The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Silsbee Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Silsbee Public Library.
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THE SILSBEE BEE
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Pretty New Work Clothes
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Grandmother likes
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Hems of Interest
CHAPTER VI—Continued
to the Housewife
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“I See the Newspapers Have Convicted Him?”
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6.4 per cent, a pound of beef 8.14
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Ample Precaution—
Hence Little Concern
AROUND!
the house!
of Rheumatism, Neuritis,
Neuralgia Quickly
of the kind,
wrong kind.
Price Boosters
It is estimated that hidden taxes per cent, and a pound of pork
raise the cost of a loaf of bread chops 8.04 per cent.
W. Henry White knows! "P. A.*s been
my smoke for sixteen years,” says he.
Keep Screens From Rusting.—
Window screens, rubbed over with
kerosene when they are put away
in autumn, will not be found rust-
ed when wanted next summer.
Rebellious Future
The future is always a rebel
against the past.
SIMPLY GET BAYER ASPIRIN-
FOLLOW EASY DIRECTIONS BELOW
k • i ■
ij
15 FOR 12 TABLETS
2 FULL DOZEN 25c
Jiseo
“IRIUM SOLD US!” SAY NEW
PEPSODENT POWDER USERS
__¥
BO
70 fine roll-
your-own cigarettes
in every 2-ounce tin
of Prince Albert
Two thousand years before Christ
the Chinese knew the principle of
the calculating machine: they used
the Abacus, that educational play-
thing not seen so often now as a
few years ago, says London Tit-
Bits Magazine. They invented gun-
powder and used it in brass car-
ronades long before the western
bow and arrow stage. They found
their way across vast oceans by
using a form of compass.
The Arab pearlers of long ago
forestalled modern science, too:
they discovered a way to examine
the ocean bed. They used a glass
bow, or funnel with a glass bottom,
which they pressed down into the
sea to enable them to locate pearl-
shell beds.
The ancient people called the
Cholos, of Peru, knew and prac-
ticed something that is today only
a theory, much debated among doc-
tors and laymen. Fierce wordy bat-
tles are being fought on the question
of Euthenasia. The Cholos had an
official named the Despenador, free-
ly translated “Putter out of Pain.”
The Despenador was a woman, and
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Calculating Machines Used by Chinese
Two Thousand Years Before Christ’s Time
dead; then remembered Phil was
here and caught herself.
Falkran went on: “You see, Mrs.
Sentry, until I talk to your hus-
band, remind him of small circum-
stances he has himself forgotten, I
can make no plan.”
They talked a further while; and
Mrs. Sentry said at last that she
would let him know her decision
next day. She used the interval to
consult Arthur’s mother.
Old Mrs. Sentry said: “Falkran?
Oh, yes. I’ve heard of him.”
Mrs. Sentry explained: “I should
have preferred—one of our friends,
of course. I hoped for a certain—
dignity! But Mr. Hare says we must
have a good criminal lawyer, and
he recommended Mr. Falkran.”
The old woman said harshly:
“Dignity! Ellen, sometimes you—”
Then she caught herself, spoke al-
most in apology. “Of course you’d
prefer some fine name; but Falk-
ran’s a clever man. Arthur will need
a good lawyer. Better take him.”
So it was decided; but Mrs. Sen-
try thought, driving home: Even
Arthur’s mother knows. The whole
‘T
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her duty, when all efforts to save
the life of a pain-wracked dying
person had failed, was to thrust her
elbow into the breast or stomach
of the patient until the merciful
relief of death resulted.
One may wonder what was the
basis of Shakespeare’s suggestion
(“Hamlet,” Act III, Scene 4):
Come, come, and sit you down; you
shall not budge;
You go not till I set you up a glass
Where you may see the inmost part
of you.
Had some alchemist or wizard
man hinted at what is now known
as X-ray photography?
Pepsodent ALONE of all tooth powders
contains marvelous Irium*
6 IRIUM means business!...This wonder-
ful new fast-action cleansing agent brings
remarkably quick results!
Irium makes short work of surface-stains
on tooth enamel. Irium helps Pepsodent
Tooth Powder to brush away these stains
*Pepsodent’s trade mark for its brand of Purified Alkyl Sulfate
is unusually
repeat ac-
cording to directions.
Unusual Dog-Drawn Transportation
An unusual dog-drawn transporta-
tation service operated in Alaska
about 1900. At times, says Col-
lier’s Weekly, a train would consist
of 24 eight-foot sledges, tied end to
end, pulled by 350 Eskimo dogs,
harnessed two abreast. The crew
of 30 men worked in two shifts,
one sleeping while the other pa-
trolled the line of animals, which
was a half mile long.
