The El Campo Citizen (El Campo, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, August 14, 1936 Page: 4 of 8
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f
an
By
-
of arotmd 450,000 totes out
about the tropics:
Randi
years.
y steamship from New awaited
2
which have made charnelhouses of Span-
No. 2
SUBSCR PT ON RATES
I
an
45 gloomy from several standpoints.
tionalistic and territorial ambitions offer
The Galapogas Islands, lonel
no h
U
run.
1 mertean roumtries.
Pension Fund Dwindles
of Garwood
And in a world where the dictatorship have made claims to .seeing such
/
| cur, that a fifteen-year-old irl
where it survive'. treae
73
- te make them
--+
Passage of enabling legislatiom
rr
?
Mayan
en .
m 22 ;
commonplaces
primary. Colonel Thompson’s lead
was' around 278,000
drop oil field payrolls in. lonely
Hot Oil Probers Report
-
Morris,
runoff
i
h
e
(From the Hidi
l ewe)
all
and honesty of • Col.
"1 have
F ra
nli
t
I
a.
.• kedA
!12
3
e
A
<
ahM
o
• r "0 da
? This
tlan
i 1W
called upon to give the public the
true and correct facts as we have
1 nesday Hid
P parish hall.
) With their
I attend.
ent |
"no |
8
Philipp
Sunday s
Morning
"Wasted <
20-24). ’
No nigh
service in
Men’s fJ
vened in quadrennial sesrion.:
The citizens <ii El Campo appreciate this
headway la Am
, , 20 ,
■ Hua i ’
Aliira
lizard.
■ '■ |
e,
r
and
■ eiie
Six Months :.
Three Morths .
% meen
• One Year
1 Iuit muths ef .the’
-sion. n-dig, in Jana
one wants them around
11 —
MeE ctth
cu.
— ——0 ---- —
Mexico’s New Highway
uncertain, although the W
apparently favorable rece
Democracy in Spain aln
doomed after a trial lai
Thompson, but Thompson'* friends
have been checking up on Mor-
ris’ activities as a former "fafth-
at g
of ‘tl
n's itt '
" vepcion- reymemt « of. pos - ■
-- Itlis whether the people
or Texas are wiling to back'the
Single Cony
Advertising Ratesen Apoiication.
oned thorns or darts.
healing" evangelist in Crockett.
The issue in this race is clearly
48
The turmoil in which the whole world more or
Tax is the thing that makes the
seat of government uncomfortable.
cars, and
From Colon, 'at the Cast I;
: certainly is
For selfish reasons and in an
r M never more iege
O
h
j
l.
enforcement program of their
dssion. Or whether
rs and others who
reptasentetives.
probing h 04
onformant mi
liminery rezyr
one’ »The ref
hot oil ope
opDAGe a 1
. o * o
Youth is the keystone of our
I
language that seem* to have much
suecess. s'
o e >
ist government of France is in
r. Should a fascist state be set
d, with its accompanying iron-
tatorehip, the French Republic
ringed around by Germany,
aly and the Spanish convert to
ranks. Only the British would
I possible major ally in Western
d the Soviet to the east. Brit-
tergoing a period of confused
id vacillating diplomacy, such
eriz«d the foreign relations of
. . The ( arib Indians were so
paign ' of vilification against
Thompson,, the "hot oireivesi
as he originated and adopted this system and it
in working perfectly in his case till et He has
enjoyed the freedom from vexatious minor ques-
tions that have arisen, and if ever a major-ques-
tion does arise he will take great pleasurein ex-
ercising his authority and independence
- . -------------
No Courage to Live
(From the Freeport Facte)
There is a surprsingly large number of, people
who do not have courage to live a nonmal existence
They accept apparently unquestioningly all of
the advice that every one has to give them with
the reauK that ene hy.one the broadening thing!
who wir’always have their hand out. We do not
believe that the relief eystem has created these.
