The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 34, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 1, 1934 Page: 2 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.
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PAGE iWO
TIU8 fKlliUNK — TUESDAY, MAY 1st, 1934.
LATE NEWS FLASHES
Better to Face the Truth
-I
CAT1IO..IC PRIEST SEEN
AS AID TO CONVERSION!
JERSEY CITY, N. J.—The Rev..
Robert I. Gannon, S. J., dean of
St. Peter’s college, declared at a
K. of C. <poo>tnunion breakfast here
that the average reception of 40,-
000 converts annually into the Cath-
olic Church is nothing to be proud
of. He said that Mere Me twenty
million Catholics “In thfe United
States and ■ th*t, it takes 500 of
them to ,/loqvfrt: one person. The
priest flwffred" <H«t development of
the Catholic press would help the
convert movement and rapped a
number of prominent feature writ-
ers for tiie" secular press who, he
said, not only are non-Catholic but
are opposed- to religion.
| traph—corrals constructed with wide
| “wings” inte which a band is pa
S|ti
HONOR ST. JOSEPH AS WORK-
INGMAN
-O-
BERLIN.—The Archiepiscopal Or-
•1 inariat of. Munich has issued in-
structions to the clergy of the dio-
cese to sing Solemn Mass in all
the churche? on May 1, national
Labor Day in Germany- The Or-
dinari&t points out that in Germany
St. Joseph also ia honored on May
1 and that, therefore, the sermons
ought to refer properly to this
patron saint, of the Christian work-
ipgtnan .and. in particular to the
hUftaingai arising out of work done
id tf-e epirifr of St. Joseph. In , a
jprayee ,*at>- ithe i and1.. of the Mass,
GosTe -fleering.Ts to , bo -invoked in
.affih the.i (Churches upon the ; work
of the , officials . of the government
who devote their, best energies to
fight, unemployment., M ,
i1K 0 1 ( Qn'M" 1 1
CATHOLIC, GYMNAST MOVE
rtS T.» lire. .GROWS
Ik: . I liiti ■ i iQ1
LIBRETTO IS WRITTEN FOR
CATHOLIC OPERA
--O-
DURANT, Okla. —(NC) — Two
Catholic women here have written
the libretto for a Catholic opera,
entitled “Praise Be the ' Name of
Jesus.” They are the Misses Ona
and Zelma O’Reilly. Miss Ona is
a singer and expects to have the
soprano role in the production. The
music hag not yet been written.
The authors have devoted 16 years
of study and effort to the creation
of the opera.
-0-
FAMILY KEEPSAKE WAS COUN-
TERFEIT
-O-
BRATTLEBORO, Vt., April 24.—
(INS)—For half a century a $2.50
gold coin was kept as a family
keepsake, according to a man who
brought it to a local bank here be-
cause of the federal rule against
gold hoarding. The teller looked
at it sharply, dropped it on the
counter and then handed it back tp
the man, It was a counterfeit,
and not a gold coin.
n ____ ' -!
BISHOP LUCEY TO BE INSTALL*
aj ED MAY 1C >M.
AMARILLO, Texas, April 24.—(N,
C.j—Tlife Most Rev. Robert E. Lucey
Will be solemnly instilled ai bishop
of Amarillo en May 16, the Rev. .Fi
M- . .Kaminsky, cbancelor. df the dWr
cese pf Amerilio, has announced. It
had previousl'y been reported that'
the installation would take place' on
May 15. This Was erroneous.
A Bishop-elect Lucey's solemn, tenser
cration as bishop of AmeriUo will
ganizations, „ofI the Orel, , Catholic
gymnastic and. physical culture ass-
ociation, are reporting increases in
membership. >/<» . , . <
; i , . O
PRINCE CONVERT LONG
INTERESTED IN TRUE FAI*TH
—_a—
- MUNICH.—Prince Friedrich Leo-
pold of Prussia, the relative of the
former Kaiser of Germany who re-
cently beqame a convert to Catholic-
ism, .had been, interested in the
Churdv. fPT) some time. He had
visited with the Steyl Fathers in
their i mission, house of St. Rupert,
in BischofShofeft near Salzburg,
Austri»,Wd iricteived hia instructions
4tt thei Catholic faith from the rec-
Me ofn that religious institution. A*
his. own .request he -was then re-
ceived .into, th$. Church in the study
,house ,pf,. the., ogder in Rome on
Holy Saturday this year, The prince
ia 36 'years-old .and, ,}a known as
•*. schoiat. iUU; v, -. .