... and Pepsodent with Irium will polish
teeth to a dazzling radiance!
Pepsodent can help YOU win a naturally
brighter smile! It’s fast . . . thorough
... SAFE in its action on teeth. Contains
NO BLEACH, NO GRIT! Try it. . . TODAY!
Copyriirht/1938
R. J. Reynolds Tob. Co,
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Barbara Sentry, seeking to sober up
her escort, Johnnie Boyd, on the way
home from a party, slaps him, and at-
tracts the attention of a policeman,
;Whom the boy knocks down. As he
■arrests him. Professor Brace of Harvard
comes to the rescue and drives Barbara
home. On the way they see Barbara’s
father driving from the direction of his
office at 12:45. but when he gets home
he tells his wife it is, 11:15 and that he’s
been playing bridge at the club. Next
day Sentry reports his office has been
robbed and a Miss Wines, former tem-
porary employee, killed. The evening
papers luridly confirm the story, and
Sentry takes it hard. Mary, elder daugh-
ter, in love with Neil Ray, young interne
at the hospital where she works, goes
off to dinner at Gus Loran’s, Sentry’s
partner, with Mrs. Loran’s brother, Jim-
my Endle. Mr. and Mrs. Sentry call on
old Mrs. Sentry, and Barbara, alone,
receives Dan Fisher, reporter, who ad-
vises her not to talk. Phil Sentry, son
at Yale, is disturbed at the possible im-
plications and suspicion of Miss Wines’
absence from her rooms for three days
during August. He goes home to help.
Sentry is arrested and booked for mur-
der. Dan Fisher explains the evidence
against him—that the robbery was a
fake, the safe opened by one who knew
the combination, changed since Miss
Wines’ employment there—that a back
door key, a duplicate of Sentry’s, was
found in the girl’s purse, and that Sen-
try, too, had been away those three days
in August. Brace calls, and backs up
Barbara in her denial that Sentry could
have done it, because of the discrepancy
of time between the slaying and their
seeing Sentry on the road. Phil, show-
ing the police over the house, finds his
Strong box open and his gun, which
only his father knew of, gone. Mean-
while, the police find the stolen money
burned in the furnace. Mrs. Sentry sees
her husband, who swears his innocence,
and tells her he had known of the rob-
bery and murder the night before, but
failed to call the police, and came home
at 12:30. Mary quarrels with Neil Ray,
and runs away with Jimmy Endle to the
Caribbean. Linda Dane, friend of Bar-
bara and Phil, tries to comfort Phil.
■ -
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♦ ♦ *
Cleaning Enamel Dish.—If an
enamel dish has been badly
burned, fill it with salt water and
put it on the stove to boil. Empty
and rub with a cloth. If the burn
marks still remain, sprinkle a lit-
tle salt onto the cloth and rub.
* * *
Longer Life to Towels.—Towels
will last longer if washed before
the dirt and grime become so
ground into them that harsh rub-
bing is necessary to get them
clean.
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house in cars, and even alighted to
pluck flowers or break down
branches off the shrubbery for sou-
venirs. Only when one night some-
one dug up a young tree in the front
yard and took it away did she ac-
cept District Attorney Flood’s sug-
gestion that a policeman stand
guard in front of the house night
and day.
For all these things, Mrs. Sentry
found strength and courage; but one
thing she could not face. She could
not read the newspapers, or look at
them. Since the first few days, re-
porters had been kind. Carl Bettie
had been of service in that respect.
He had put through with the pub-
lishers of the other papers an agree-
ment not to print photographs of
Mrs. Sentry or Phil or Barbara,
and to use their names as little as
possible in news stories. When Mrs.
Sentry thanked him, he said:
“I don’t deserve all the credit.
One of our reporters, a young man
named Fisher, suggested it.” Bar-
bara was in the room and he looked
at her, smiling a little, and ex-
plained: “He had met you, he said.
I think he had you particularly in
mind.”
Barbara nodded. “Yes, I like
him,” she agreed. “We’ve seen each
other since, once or twice.”
Mrs. Sentry protested, “Seen him,
Barbara? Where?”
“In town,” Barbara confessed.
“He has tea with grandmother and
me, sometimes. It’s perfectly prop-
Wo
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A curious crowd stared at them as
they came out, and Phil said, as
they drove away, “You can wear a
veil next time we come, Mother.”
“I shall not wear a veil,” she an-
swered, fighting to forget Arthur, to
forget how gray and lifeless the
flesh on his cheeks had seemed, and
how dull his eyes were. She must
forget, so that she could be brave
enough to come to him again.