They have always been with us. There has always
been a certain number of people who are'hot -worth
ipaon, cbaitman of ।
commission, by ci
AUSTIN-—In every eounly in
Texas this week officials eagerly
Passage of enabling legislatiom to do. give, or sacrifice for some-
to qualify Texas for federal aid one we love or. think worthy. It
on other phases of the Social Se-lereates an emotion of exaltation,
with the trite and uninteresting. The mind wearies
of its imprisonment and old age and decay set in.
It takes courage to live one's own life and refuse
to conform to the blighting exactions of the hum-
drum and the commonplace.
Na-ltrante to the Panama Canal,
First
Bible sen
ter Schnel
com ito! |
a, D .
Md-weck
7:30 p.m.
w.
of narrow petty, colorless.
Pacific outposts, are
« at El Campo, Texas, as
Mall Matter.
only five -
Democracy in France, practiced;
feetm lemth.
successfully for more than a century. | it is ciol
2
community arch, a
o o •
Fashion la th* most powerful
dictator. / J 2018
deurary among nativ
"Try as he win the experience
cf the past are clearer to a ma
of seventy, than his thought
the future”—Dr. waitam j, May
- -eg
s.,
The danger lies in giving or
sacrificing too much and thereby,
robbing thie individual of respon-
sibility, or in giving and expect-
ing too much gratitude, or in
making others feel obligated to
us.
A striking example is the cRse
York to Barranqilla, Colombia, <m Washipgton by a committee of
First I
Sunday a
P reachins
League, I
l’nion sl
Deatherage
at-this hov
and an additional $500,000 is ex
pet ted in September from license
renewal fees. Nobody knows yet
what the total of pensioners will
tin ntE 'i vl'h ils share.
vestigation." n
, The report asserts the commit-
tee made carefal and complete
exairAnation of Thomnson’s per-
sonal and official business affairs
and in addition, had access to the
records of the government com
mittee during a similar investiga-
tion made by the department of
the interior,”
“As a result of this work and
these complete investigations, we
did not find the slightest evidence
that would reflect in any manner
upon the integrity and honesty .of
Col. Thompson, either in , his per-
sonal business or official acts.” The
report bore the signatures of Leg-
„islators H. N, Graves Augustin
Celaya, Walter E. Jones and Hugh
stewart.
• • ° • .camps from the dlr.
We have heard it said that the present relief _____/
system is creating an undesirable class of loafers
on a
j we ar ways reminded that when
nan marries he hecomes an uncertain vojm man.
Since there are two minds then, engaged in se
tiing anv question that may arise. History teaches
that it takes longer for a man and wife 1
ujen anything than it doe's for a single personof
'either persuasion, and in many cases the time
consumed in making a decision is so great that not
much is left for the execution of any certain pro-
gram. An excellent system for a newly-married
couple to adopt is to allot to the man all decisions
of a major nature and leave to the wife all minor
1u ndinani
A pie are courteous and hospitable, notally
after the border cities are left behind.
, The Pan-American highway epens 10
the American motorist .a new vacation
Wonderland richly meriting a visit; -
—-— ero——-
“Fire Burn, Cauldron Bubble”
Bi Spain’s frightful civil war is a painful
mreminder to the people of the United
the years immedjate-
■
whom, and
summer months, with California
leadiua all states Each visiting
travels an average of 540 miles
"4s. increase of travel with-
While Frank
dates who bowed to the will of the
voters and withdrew, where- lead-
ers lacked only a few hundred or
thousand votes of having a major-
ity vote, the backers of Frank
Morris apparently were planning
to keep their man in the run-off
against Chairman Ennest. O
Thompson of the railroad com-
mission, and observers here ex-
pected a bitter, mud-slinging cam-
paign of the worst type, based on.
Morris’ performance in the first
zamdor.n
DIZZY
Definitions e
-d,e "o
Compiled BY ‘
H. W. Schwalenberg,
% b-
-----------------;-------------”
A wink is the ‘nly universal
friendly action on the part
school authorities.
vote, and nobody here concedes
Morris an outside chance to win
the runoff. If Thompson had re-
ag< inst all alieu tendey e
share of them. They
! implement- of war.
