The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 50, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 23, 1936 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hallettsville Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Friench Simpson Memorial Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
rp> Wimm «f* wry v
’
1
*
«yw‘ v •
— ii mj n...... — ••• •>.•» •'
Mb’
fUf
Important Notice!
I had read the articles tel-
ling how dangerous radium
is, that little fish in a vessel
of water containing radium,
die, that seeds will not ger-
minate and come up, etc.
Dear readers, electricity, fire,
sun, water, etc., are also dan-
gerous, much more than ra-(
dium. Electric devices, elec-
tric rays, ultra violet, infra
red ana others cure many di-
seases; but electricity also
executes criminals. Electric
wires of high voltage kill
anyone they touch. Fire is
dangerous too, how many.
people burn themselves and I
fires destroy millions of dol-
lars worth of property every
year. — The sun is danger-
ous; thousands of people died
every year of sunstroke, etc.
TOT TMBTTNE - TUESDAY, JtTOT 28rd, 1936.
PACT
, year, floods cause so much i far better and were of giant j
damage, stormy seas destroy | size. I have read more of
ships and people by sharks > such articles and so did many't
in the sea, etc.—and yet, we 1 of you. Dr. W. S. Rusby, |
■can't live vdthout water, sun, dean of Columbia University,
demonstrating with great.
—Water? Thousands ol peo-
ple are drowned in it every
fire. Radium is dangerous al
so, that b the truth. But
truth is jiverso! Judas Is-
cariot als6 told the truth
when he told the rabbi*,
where .le.-jus of Nazareth tar-
ried.
I have rad these days in
different papers the articles
written by Alexander Guro-
wifsch the scientist, and by
Christopher Leau, the zeal-
ous student of radium and
proprietor of a truck farm in
Ramboiltet, France, how he
raised, by the help of radium
radiation, two crops in a
shorter time than it took o-
thers 1® raise one, and his
vegetal fes were pronounced
The Blessed Virgin and the
Negroes of Uganda
arriving in Uganda | Alter a short prayer
success on a 1(H) acre piot a
number of experiments in
raising plants by the help of
radium emanations. Those
vho read "Popular Medicine''
and "Popular Science”, have
learned that raaium rejuve-
nates and lengthens life. They
say that ex|ieriments with 1 Mary,
animals have
Upon
in 1876, the pioneer
Fathers consecrated
lives and the r work
Blessed Virgin. She was ap-
pointed Superioress of the
new-born Mission. “Regnum
Ugandae. regnum Ma.'iae”:
the “Kingdom of Ugunda”
became the ‘‘Kingdom of
proven that | From tne very
iliey live one fourth longer | also, th. Fathers decided that
than their usual span of life, the miraculous medal, hang-
short prayer, each
White one, candidly and in a loud
their1 voice, asks for a special
to the grace. "Kind Mother, you
know how I love you: but I
would love you much more
if you obtained for me the
! g ’ace of Baptism.”—"Mother
of Mercy, have pity on me!
1 have been set back twiee
i for Baptism. See to it that,
beginning at the coming examination,
♦he Father asks me some-
thing easy. I am so anxious
to become a chip', of God.”
After passing the terrible
Do not wonder then that.ing from the neck, would be
the curative properties of Uie the distinguishing mark of
radium Kompresses, sold by ithe Catechumens (pagans un- ordeal of an oral examination,
Mr. Bernard C. Stria, Box der instruction). With what the successful candidates con.
712, San Antonio, Texas, are, eagerness the Negroes, young gratulate one another, "Say,
proven beyond any doubt, land old, aspire to “the me- Kalounwe, yours was a nar-
I'hey have in comparatively I dal" as an exterior sign of row escape. You almost trip-
short time brought back the J their rvligjpus learning and ped up on the Father’s last
lift to my for three years al-|of their love for the Blessed I question. The Blessed Virgin
MILD FAMOUS Dll
INOW ONLY ORE TIRE IS
Tiresfono
OOM-DIPPED TIRES
WIR INDIANAPOLIS 500 MILE RACE
LOUIS MEYER won the Indiananolis 500-mile race, t J
an average speed of 109.069 miles an hour, breaking a !
track records, without tire trouble of any kind.
No tfres except Firestone Gnm-Dippcd Tires could h
resisted the terrific heat generated at such lii"ti sir mined speeds
the hot brick track, lap after lap, hour after hour You :an have
greater proof of blowout protection.