At home, Barbara was waiting
with questions. They told her he
was fine; was cheerful, confident,
and unafraid. They brought her
back to comfort for a while.
If
world
friends
ing sorry for me.
Phil. And so are we. We’re glad
to have her come to you.”
And Mrs. Urban. Mrs. Sentry had
always thought of Mrs. Urban as a
mouse of a woman, with no mind of
her own; yet she found in her now
strength and loyal understanding.
Of the others, Mrs. Furness invited
Mrs. Sentry to luncheon, but she
declined. I will not be made a
show of, she promised herself; and
Mrs. Harry M»irr’s persistent ad-
vances likewise she put aside.
There was one loss which hurt her
keenly. She and Mrs. Waring had
been closest friends; and the fami-
lies were intimate. The two moth-
ers had even discussed the possibili-
ty that Phil might marry Ann War-
ing. But a week after Mr. Sentry
was indicted, Mrs. Waring took Ann
away to Europe to school there. The
decision was sudden; Mrs. Sentry
knew it had not been planned in ad-
vance. And Mrs. Waring left with-
out even a note to say good-by.
Mrs. Sentry never spoke of this
hurt to anyone. In the same way
she ceased to resent the curious
groups of people who drove past the
PRINCE ALBERT RATES 100%
RIGHT ANY WAY YOU LOOK AT IT.
ITS CUT TO ROLL FAST, BURN SLOW, fi
AND SMOKE COOL. PA.TASTES LIKE
WHAT IT IS-CHOICE, RIPE TOBACCO. )
ROLL UP A PA, SMOKE, BROTHER
¥ —YOU'LL CHEER TOO >
Conserve Mineral in Cabbage.—
Cooking cabbage in quarters and
chopping it later when the sections
are tender helps to conserve the
valuable minerals contained in
this vegetable.
* * *
Drying Woolens. — Blankets,
sweaters and other woolen things
will be softer if dried in a well
ventilated room. Long exposure
to the direct sun hardens the wool-
en material.
Adeline Genee, famous dancer,
now retired; te4to-4his .story.
Two young ladies—nongolfers—
who wandered over a golf course
and, finding a nice smooth bit of
turf with a little flag in the cen-
ter, sat down to rest. A couple of
men in the distance shouted
“fore” • and madly waved their
arms, but not having been intro-
duced, the ladies took no notice.
Soon one of the men came
striding up. “Don’t you think it’s
very dangerous to sit here?” he
asked gravely.
“Oh, no,” replied one of the la-
dies, with a smile. “You see,
we’re sitting on a mackintosh.”—
Kansas City Star.
V^TE CAN all get our work done
better and more happily, if
we go at it in the right clothes
(and, of course, in the right
way!), whether it’s a complica-
tion in fractions, or the necessity
of getting the house cleaned and
dinner ready before a flock of in-
laws arrive. Here are two new
designs calculated to make life
easier for ladies busy about the
house and lassies busy in the
schoolroom. Both are quick and
easy to make. Each pattern is
accompanied by a detailed sew
chart.
House Dress for Large Women.
Every line of this simple dress
is made for comfort' and good
looks. Ample armholes, a waist
that looks slim but is thoroughly
unconfined, a skirt wide enough to
climb and to hurry in—all assure
you.complete freedom for work-,
ing. The front fastening makes it
easy to iron as well "as to put on<
The v-neck adds to the slenderiz-
ing effect of the long, plain lines.
Contrasting cuffs with a touch of
braid brighten it up, effectively.
A diagram design, to be finished
in a few hours.' Make it of ging-
ham, percale or calico.
Jumper Dress for School Girls.
This is an unusually good ver-
sion of the always-smart jumper.
It has such a nice, tiny waist, the
skirt flares bee-yu-tifully, and the
straps are so fixed that they won’t
fall off at the shoulders. Make
several versions of the sweet lit-
tle blouse, with its round collar
and high-shouldered sleeves, in
dimity, linen, organdy or flowered
challis. One jumper, many
blouses, make it easy to have a
fresh outfit always ready for
school. For the skirt, choose chal-
lis, jersey or flannel.
The Patterns.
No. 1623 is designed for sizes 36,
38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52.
Size 38 requires 5% yards of 35-
inch material; % yard contrasting
for cuffs and pocket; PA yards of
braid.
No. 1520 is designed for sizes 6,
8, 10', 12 and 14 years. Size 8 re-
quires 1% yards of 35-inch ma-
terial for the blouse; P/s yards of
54-inch material for the jumper.
