An enormous crowd gathered
for the night and dance and
songs were enjoyed till late.
MARKET REPORT
crowd was cencerned After i Cotton, strict middling 12.80
High Mass celebrated by Rt.
Rev. Msgr. L.P. Netardus the
people gathered at the Blue-
cher Park where a most deli-
cious a plentiful dinner was
served to all. Music by
Patek’s Band and Beano were
the only things to interrupt
the friendly chats and keep
the people cheerful. Refresh-
ments of all kinds were en-
joyed but the cool breeze did
not cause as much thirst as
Eggs......... 24c
Fryers - - . 12c
Butter fat...... 25-23c
Hens, per lb.---12c
JAPANESE OIL
Mato la U. ». A.
FOR HAIR AND SCALP
Dlffaraat ♦ram Ordinary Hair Taataa
IT'S A SCALP MfDICINdl
Me 111. FEEL IT WORK! At All Brugglm
Writ! far FREE Baoklat ‘Tha Tnita A Mat
Tha Hair." Natlanal Rtmifr Ca.. Naa Vara
p
146 cities in the United P«0P>* bgve breome despondent
07 p0„0j„ bacauae thrv have been led »» brlieve
Mates, Oi Cities in Ca.na.cict, that there i» no remedy that will reduce
and 69 cities in foreign conn- iwollen velnn and bunchea.
, . ” | If you will got a two-ounce original,
' riCS. ! bottle of Moone’a Emerald Oil ,,M|1
THE TRIBUNE
itrength) at any firat clma rtruqf etora
and apply It night ' “
and morning
quickly notice an
Noted Anglican Convert i dlrectaS1’>ou‘‘gho?id ...
.loins Mission Group j
reduced.
Moone'a Emerald Oil Is a harmless
yet moat powerful penetrator and tw«
ounces last a rery long time. Indeed
1 10 powerful la Emerald Oil that old
tbronic aorea and ulcers are often su-
it has brought much com-
London. — The Rev. Ver-
non Johnson, formerly a po-
pular Anglican preacher,
whose conversation a few
years ago caused a stir, and
who was ordained to the pri-
esthood in 1933, has joined
the Catholic Missionary s^-
tlrely healed.---- _
fort to worried people all ov<
country. A •
For generous sample aend 10 cent,
(ellrer or stampa) to corer coat—mail-
ing—packing to Dept. A.M., Intern*.
Sons) Laboratories. Inc- Rochester, N. T.
Published every Tuesday
ifui. and Friday by the Malec
Bros. Publishing Co., 108
Texana St., Hallettsville, Tex.
Editor — Walter Malec.
Entered as second-class mail
matter Jan. 7, 1932, at the
post office at Hallettsville,
Texas.
The Only English Catholic
semi-weekly in the Country.
Subscription rate $1.50 a
year.
Miserable
with backache?
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ell upset... use Doan's Pills.
Doan's are especially for poorly
Lau hing Around the
With IRVIN S. COBB
World
Keeping the Color Tone
By IRVIN S. COBB
FIFTH AVENUE, Charley Towne, the poet, met Oliver Hcrforri,
the humorist.
"Ollie,” said Towne, “sartorially you’re a wonder to me. Always,
no matter what the season, you wear clothes of the same becoming
------ ----... shade of gray. Winter time or summer time, it makes no difference.
working kidnays. Millions o( boxes f The weight and the weave and the texture of your garment may change
are used ever/year. They are rccom- ! but the color doesn’t. Now, what I’d like to know is how you always
succeed in getting such a perfect tone.”
“Simple enough,” said Herford. “You see, I’ve had the same tailor
for years. He has my measurements on file. So whenever I need a
new suit I just send him a sample of my dandruff and tell lum to
match it.” ,
(American News Features. Jn<\)
i mended the country over. Ask yojr
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DETECTIVE RILEY
By Richard Lee
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riley and buck float
gfntly to the ©round-
Will Rogers’
Humorous Story
By WILL ROGERS
J’M afraid the jokes .about Chicago
are going to run out pretty
aeon, so we better be using up th«
onrs we’ve got. This is about two
Chicagoans that were visiting in
New York. They went out for a
wulk and got lost.
"Where are we, Bill? says one
to the other.
L- > l
I don’t know. I don’t think we’ll
ever find our hotel thi* way.'
'•Well,'' says the other one. “I ve
got it! We’ll shoot a couple of cops,
and somebody in the crowd will
surely know where our hotel is.'
(American N«w» Featntns, Inc.l
Crochet And Be Smart
The smartest women of America are busy plying their
crochet hooks. The foremost designers in Paris are ad-
vocating crocheted accessories for every occasion; there-
fore this newspaper is offering its readers this series of
ten articles, illustrating smart accessories which you can
make yourself.
VII—A Blouse For A Lovely Lady
¥-sOR the lurky woman who looks exceptionally well in very feminine
r clothes, this lovely blouse made of soft, glossy ltnit-cro-sheen will
be particularly becoming. The neckline Is softened by two clips, and
the elbow-length sleeves are full and graceful. It is crocheted In a
,lacy stitch, with a solid band around the sleeves and waistline.
An illustrated sheet of detailed directions will he sent youi
without charge, if you send a self-addressed return envelope
btwrint/ a three cent stamp to THE CROCHET BUREAU OF
THIS NEWSPAPER, 522 Fifth Avenue. NEW YORK CITY,
Specify “Crochet and Re Smart, design No. YII.’> Be thriftyt
While von create something beautiful with your hands.
t»i* *'to«
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Here is the
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placed to give extra traction in
mud, snow, sand and loose
ground. In addition the tread is
self-cleaning. When you equip
with Ground Grip tires you save
the cost of chains, the trouble of
putting them on and taking them
off and the extra tire wear the
chains cause.
0. H. BOCK
WHOLESALE DEALER
Henry B. Fabian Service Sta.
SOPHIE’S SERVICE STA.
KING’S TRAIL SER. STA.
ALBERT HEINZEL
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C HAPMAN’S SER. STA.
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Lasts 2V,2 times as long!
SUN PROOF PAINT
You i mney when you use tills fa-
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/
/
Walter E. Albert
Auto tons and glass, seat covers and
awnings
HALLETTSVILLE, TEXAS
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Malec, Walter. The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 82, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 13, 1936, newspaper, October 13, 1936; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1036928/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.