Not one of the thirty-three drivers would risk hisl; ,e on any otL
tire, for each driver knows that heat is the chief caur.e of tire failure
and blowouts. Firestone cords are soaked in liquid rubber, which
saturates and coats every cotton fiber, preventing fried in and he it
sind adding great strength. This is the Firestone patent* d process if
Gum-Dipping, that gives you greatest blowout prolectio i and safety*.
Profit by the experience of race drivers. Equip y nil- car tui .y
with Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires — it costs so little \c protect In.*
worth so much. .
tne W Jtreston
Designed and constructed by Fire qn
* — skilled tire engineers — a first qualii tir_
built of all first grade materials, embevvinu
the many exclusive Firestone pai >1ted
construction features. Its exceptional qi alii v
and service at these low prices are - lade
possible by large volume production ruthe.
World’s most efficient tire factories. M Je in
all sites for passenger cars, trucks and I isos.
Let us show you this new FI., ymc
tire today
* HIGH SPEED TYPE
4.50-21....
$ 8.60 j
4.75-19....
R.W
1 5.25-18....
10.851
‘5.50-17....
11.90
6.00-16....
13.851
*6.00-17 h.d..
15-90
6.00-19 h.d..
1<9.90!
6 50-17 h.d. .
18.40
7.00-17 h.d. .
81.30
7.50-17 h.d..
31.75
FOR TRUCKS
6.00-20 ....
* 18.85
7.50-20....
39-10
I 30x5 Truck r,p-.
18.75
1 32x6 h.d. ...
40.85
I Other Sites Priced Proportionately Low
MiTO*AO(Ol
lsS1iSl
STANDM0 TYPE
SIZE
PRICE
4.50- 21..
4.75-19..
5.25-18,.
5.50- 17..
•7.7*
O.SO
7.7*
10*70
FOR TRUCKS
6.00-20.. 1
30x5........|
•10.0*
Sl.SO
Others ProportJonatwhr Low
IBfix ....................... ■>/
• fOc 1
He*
ioc r
IHEL TYPE
Of good quality
and conutructinn
and backed by tho
Firestone name and
guarantee. An out-
| standing value in its
[Sfjgte:
4.50-21
*6.05
El
4.75-19
6.40
o I
5.00-19
6.05
V |
5.25-18
7.60
1 Others Proportions*!)! Low
COUR'ER tyre
A gor>J service-
able tire for
owners #f small
cars "1* want
new tire safety at
low r r-sti
iHTB*
Etches**
4.40 llSS.OB
4.SO Jl *•*•
4.75 19 S.S*
30x3 .11. 4-331
SPARK
PLUGS
.51*1
k Es.1 nl
Sots I
SwRhonv.^and ^fVdliam^aN^OrcheiWa^icry Monday nirht dfer N. B. C. Nationwide N<
rano, «.|A the Ffrestor.e ChoreM
ttwoM
H.
HAASE
Wholesale Dealer
Moulton, T exas
W. M. ST ARY STORE
Witting, Texas
EDWARD MIK A
Novohrnd
CISTERN CITY GARAGE
Cistern
MAREK’S GROCERY
Shiner
HKRZ1K GARAGE
Prahn, Texas
F. T. BARTA
Moulton
(\ H. BLASCHKE
Wled
MIGt, GARAGE
Shiner
i A. A. STASTNY
Novohrad
J. B. WARE
^ Moulton
» CHERRY GARAGE
I iVIuldiHin
MUTI1 END SER. STA.
(* Moulton
most dead fingers of my
right hand. The fingers were
pronounced at the court by
expert physicians as incur-
able as their nerves were in-
jured in an auto accident.
I have been using these fin-
gers now more than two
yeurs as before the accident
and my urinary ailment of
20 years duration, when I
had to get up as many as
eight times in a night, had
disappeared. These kompres-
ses have helped my two sis-
ters in Prague, C.S.R., and
others.
When Dr. Netardus wrote
to me several months ago,
asking why I let my name
be used in advertising Striz’s
radium kompresses, I an-
swered him with a letter and
also an article in a newspa-
per, that I am only corro-
borating the truth of the
healing properties of the
kompresses, and that many
other priests known to me.
some of my parishioners and
! must have helped you.
“Yes indeed, the Blessed Vir-
A with-
Virgin!