; It is pr-uinr a
banded dowa for eeney at ions t
,i i.art if their Ama) worshir. .
iungjua duzwe
echdqgd qhaxba
» the mainlands in the til l
K U PADLC YATES,
Editor and Publisher
FREDA H. YATES,
pySH- - Associate Editor.
madhone------------.......
he north cost of South America, the planning board, there to
Both than from New York to Houston.Aatarrpwraidenctanooscyet
are The Panama Canal is on “ler(rekas right to partictpate in
13o),000,000 federal PWA pro-
i gram for 1936-37. Leftcoff the list
of states to which allocations
were ni Ata was Texas.- Inquiry re-
vealed )oe Washington nabobs
ashamed of her old fashioned. Ill-
fitting; garments. They talked of
topics, of the day and travel in
A patronizing manner, because
“mother- i wouldn’t' understand.
aind south line with Baton Rouz
The peopi , The shortest crossing •
1e"nevitatl hurricane shutters.
Firs
jj^tenffay
alas* for
2 . Preachi
q "The Mat
Htice the t
ler than
| The Pre J
. ene held
FT canpment,
. to a close
. conference
enrollment
been antici
I ficials.
r Among 1
I tended and
k were Rev J
K They were
I - sembly H <<l
8ionH
Seven in
I given to cl
t .nstructors
V some of th
in the I
l churclr. •
L bly’s exe,
| ducted the
1 ice durOig I
" Both Rev
z that thoirs
1 top experie
I their home
1 greatly ble
‘ durin I
' fellowship I
. ones. I
J Roy 1.‘
City for a I
b some busin
) the Centen
of the Pre
k wil be bail
) gust 23 tfil
( time plans I
N activities <1
considered I
i and Sunda
7 Regular I
k the local iI
A be repum I
Aninr -I
• sei |
AI STIN. Despite Gov. Alred’s
declaration, that he "still has an
open mind" on the .question of-
calling a special session . of th'
legislature this fall, best informeg
enue I. .s opitilon here is unanimott she
belief that a "lame duek" session
will get tinder way around oct. 1
, , ... > in the hands of his mnnagers will
firming forecasts of the need • .
. . , get a good chuck e because of.
- ial session of the legisla-t 5 " .
what happened at the Dawns ( en-
in this150-mile ne. , • . Ne Pan-
, ama hats are hade-in Panama.
of life are left out until it becomes merely a round - Chile con carne’is unknown car 1
filled throughout mod -M Mexico randan’Tekai
Central America’. . . . daMtain in the state by Texas
Frank Hewks, noted speed fer
though renewal of liquor licenses
will bring in substantial additional
revenue for pensions in Septem-
ber. all authorities here agree ad-
ditional permanent financing will
be necessary. They think Gov.
Allred, with, the very obvious
mandate of the people .reflected
in his tremendous vote for re-
election, will have no great dif-
ficulty in obtaining from the leg-
islators favorable action on his
tax program, which included in-
creased taxes on natural re-
sources, increased franchise taxes.
faces dire peril. The same cleavages
a giat
or Mirn
. s ilent when, pioprly conked
. . The tapir, when wounded, ear
policy of rigid i~ola-li as dangerous as a charzin., c, ,
tion in the resilm of world relationship-. ri nreres. . (rntral.Americ oi a -p
Yet there is no assurance that the ba for of the deadliest snakes 1 re mis fall to rehabilitate old
! reoplerof America will escape either from, th’ harhmastn It’ d" dnee eora age jensions funds. Director Or-
, > r .L. 11 , -rake and anaconda, or giant boa vias cmnenter estimates that
the horrors of another world war or from reusiret ,r Although sclent 1 , ' - 1 \ T !„ •
the equally dreadful civil strife enrineered isis declare no anthropoid ape ever cude approximately 6o,000 bene,
the hv the extremist groups. had a habitat in the wilds of the rjeiaries, drawing a total of-about
So inter-reated are the nations of the New World, legends of a great $92b,000. Liquor taxes are bring-
■ "man-beast" or missing link have ing in about $300,000 monthly.
run animal in the high ram forests, he, • Abut 200,000 applications
Strug- Driver ants, said t be total- ; were received, and of the first
Ty blind, are kings of the junK < ( 95.000 investigated, 60 per cent
the * , , ..
eg , 1 WAre aPHroyed for pensions: If
this ratio held throughout a total
antS
hey are,
."P
E.i 131 2
architecture, dating back to the
pre-Christian era, shows, certain
Hebraic -influence*. ... An un-
blemished specimen of one species
of oceap shell is worth $1,000. . . .