..rilHei iq.iJMt tire first member of
(,toe..,Hoben»Uern family, who; be-
eame, >*, iCstholip. March 30, 1682,
am . of ibis, .ancestors, -Count Chris-
tian ,. Wilhelm of Brandenburg, was
, received jnto-.the true Church af-
ter he had fought his way through
many rajydRes, After, his conver-
. gion ,l>e described his religious ex-
perieneef,;;in .book called. Spec-'
.nlnm^.Yeritetis, (The. Mirrpr of
•(.Truth), whjeh. inter on was followed
by, .-a, .epcomi, volume, the,, Apologia
£pe«ulj.,i;Ver»tati#,i as *a refutation
. .(Pttinks dieted against, him,.by
Protestant theologians, He becaip*-
a widower twice and succeeded in
, .gaining. both, ■ these, .vjaws
,BUeifim:,.Hiq , greatTgrandfatber was
a brother of Raiser William JL.,:
,. i ... .
OVER-EATJNG AND NO REST IS
HARD ON HEART, PHYSICIAN
.... DECLARES
l. . , :T7V”0-’-" . > .1
CHICAGO.-^Yatoh your dfct.
don’t drink top much beer, exercise
only,/as . mpeh an your; doctor .sqjrs
. you need to, /and avoid, nervous e*-
citementrr-and, .if . you.,have one tdf
the most .common types of heart
disease, you’ll stand a better chance
of being one of the 5Q per pent that
heart trouble doesn't kill after 45.
.. . That was the wrfvieq .'given by Dr,
Alfied , Stengel, of .Philadelphia, lec-
taring at, GilUpgs hospital of the Un
, jversity ,pf Chicago to jpeimbers . of
the eighteenth annual session of, the
American.College, of Physicians.
, HUNTINGWILD HORSES BE-
COMES profitable , ,.ij
apt like it if we would act otherwise. . J Ifbw-mi- .
/it biol Indifference and .ignora^ifo'-ai-the^ yon, sir." she said gently
shop is installed, V. Rev. Fatlier'Jos.
Pokluda, the pastor of Rowena, is
directing the affairs of the difcesc.
-O--
BRITISH PRINCE ENDS
IMPERIAL SALES TRIP
LONDON, April 24.—Prince Geo-
rge, understudy to the Prince of
Wales, as imperial salesman, return-
ed to England yesterday after a
4,000 mile tour of South Africd,
He visited mining areas1 in South
Africa and talked' to. native chiefs
from . whop he received , j numerous
presents^ In exchange the prince
presented each chief with1 a walking
stick.
• .. . ,4..r-0 Lit:,:
107 CONVERTS IN ONE
CONFIRMATION “CLASS
/AY/A
WISCONSIN RAPltoiSi WAle:—In
1. • t
KH 1
Most "Rev. Alexander J.: MfeGaViCk-
D: B.; Bishop of 'La Crohto/ tftrte
were i07 persons Who wetWT’<4tort-
verts to the faith. .-nelalom
|l-—^ If
11DOUBTS CLEARgD!!
VftceMsr? to_ wnftfM
my sins
robbed er,k41qi
other sins ,tq Qo4 time?
A.-r- Bin
law: pf God .......
robbpry ,and ;nWEder oply„,
m we have no rin, ,we de«
hWveu’: John m ..Christ, fit
fpnleaaion when He institu
Sacrament of Penance.
There were 20,882,594 Catholics counted in this country
last year, according to the Official Catholic Directory just ra-
, - , ... , , . leased by Its publishers, P. J. Kenedy & Sons, New York. The
| txentiy wor e y & i u cow ys. does not include the Catholics of Alaska and our inaular
0 possessions.
This would indicate an increase of 54,191 over the pre-
ceding year of 1932, when again the reported gain was 32,012
over the year of 1931. . * >
— Tlhere were 49,181 converts to Catholicity in this country-
durinJr 1933, or 8,955 more converts than in ’1932.
L In other words —
(C. In 1933, out of the total gain of Catholics in
the United States, 49,181 were converts, making the net
gain — due to Catholics proper — 5,010.