One flay a young girl wear-
ing the medal met a protest-igin saved the day!" A wi
ant Englishman who asked I ered old granny lifts her e-
mockingly: "What is that J maciated arms to the sky and
trinket around your neck ?” j cries out: “Thanks be to
—“What have you on your i Mary, I will become a child
chest?", she retorted.—"Why j 0f God. I was old, my youth
that’s a distinguished-service! has been restored to me;
medal, bearing the image of was ill, I am now cured;
the Queen of England.”—“In! was poor, I am now rich,
that case, my medal is worth Give me elbow room, my
you.-s; it bears the image of’friends." And the old woman
the Queen of Queens!”
During their stay at the
Mission for final instruction
before Baptism, the candi-
dates pay frequent visits to
the Chapel of the Virgin “to
pay homage of their Queen”.
starts prancing around with
evident joy. A young athlete
twenty years old, is turning
somersaults around the Cha-
pel. “Another happy one, his
friends exclaim; he is thank-
ing ffi? Blessed Virgin.”
Shiner ^
Parish news.
Next Sunday divine servic-
es at 7 and 9 o’clock. By the
Most Rev. Archbishop' Dis-
_________ _ pensation has been granted
others welf known to me and •for Shinc:r parish from fast
honorable people are recom-
mending Striz’s kompresses
that have helped them to re-
I gain health.
' I have also read the arti-
Icles by Revs. Raska, Klo-
bouk, Svozil and other good
people, where they defended
Mr. Striz as an honorable
man and his kompresses, and
I hope that every respectable
person will believe our truth.
Let us proclaim only the
truth and whenever and
whereever necessary, let us
defend Mr. Striz and his cur-
ative kompresses that he
sells.
If the kompresses have not
helped 3ome persons, no won-
der. Most of them, according
to their testimonials, buy
them only when nothing else
will help. I have bought them
also, only when everything
I had tried failed, and conse-
quently didn’t expect much
from them, especially in cur-
ing my fingers,—and the
and abstinance next Friday.
Next Sunday after the se-
fJtfanchen-Stork.
Jessie Stork of Yoakum
and Leona Manchen were
married Sunday afternoon at
2:00 o’clock by Rev. Schutze.
The witnesses were Mr. and
Mrs. E. Dreyer. The newly-
weds left for San Antonio
for their honeymoon and will
later make their home with
his parents in Yoakum. Jes-
sie Stork is working with the
cond Mass, blessing of the1 Houston Chronicle on the pa-
badges for the Junior mem- per route.
bers of the K.J.T. Next Tues-
day meeting of parishioners
in the hall at 8 p.m. Nextj
Saturday confessions of St.
Peter and Paul society’s mem
bers at 3 p.m . »
Baptised: Little Angeline
Darilek, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. A. Darilek Sunday
morning. The sponsors at the
baptism were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Hajek.
Personals.
Mrs. J. C. Blohm and
daughter. Dorothy Jean, left
last week to visit in Louis-
iana.
Rt. Rev. Msgr. L. P. Ne-
tardus left after second Mass
to Flatonia.
Sofka-Hybner.
Otto Sofka and Annie Hyb-
ner were married at the St.
Cyril and Methodius church
Frank Jilek. Sr.
Mr. Frank Jilek, Sr., aged
resident of Moulton, passed
away in the Wagner Hospi-
tal at Shiner. Friday evening
at i :0U p.m. Mr. Jilek had
been ill for the past two
months and only a week ago
was taken to the hospital. At
the time of his death he had
reached the age of 78 years.
The deceased was laid to
rest in the Moulton Catholic
Cemetery, Sunday morning at
7 o’clock, following services
at St. Joseph's Catholic
Church, Father Joseph Kopp
officiating.
Mr. Jilek leaves to mourn
his going, his wife, nee Mary
Fikac; three sons. Frank Ji-
lek, Moulton; Anton Jilek,
Fredericksburg. Alphonse Ji-
re _
suit? The kompresses helped at 8 o’clock by Rt. Rev. Msgr
me, at the age of 70, to,L* p- Netardus. Brides maids
health again. I didn’t know|were a sister of the groom,
about them until a priest, | Margaret Sofka, and sister of
known to me, and cured by i the bride. Marv Hybner. The
- - groomsmen were Clement Sof
tap brother of the groom and
Felix Hybner, brother of the
bride. The bridesmaids were
dressed in pink and blue,
both carrying a bouquet of
dahlias. The bride carried a
bouquet of roses. The witness
ses were John Sofka, brother
at Shiner, Tuesday morningllek, San Antonio; eight dau-
ghters : Mesdames Jos. Ko-
Pavlicek, Adolph
them,** had recommended
them. No miracles can be ex-
pected from them. That is
the way it is judged by
Yours in Christ,
Jan Marsalek,
spiritual director in
Ford City, Pa.