Portions of the Panama railroad,
crossing the isthmus, have ma-
hogany crosstie. Old timers say
a man died for every spike driven
general improvement in business,
together with better collection over Morris
methods, have „heped swell the
sion is a practical certainty.-
0 0 0
Gas Tax Income Up
When centennial officials sought
passage of the. $3,000.0000 state
centennial appropriation last year,
they declared increased gasoline
tax sollections would probably re-
“pay the 'state the full Amount
during Centennial year. Gas in-
come tax last year was $37,152,700,
Celleetiens this year have shown
a .substantial increase each month
over last year. Land Comptroller
George Sheppard now estimates
collections this year will exceed
$41,000,000. The money, of course,
'does net B back into the general
fund from whence the Centennial
$3,000,000 .came, but the gas tax
at least appears likely to bring
back to the state additional reve-
nue equal to the appropriations.
Figures compiled by the highway,
department from actual. traffic
counts ob gateway highways show
45,000 out-of-state cars have vis-
ited Texas "monthly during the
would cause a
Other Editorial Utterances - uhlipedcuncndah 1
i .. - ~ . m c. i a , . V ' y j,or more month$; and
_____________—.— — —-----— — —r edN3sther/ South Amejieat
CF0R16 eAfNOES ■ Slirring y
aoe needed to guard elotbin and ' ' ' . ' alcurity program of the New Deal, and it is also a moral stimulant.
tatber goods azainst Tungirrin "u, ' ’’ 1018 n AKe land raising of additional revenue
, .. puj-un-, Iekon toyns and cities । 2 ... ■ , ,
tlie rainy so; son. N‘ merusi . , . | for .old age assistanee will be the
., , t- > that period. If Carpenters .... ,
< aribbean countries have no win- i principal matters submitted. Al-
. . . . . ... eStimats are anywhere near cor-
dow runes in their homes-merely
. . .. . revt their, an autumn special ses-
i "alousies or slatted shutters, a nd '
their salt and never will e. They ar« akeconomic
liability. No age has found fa-way trget rd 01
them and each age has been burdened wih, it* ,
ma soahirdesa thkt ne
Revolution in Eu rove
ooo
decisions. The writer knows whereof he spraks
AM*/ : Aphucas
• meHiyw o-nk.
v Trinit
“The CM
God.”
| There w
I Gunday, A
A will be spe
I City Parisi
The foil
23, we will
ice at 8 pl
Luther
day night.
EDw
0 0 0
Allred Likes Skating
Those who know coy James
V. Allred's habit of promptness
in keeping his engagements and
his usually tretable disposition
that it would be more profitable
to work at hi* own job than to ,
campaign against his colleague*,
Thompson and Judge Terrell.
0 0 0
Political Pinwheel
- For Sale Cheap—A vast and
variegated asssortment of political
“literature” that voters rendered
useless by eliminating many run- - -
offs. . . . The confident pre-elec-
tion predictions of the losing can-
didates always sound funny the , d
day after the election, but no- l
body remembers them, anyway. A
. . . Fort Worth is making a hard I
fight for the State Democratie A
convention, Sept. 8, and appears I
the favorite now. There Myron fl
Blaloek, all') tpos of the Allred- I
picked Detorratie executive com- •
mittee wil' he re-elected for an-’ fl
other t 1 •cars, .and the plat- .fl
form which '. 1) be the Allred fl
legislative prgram for 1937-38, fl
willbewtitt and adopted. fl
Tom love will take another anti- I
open saloon resolution to the con- fl
vention, but nobody else will take fl
ft very seriously. . F. L. Wei- fl
mar, Alto editor, recalls, apropos fl
of the forthcoming motion pic- •
ture, "The Texas Ranger," that_______E
Sam Houston ordered Capt. Mich'- B
ael Costley. of Douglas, to organ- fl
ize the first company of rangers fl
to protect the settlers of Alto, . fl
after Brooks Williams and Zach fl
Gibs were killed and scalped by ■
Indians, as they worked in their I
cornfields. The rangers stopped * I
the Indian raids, just as they have I
done most jobs they were assigned A
to do ever since. I
gas tax income.