In 1932, in spite of 40, 226 converts, the net
gain in the Catholic population of this country was
— 32,012. The converts were not sufficient to cov-
er the numerical losses in the ranks of American
Catholics.
Without the converts in 1933, more than twenty million
Catholics in the United States gained only — 5,010.
Without the converts in 1932, the Catholics show actual
loss of more than eight thousand souls. While they were gain
ing converts, they were losing their own.
What is happening to that natural gain which
Catholics should show every year?
.ere must be at least tfrree million Catholic families in
iand more than a quarter million children bom of
pdrehts. The birth rate among Catholics is still
higher than anywhere else, . 'ooa ml
)-a Where is that natural growth? -*0 mof-
lliat really — not the converts — should be tHfc prih-
cipal gain in the ranks of the Catholics of America-
, The Gatholics here should grow at least,at the ,
rate of a quarter million souls a year — plus me con- 4
verts ^ incidental.
But as it is — the converts present the principal gain
aqd>,ih.e Catholics proper only the incidental gain.
.vjiiaioi Without the converts, there would have fifeah only 5
thousand gained during last year, arid actual lore ofTrtore than
ejRht thousand in 1982. , *.!JSn»w
The rest.— of what should have been a naturals growth
was a loss — loss. «• r.-.n
i> ■ That loss to Catholics is no sect’s .gain. :'J*'
r 1 When a Catholic is lost, as a rule, he is lost to all reli-
gious life. He is a gain only to that multitude in this land who
belong to no church whatever. -vaie.v
We are gaining the converts, but losing the youth, o
What should be the principal gain, is only incidental.
Too many mixed dances produce too many mixed
‘"Cy • • i •m: ^ . 7 ' | ' 1 ! f'.:
• \»P***n*I*|* .. ^ .•••
We fight dances but offci little in their places. , y ...
You can hardly blame the young people.-* ■ They do not
know, any better. ■■■?■ 1 .
i. In most of our Catholic families, the Catholic paper is
not *he Principal reading. Rather. some “ppy
dances.” " -»n \mi.~ v \o *V.xW avd}
, Qqt of the total of about one hundred thoiwa&d GathOlic
families, in this state less than 25 per fcrint ^lbkcrtfcdTAWMifly,
' ... ' . Is*.' ;‘j ) ':■> 9fU to1 xnotir
Catholic paper. •J' , -i ja* hdiniTi
■*.) in We talk about the Catholic press but «o very
Flame
of the
Border
By
VINGIE E. ROE
He led her into his private office, •
spacious, comfortable place, Its walls
lined with filing cases, and pulled up
the deepest big chair.
“There 1” he said. “That’s better.
Now relax. Vou must be tired.”
“No," said Senyu, “I’m not, and I'm
In somewhat of a hurry. I’ve come for
the two children of the Indian, Hos-
teen Nez, over In the big cut beyond
Lone Mesa, just on the line of the
Reservation. This case Is rather piti-
ful, Mr. Spartow, and I'd like to enlist
your attention to it. Mr. Satter will
remember. 1 came upon him takinu
the children, not so many weeks back
—very near the end e* the term - and
the parents are ‘wild Indiana' They
don’t understand either the necessity
or the -methods employed In the mat-
te* of giving up their children, and
.tebegged off tho Mttlest one from Mr.
Satter. The mother had run herself
nearly Into collapse, hanging on the
buckboard's tall. She Is in a serious
condition, now, with the grief over
their j( disappearance. Doesn't eat.
Looks awful. And Mr. Satter bad for-
gotten to tell them where to come for
the children. It la rather hard, when
you think of It, on parents, you know,
either red or white. As It would take
-the’HoBteen some days to get here and
back with his horses to fetch them, I'd
like to take the children to them my-
self. 1 will be responsible to you for
them.*'/'
•* As the girl talked the man’s sharp
eyes regarded her with an alertness of
expression that changed to guarded-
ness as she mentioned Setter's lapse of
memory. Now he leaned toward her,
smll(og.
“Why how kind of you. my dear
Miss Savarln!” be said. “Few women
of this day would take so much trouble
Tor. Ignorant Indians. Of course you
may take the little ones. But surely
you're not starting hack today? Ton'll
stay with us for the night and get a
good early start tomorrow, If I have
my way."
“Oh, my, no!” said Sonya. “I’ll get
ren my way as quickly aa possible.