itor’s note—We received
the above article directly
from Rev. Marsalek and we
are publishing it here as an
advertisement.
of the groom and Louis Ma-
tula, brother-in-law of the
bride. The married couple left
for Corpus Christi after a
wedding dinner at the bride’s
home. They will make their
ihome in Shiner.
pecky, Joe
Vana, Frank Hons, Anton
Stary, Tom Picha and Miss
Albina Jilek, of Moulton, and
Mrs. Rudolph Chlastak, of
Houston. He was preceded in
death by two children, one
dying in infancy and a daugh
ter, Mrs. Frank Migl passing
away several months ago.
Pallbearers were eight of
his grandsons, Joe Pavlicek,
Jr.. Anton Stary, Jr., Tom
Picha, Jr., Frank Hons, Jr.,
Alphonse Vana, Rudy Chlas-
tak, Alvin Joe Kopecky and
Frankie Jilek.
The Tribune offers most
sincere sympathy to the be-
reaved family and relatives.
Texas' two most prominent citizens in the *|>»tlight at Philadelphia thin week.
Vice-President John Nance Garner with Governor James V. Allred, who was selected
by party chieftains to make the nominating speech for the Vice-President at the
National Democratic Conven tion.
/ am asking yoat vote!
ALVIN P. MUELLER
CANDIDATE FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY,
Colorado, Gonzales, Guadalupe and Lavaca Counties.
A native of Lavaca, a son of poor parents only.
Whatever he is today, he is by his own efforts.
Born on a Lavaca farm, he worked there till his
20th year.
Educated in Lavaca schools and a teacher in the
same schools.
A clerk in a bank and student of law in his spare
time.
A lawyer already for 16 years, enjoying sincere
respect of all who know him.
A man of piain people, one of you. He knows you
also as law-abiding, industrious people, and if elected
will see that you are protected in your peaee and order.
“What may happen, we cannot tell,” says Alvin
P. Mueller. “But if any secret terror ever threatens
you, rest assured, if I am your District Attorney, I
will not tolerate anything contrary to our Constitution
and liberty."
"I am asking your support and vote!”
Farmer for the Farmers’ Office.
james eric McDonald
State Commissioner of Agriculture,
Candidate for Re-Election
Born in Mexia, Texas, Limestone County, June 4,
1881, and educated in the Mexia schools.
Engaged in farming in Limestone County until
1911, moved to Ellis County, continuing farming.
Always interested in movements which were con-
structive and beneficial to farming.
State Representative from Ellis County in 41st
legislature.
Texas Commissioner of Agriculture in 1930. •
Always met the problems of the farmer with cour-
age.
Worked in close harmony with the Democratic Ad-
ministration and National Farm Programs.
Possesses the full confidence of A. & M. College and
other educational and research Institutions.
Inaugurated livestock development thru the placing
of more than 290 stallions and jacks with the farmers
of Texas, adding approximately one-fourth million dollars
to the wealth of (he State livestock industry in colt pro-
duction.
In the face of the proximity of Texas to Mexico
with the resulting International Plant Quarantine com-
plications his administration has kept the channels of
trade open for Texas fruit and vegetable industries to
other states of the Union.
He has inaugurated the rehabilitation of the peach
industry in East Texns. making way for a new and
sounder industry.
He has brought about the acceptance of the Irish
potato crop of the South Texas potato belt, by north-
western slates making available 300,009 new markets
annually.
His administration inaugurated the Low Water Dam
Work in Texas as an aid to soil conservation, preventive
of soil erosion and the raising of the sub-soil water
levels of the state.
He has stabilized the sweet potato industry of East
Texas bv establishment of Pest Free Zones and Com-
munity Pest Control programs.
During his admii'istration the seed cleanin'? and im-
provement facilities have been doubled over their f rmer
canaeitv as in orevious administrations. «nd has wit
nessed the enlargement of the Seed Certification Pro-
gram to include sort?hum. small grains, rotten and era.
ih*1 nom^er of SHfe Bonded Warehouse** *"«re than
doubled with its Accruing protection to the public
KEEP A FARMER IN THE FARMERS' OFFICE.
.. w .
mmm
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Malec, Walter. The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 50, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 23, 1936, newspaper, June 23, 1936; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1037171/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.