ooo
ish cities and towns exist in France. _____ .. .. . __________
communistic and fascist elements are The Panama Canal is on • a
highly organized, each waiting the pro- north and south line just skirt-ihe
J-’1* | pitious moment to seize power, ing the eastern tip of Florida. .
A’ .13 The European outlook is profoundly
hes the 'sun set in 'he
u078teme with A waffle is a on-ekja, pancake.
of a mother, who sacrificed her
entire life for her children. She
refused to enter social activities,
saying, "her children needed her.” -
She bought and made lovely clothes
for her children, but she would
with smiling martyrdom, wear
frowsy made-over garments. She
gloried in doing the daily tasks
not expecting the children to do
suchr dirty work, and “servants
were so unreliable." She, of:
course, had no time for pleasur-
able activities, travel, reading or
any sort of an outing, although
her husband could well afford it.
The outcome of this mother's
sacrifice was - pitiable. The chil
dren looked upon her as a serv-
ant They secretly wished that
she could mix socially with their
friends mothers. They were 1
ceived 13,ODO more votes than he
— -g, ----did, h9 would hve had a clear
candidate against Chairman Er*- majorty over his four opponents
est O. Thompson of the railroad ot of more than 900,000 vote*
commisston, continued, his cam- least fn this race.
Thompson forces indicated they
_ ------- -------zoym would continue their campaign on
gating ’ committee of-the nube of, 8218 outstanding record of the rail
A which has peen oommission chairman, urging his
l situation offhand-; pQpicy ofceqservation-sogtural
baths, issued a prtr rebpurees, as opposed te Morris'
of "throw the oil fields wide
°PS." They have so far made
no effort , to reply to Morri*' U-
rade
fierce and implacable that ■ they
effort to miglead Athe public, cer-
tain gentlemen, aided and abetted
by sinister interests and indivfd-
uals notoriously •connected with
the ‘hot oil raket, and known a*
flagrant violators . . . hve made
I a contemptible, unwarranted, and drawn,
false attack upon the integrity
tennial last week. Gov. Allred
with Gov. Henry Horner of Illi-
nois and a host of dignitaries
were dinner guests at the Black
Forest at the Centennial. Gov.
Horner had especially requested
that the dinner be held there be-
cause he had spent so many
pleasant hours at the attraction
at the Century of Progress. And.
at Gov. Horner’s request Evelyn
Chandler, world’s figure skating
champion, who did not ordinarily
appear until later, gave a special
performance for the two govern-
ors and the guests. When she
started it was time for the party
to rush to the performance of
Cavalcade. Once he had seen her
in action, however, Gov. Allred
refused to budge until she had
finished ... and applauded for
several minutes while Centennial
officials, dignitaries and'his man-
agers waited good naturedly.
luxury taxes and others in his
original tax program preposed 18
months ago.
ooo
Bitter Campaign Loom*
Notwithstanding the example of
several other runner-up candi-
Assem
■ We have
and you a
church.
Sunday.
Morning
. Christ A
people’s e
Evening
W. M. Cu
Prayer r
9:30 o’clor
h.."A heart
■ ' I
t. ly undertake the journey alene.
6 -There A not a ata gerous -roih on • " other countries
• prrinotl- patn
. 730 Acros the waters, foes in various di
' c । l । gu- lurk rear at hand. The 1 eed fo
this single tiethcrakeit ni1, " anet
making it smcoth foi truvel. .