Will it take long to get them ready T’
lodYit: you really think you must go,"
tie sold regretfully, “I’ll have them
made. ready at once. It won’t taka
’ T^ie tw.o were presently brought to
her.'their belongings In a neat bundle.
'THey-atfll looked as they had looked
• that day In tho buckboard, Uko fright-
tnad quail
r >.Softya smiled at them, took their un-
./erivip*han,;l*-
-■ mvii -v. >mue(j at spartow.
conditions. The youth and-tiie. press remain as two princi-
m,p«»ian*.r ' "A :aA-"*Y j
1; reeelving Vlaticdml may^ ’ V# toe^^n^efttts
physical ^eppditio*_ to .ph
srnd „obey, hjfl direqtiqifji fct fa.#
cure yoq. Jhe priest is-your .spul
physician, ordained by ^ God. “Wh.
soever, is ashamed to Recaro his sins
*9 «d n«3t.co^ss.^heni,
confounded, in %,;dpy
of JMdgement in the fa#ie of bt>»
whole world” says St Jijhn. Cbrysd- all^f-thom are the graves of doctors
fri-tX i Of* ihoq^k. wU'.ilod '.rir:inoK«6
X Himyw^ins H$fifient, Christ hearts. ...... _____ _______________ 1
h*w mV t(»lisd oJafe . ,-o— . ........,!
CRAIG,’ Coio., April 24.—(JN9)J—
The thrilling end sometimes profit-
able vocation of hunting wild horaes
has been revived, in this section with
the greccnt rise in price of mustangs.
It is estimated that 1,600 cayn*«s
roam the cedar brakes and,, sand
waihoy in the region 85 miles north-
west of Craig.
The horses are caught with snares
made of lariat ropes or in horaejcelve
Ptonj.:^
ing Hi/
!• i r.|(, < it >a
WOU^ not h*v* given
Oie Apostles, and
priests ,p<t retaining ,or:, . , .ren^tt&jgi
^ :...■(V bn.'ittvail! i
i.l Q- — Are therp any other Saints
in heaven beside*, thoae named.,id
tlifs calendar? Ur'!.,
A, Certainly,. . On)y Giod )qiows
how many Saints there, are, because
all who are admitted into heayen are
truly Saints, That is why , ,.be-
aifies several namea of saints for
each day of the year the Catholic*
Church celebrates the memory of AU,
Saints, Nyv. l^ vf each year.
, Q- rs Wh»‘ is s Pontifical Mass?
i A. — It is a solemn Mass cele-
brated by a Bishop with f special,
ceremonies.
Q. — May sick people receive
Holy Communion when they are not
fasting?
Wdofrt. ~ga^ifl*tj«is
........................
■■( •ssw.’i. ?«|U :i«0i - €entO0h<^|M«Wun?«i»?
* “MWtoam*
sriT
»hi? \t:-A'■'T> t iri nn v 1 •.
“V A JV X Ei i I — .. •
collapsed at sight of her children, and
S’ v JL victod recently .qf murder and sen- ,.^0nya bad a brisk half hour in bring-
Yes, *gt. neariRbehled td death,hotice pf W W round again
Newcomer — Did
village' iq, healthy?
VR. E. i\gent — You can’t
any healthier spot. __________ f ________ _
Newcomer. —- But your. cemeteryjHarry Dolan. Cesnoah, ,whe -wae!non.
is quite full.
R. E. Agent
i^cWiieh'j'. it Bohemian farmhand,
shot Lindsey aQl. Constable Sain
Moore in the office ofAfurticesof the
Mewr—Didn’t you go to cook-, Peace John. W< Nnjan^nf^Epbfnary
ing acW for,two sessions darling? 15 after :he Uad-T b«m,into
/, Mm.; New -r- Yes, dear, I. did, custodyvfor ,faihut» ta a small
Mr. : New jnrr T?»en you must have ./Im for a misdemeanor/ lw JHl lft
1 the desses (Curtain), fense at his trUl: Wa-s inswripy. '
fa for the sUyj^^^ty Mk/ehaf
'“and l shall not forget your kindness
In letting me take them. I hope you’ll
^Sah- Mr. Satter to tell the fathers next
rtlme,, will you please, Mr. Spartow?"
‘ Mr. Spartow returned the smile with
a'lbok that promised to ask the gov-
ernment for a mlllion-dollar loan If
•/Mia thought It necessary.