From Mexico City, '• rmir 10- of- 1h
highway, ether hard rft •• l inad- l- d +—----
In several dir | At ion thi g rgi 1
in historic intere-t and -i.k vrasipu- |
Through the jnitlative-f American . ~
E companies, the Pan-American Advice From a Husband
has been rroridcd vj5 our- camp- tFrom the Colorado count
where excellent at" nm vd.tioi awei the .,."00"/" ■ ,
| • motorist. ppointed county judue by
Mexico has much of romance, cbarmmiuis e erurt upon the death ef the teedohr
k and mystery to lure the touri-t. 1’ has 1 -■ me months ago, defeatrd lb। ‘
an abundance of big gam", fine fishing and Mous present county attorney, almost 1o ' ne
11 . . - , 1 ,• ! We aru alwavs reminded that when a (/ta/ ounE
other outdoor sports. The Mexican 1e9
less, has been involved for twhty year* and more,
finds itg"latest manifestation in th* bloody revold-
, tion ‘BOW IB progreas in Spain. From all report*, '
, France, too, seem* to be on the verge of a popular
: uprising.’ ’ - -2- n, ' 2.
It is rditficnit from iW*, distance 1*. place a
proper vain* upon the news that the cable* bring.
I We have nothing in our American temperament,
our method* of life or our pol
ct 120:060 pensioners is indicated,
iut the first cases investigated in-
i . W dt ‘eluded 40,000 persons' on relief,
land a half mile long. . iThe Tulewin a veyvbiuh percentage of ap-
indians of Danen ha ve thrir own prevri wih a smiler percentage
version of Noah S Food, nd I । , .114 mA
■ . ... . ,t cf apiprcvalsamapg th#* last 100;-
a white IaV-givei and AeSSiah . . 2. fr.
. , . MHn rpp)jcarF, soie state OKI-
whe landed in a maznificent shipcgms Leucvaine rompteted initial
' ..... the east many rentnns aln :. ..„ , , ,n near-00.000.
Hostile-eyes watch fim The head-huntdrs o Eu i . ncuucr as indit atad -his brfief I*
— . - ■ mi ann9 01 et herhey derar . , • •
foes tn Various dipsnastrangerandssrinkbsras"" wi e lundsenvpab '
t . . , . . bas grnEons until Jan. 1. If no
rudef their own cazeruity Eardar
, si ■"<■ at --iom sre held, it would
of pe ss.until it is.nin larer on , .. ' -
a HFpnle tt* ire "inA"e‛ .hi •'
•y ing ut an old relgiouercusime
mdalmdamebk b
geeuzsengxmdi
needed. With realisation finally -
dawning she understood how eel, ,
fish she had been. She had rob- d- s
ber her children of the right to ... 12
know responsibility. She haccub
taught them only to receive and -"2
not to give and had made of them Als
selfish prude*. 1
We pity this mother. hould
we not also pity the chhdrent
Their heartbreak and trageqien 4
lie ahead—unless kind Providemcez
take a hand.
Next week: Do noral per.
sons suffer haltucinatiqe. . aag5
: blamed (hack of skilled labor on
relief rolls. Representatives of
Tesas cities, at a special meeting
of the Texas League of Municipal-
ine A in Dallas, declared 35,000
She had never been anywhere
nor had she kept up with the
time*. '
Home became just £ place • of a
convenience to them as the chil-
dren grew into adulthood. This
mother became a truly tragic
figure: Just when she had ex-
pected loving devotion and grati-
tude she found herself no longer
used to fly qitrokkcerin over the
jangle* of MexicPkeast coast arid
chase complete extermination to
slave ry under the Spaniards. In
the era, preceding Columbus' voy-
1 age to the' New World, they bad
extended their influence over most
of the Caribbean and a fringe of
the Seuth American coast. . . .
When our American youth picks
up an air rifle, he is looking at
the Yankee adaptation of the
blowgun, that efficient.killing in-
strument of the jungle and bush
The blowgun makes very little
noise,.and every hit is a kill when
the ammunition consists of pois-
2, States that they live in a world gone
bersek, driven by titantic opposing forces.
lip The death struggle between leftists and
fl the. army in Spain is in reality a struggle
between the two, main forms of totalitarian
k’ commonwealth—communism and fascism.
9s Today the bitter conflict, the effort at
2 extermination, rages in the storied land
y where the Moors found haven centuries
I , ago, only to be ousted or absorbed.
f Next month the same flamingly antag-
onistic rivals, communism and fascism,
may extend their battleground to France.
The magnitude and intensity of the
Spanish revolt indicate that fascist ele-
8 ments had' planned for months to seize
Au, power, and were possessed of ample fin-
g ' ancial resources. Leftists have accused
Fuvaltaly and Germany of supplying a war
I chest to the rebels.
• - , i . • h r
f entire highwy." h" -id.
f All except 80 m b - "i the
mile motor route is ha l surf
Psychology
Week-by-Week
E Campo Tcx;;- pritav August 14, 1936. a constant menace to peace, even whil'lnue-from Panama city, ne
2a ______1 _____________* _________i the rise of totalitarian government spread- saches the sun rise in the Paci
. . .. . c . . jt, never-ending threat of civil carnage The Gelonavne 1elandu lon •
A Neighborly -Pirit The nations are arming feverishly, war
The Garwood li depemdent School di— talk i- heard on every hand.
trict, which ha- made a enviable re ord of Eurepe live in dread of invasion fror
fl in building a i «• ‘ icat imii l -ytem, ar vithout and revolution from within. inu N-i Worlds from Nat
X* week displa • I - k" orlv -sirit y • ».... ,. . . 2. . :. - T .* a ,ththevicinly if Konekry
& Wcngiga. yg . g, .1,-; lilted ,h(. 1
D loaning - • mi ot the threat of world cataclysm. 1' .. wost
7 El Camvo (‘hamber i i emmerce lor , , . . 2
t H inilding vultlhips as fast as the -hit-
* transportativin "f ' 1 •- Ie । mumcipal and .1 .
" ,, ( .yards can turn them out, inereasing h
: to East Ben stingth of its regular army by thousund-
The band fumni hedmusie- Lor ‘he ot men. perfecting new and more terrMle
: SPJST grand lodge of Fexas which con-
By IYONNE FRANKLIN
Consulting Psychologist
Egocentric means: Self-een-B
tered or selfish. A saerifice can
be a. thing, of beauty or it can
become a vicjous egocentric ex-
pression. ■ .
Most of us are Tmilar with u
the proverb, “It is better to give "
than to receive." Many of us re
alizethat it is a genuine pipakure.
skiHed and unskilled joblessaxork-
ets are available, enlisted" of
Enua his Morris Sheppard and
Tii'ii i onnally io have Texas in-
■ i ad-l Dizens ofetity, 'county and
olber. prgjerts, for which local
"'d' '' 1 ’be money has already
I" n. isd by bond issue and
til he ' '< aus, areldomed, mless
tue ;• I government comes
The recert formal dedicatien of
PanoAmexexnebichys’atininderiha worltd todav that despite all eftort aimnd - days a th'
Mexico is fully alive to the needs fof at striet neutrality, any major war easlconquistadors, and scores of rer-
modern transportation facilities. might draw this nation into its Mortex sons independently of one another
More than 70 officials from the United
States were taken over the highway, fol- of the proletariat or of the industrialist
lowing the dedication ceremony id the forms the source of never-ceasing F
middle of themternational bridge at La-it is tremendously difficult for t < Even the great snakes and
s redo, as guests of the Mexican govern- ideal of democracy to survive, magntice nt black cougar of
Stment i Communism is securing art Amerianitral America, flee when these
5y-; n,. p , ,.,.igcu r rhe'foothold, especially among the youth, arproach a seething, rippling
AmhimARtomheni. A.., X aslan Fa-ciem has f.......favr.a the I-rorm. eom
M-.ed after making 1h une-trip to Mexico wo evils among powerful financi -y-
E City bom the border. In ov niterests whichiexercise; enormous inhuene
" could safe- in shaping the nation s destinies.
Democracy in America, as in the few
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Yates, Paul C. The El Campo Citizen (El Campo, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, August 14, 1936, newspaper, August 14, 1936; El Campo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1577932/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Wharton County Library.