I -~:And presently Sonya Savarln waa
driving down across the Illimitable
lov«ls with Joy In her heart and the
buahci1 little Navajos huddled In
against her with Instinctive trust
Shis was thinking what fun she
would have watching Cactus Flower’s
haggard fact when she took them In
'JSijthj* hidden hogaq In tha canyon.
' CHAPTER V
Deep Things Begin to Ollmmor.
That little matter proved almost
more than she could stand, however,
^ . T —wnav -i-j-t-.y hfon the Indian mother, watching the
Henry J. Lindsey a*,~(?fang|r .continually since her previous
overruled Thursday by Distribute* visit, having taken her advice literally,
skipped all:
j /■,; ——(J—— . j-i.
Editor — I’ll give you $3 for this
anectiote stout President Roosevelt.
Scribe t— I don't see, why. You
gave $5 for that anecdote when I
wiote it about President Hoover.' ,
i.i 0
,D Doctor, — I shall have to paint
the sore with nitrate of silver, ma-
dam. I
Mrs. Rich, r- Oh, doctor, I don’t
the cost. Please use the nit-
rate; :««M. • : j
tel . • ■ “ ■
j Photographer — Why don’t you
let ms majee a nice picture of both
A. — When a person ia in prob-. of your twins,
able .danger, of death, one may re-, Mr. Saver — WhatV the use ?
Holy Communion not t fasting They look so much alike, why should
wh—‘r.'ii < [—H—i-hrtsrf
11mm
The • Only ,Engllali^”fJet^>llc.> send:
I weekly ^eft»untiy
hv the MnW Rro"/.
108,,Texaer. St , ^Jay^tt^ge,'.Texks
Editor, h--—ywroVWtet Meloc.
" * ■11 d . ’ - 1 . ,11 .> '' :
iz-Subkcription rets? %5a,.e. -t^r
Entered uu, secondjclaeanistail ntattei*4 l»k bn his handsome face.
■Tat. T M»aa, at-Riotport office at
I: HalkttsvUM>, Texasi 1.».)
When she was able to clasp them
lb her shaking arms the sight was
enough to wring a heart less soft than
Pgftaf Sonya’s.
But All’s well that ends well, and
tlh* girt finally 'tode away, leading her
extra herse wlth -a smile on her lips
and the deep light In her eyes that
Rod Blake called fanaticism.
Maybe It waa, but It made her fool-
happy to see this poor family
.united again. And Hosteen Nei had
' looked' over his woman's head at her
-exactly as Two Fingers had and
,«allydvh«r Blue South Woman In the
Sun. ', It was all he said, but It was
IrtrttnSdf with deep things, and Sonya
go she opened her lips and sang.
And then she cume to the canyon’s
mouth and caught tier breath sharply,
1 fdr a'man sat there on a golden horse.
;-P* looked like a young god with the
supllght on his hair, and his eyes as
nine as the heavens, and the grave
HP**-Tribune ©ne Dollar for
^tra.Mpath!.. n.New..*ub»oa0M**-
"Forgive he,” he said quickly, "for
being In ypur tcnll nga(n “
<r-Why?" she said as quickly, "ti i«
free Vomitry."
vjee. I know r it 1 imcmiscd t»
stay sway."
"Thai wus from l.une Mcij."
“The intent wa* everywhere
meant It, too—was goln’—going to
keep my word, but I seem to com*
back regardless.”
Sonya sat and looked at him stead-
ily, her sweet face grave too. He bora
her scrutiny quietly, though a muscle
twitched In bis cheek, and there waa
a seeming of strain In his face.
"I’ve thought • lot about you," the
girl said presently: "why. I don’t Just
know. I shouldn’t, by all the rules of
my life’s game, hut I have. Tell me—
If you care to—where have you bees
since I saw you last? Where do you
live?”
He moved In bis saddle, put his hat
hack on his head, laid bts hands on
his pommel.
“Miss Suvurln," he said, “h can’t
tell you. A lot of places for ttt first
question—nowhere for th’ last ona,
I told you before, I wasn’t at to talk
to. I am a drifter, If you like,. Juat
goln' through th’ country.”
“Oh, do, you’re not,” said Sonya,
“the day you came in the store yon
were familiar with the place and had
been there before. Don’t you think X
know a few things?”
“What do you know?” he asked
quickly.
“Nothing concrete, only l know •
stranger wheD I see one by bis very
actions. Well, we won’t talk of that," l
she added gently, "where are you go- ’
Ing now?”
“Why, nowberes. That la—1 waa
Just ridln’ around for exercise, sort of.
Un d'Oro, here, be needs » lot of ea-
erclse."
i He smiled and patted tho shining
. neck at his saddle bow.
I "Un d’Oro—Golden One," said Son-
ya. “What a lovely name. And what a
wonderful horse. He's the most beau-
tiful thing I ever saw done up la
horsehlde. You lore him, don’t you?”
The man's face lighted' as with lo-
ner fire.
“Well—some," he saldi
For a while they sat In- silence, at a
loss for something to. talk about, and
then Sonya told him- about Cactus
Flower and how Mr. Satter had' taken
her children.
“D—nl” he said flushing. “Excuss
me—but some people Just ain’t hu-
man. I'd like- to see that agent on—'*
He stopped, and' Snnya felt her
heart contract, for she knew he had
almost said "a. cross.”
What was- this man? Whst w*a la
the soul of him? What strange con-
tradictions? What savageries and con-
tritions, what sympathies and cruel-
ties? What connection did he have
with those awful, retributions arrows
the Border of which the Servant had
hinted? What did' the strange old men
know about him? The henchman ot\i
Beelzebub he had called him—for nef^
other In all this country answered to
the description of the Blue-eyed Oea
with Bronze-colored Hair. Sonya felt
cold, as If a wind of portent had Mown
across her spirit And swift on Its
heels a sadness came, the odd, unac-
countable feeling of personal loss and
sorrow which had assailed her that
night at Myra’s
She shook herself, mentally and
actually, and was angry at herself
again, and when this man spoke aha
listened; forgetting.
"I'm s violent man, Miss Savarln,”
he said strangely, “and my nfe wont
bear th’ light—but a thing like that
makes my blood bofl. There ain't ne
manner of use hurting something that
can't light back, and a woman an* a
child—well, they're sot aside, some-
way, tike a starvin' kitten, or * dog
that no one wants. No kind of a man
weald do them a harm—not an' b* a
man.”
“You think that—honestly?” said
Sonya. “Right In your heart?”
"Why, of course,’’ he said surprised.
“Don’t you?"
“Yes, oh, yes, a woman fools Ilka
that, but men are different I. Just
wondered."
“Have you boon back to Lon*
Mesa?” he asked presently.
“No," said Sonya. “I haven’t Pf#
been pretty busy. Housecleaning and
■awing. Have yon?”
"Twlcet At night Watchod th*
moon como up across th' desert and
It was wonderful. A man can’t de-
scribe it—like new life cornin' to S
dead world."
"I know," said Sonya, 'Tva seen It
from there myself."
“Alone? My G—d. Miss Savarln, yoa
shouldn't be goln* around this country
by yourself like that!”
“Why not? I’m perfectly safe Every-
one knows me, and there Isn't a Nav-
ajo, drunk or otherwise, wbo’d say
a word to me."
“Ntot th' Navvys, no, ma’amv” ha
said painfully, "but they ain’t all there
are, you know.”
How well she knew! But she wa*
sorry the Inference had been drawn.
“As for being drunk—will yon be-
lieve me when I say I haven't touched
a glass or a bottle since—since that
day—on th' cliff? Every time I've tried,
your face has come before me plain
aa plain—the white fury of it, tha
courage—G—d! I cheke an’ quit try-
in'."
He was looking at her earnestly, and
Sonya d!d not question a word he said.
Instead she smiled, snd the coldness
left her heart In a racing flood.
“I'm glad," she said. “Didn’t 1 tail
you It was never too late-to look up?
Didn’t ir
“Sure you did, but that don't mean
anything In this case. Pm just telling
you that your fac# stopped my liquor.^
"It’ll stop a lot of thlngb for you,"
the girl said In a rush and waa as-
tonished st herself;
"Whst—do yon moan?” ha said
slewly. ..... ' v *
”1—oh, 1 doirt know I” said Sonya,
tmpMina, “only | know you've got to
stop--atop that Border stuff. That
‘ jjjjt W* * '*ate*~ih(» .i*>P»rd
i
v
I
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Malec, Walter. The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 34, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 1, 1934, newspaper, May 1, 1934; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1037429/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.