Fall and Winter Fashion Book.
The new 32-page Fall and Win-
ter Pattern Book which shows
photographs of the dresses being
worn is now out. (One pattern
and the Fall and Winter Pattern
Book—25 cents.) You can order
the book separately for 15 cents.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1020,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, Ill.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Fringe Albert
the national; joy smoke
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. Dean Hare, a day or two later,
brought Falkran to see Mrs. Sen-
try and Phil. Phil was not at first
favorably impressed. The lawyer
was a big man, bald save for a
fringe of red hair above his ears,
with the' wide, loose mouth of the
natural orator; and Phil thought he
studied the rugs and the furniture
with a shrewd appraising eye, and
he saw his mother visibly conquer
her distaste for the man.
She asked, after introductions
were done, “Are you familiar with
my husband’s case, Mr. Falkran?”
“I see the newspapers have con-
victed him?”
Her eyes hardened.
him guilty?”
Falkran, suddenly, smiled; and
Phil at that smile felt a quick liking
and trust for him. The lawyer said.
“Mrs. Sentry, no man was ever
electrocuted on a newspaper ver-
dict”
Her eyes closed at that word, then
opened again as he went on. “If I
"'could have my choice,” he said, “I
should choose to defend men who
have already been convicted in the
newspapers. When everyone is con-
.. vinced a man is guilty, the smallest
grain of evidence in his favor has a
; tremendous effect in provoking
doubt of his guilt.” He added, "And
from the practical point of view,
such a. situation makes it easier to
disqualify jurors, easier to get the
jury we want.”
Mrs. Sentry had not surrendered
her question. “You think him
guilty?” she insisted.
“No man is guilty till a court has
found him so, after a trial by due
process, and till all appeals have
failed.”
“I asked whether you think my
husband guilty?”
He smiled again. His smile had
won many a jury. He said reason-
ably: "Mrs. Sentry, I haven’t even
talked with him. I don’t know his
4 side of the case at all. I only know
the published facts. Mr. Hare has
. : told me nothing. The evidence is
damaging, difficult; but there are a
thousand explanations that might
meet the situation as it appears.”
Phil saw that his mother too was
being won to liking. She put her
question in another way. “If you
thought him guilty, would you de-
fend him?”
Falkran smiled again. “Even a
guilty man is entitled to his day in
court, to a fair trial, to all the
protection afforded by the law.”
Then he answered her directly:
“Yes, Mrs. Sentry. Even if I knew
Mr. Sentry guilty, I would defend
him with all my powers.”
Mrs. Sentry nodded, surrendered
her point. “You said,” she suggest-
ed, “that any one of a thousand ex-
planations might cover all the evi-
dence.”
“An infinite number, yes.”
“Have you anything in mind?”
“Mr. Sentry may suggest some-
thing.” She started to speak, to tell
him that Arthur had found the girl
The weeks that elapsed before Mr.
Sentry could be brought to trial
were long, but they were curiously
empty; and Mrs. Sentry, used to
activity, came in the end to accept
this emptiness, to understand that
their world would hereafter be thus
constricted, whatever the outcome
of the trial. It was not so much
that her friends dropped away.
Some did so; yet others, upon whom
she had not counted, surprised her
by their understanding loyalty.
But the larger world in which she
had been active, all the organized
benevolence in which she had tak-
en a vigorous part, now—though
with polite expressions of regret—
nevertheless closed its doors against
her. The resignations which she
felt it her proud duty to offer were
accepted. She hid as she could her
fierce resentful pain.
She missed Mary dreadfully;
clung passionately to Barbara and
Phil. Linda came often to the house,
and Mrs. Sentry thought: Perhaps
Linda will marry Phil, even after
this. I had hoped Ann Waring . . .
The Warings are so fine. But Linda
is nice. He might do worse. And
she thought: Barbara will marry,
too. She’s a child. After this is
over, she will forget, as children do
I must be sure she marries well.
The right marriage means so much,
especially for a girl. Once I get
Barbara married, I can rest, can
surrender. For me there can never
be a new beginning. I am too old,
old, old. And I can never face peo-
ple again without knowing their
thoughts, imagining their whis-
pers . . .
She would have nursed her hurts
in solitude; but certain friends per-
sisted in their friendliness. Mrs.
Dane came often, quietly loyal, nev-
er insistent; and when Mrs. Sentry
suggested, in the tone of one doing
a conscious duty, that Linda might
better stay away, Mrs. Dane said
simply:
“She’s very fond of Barbara and
knows, I expect. All my
know; all of them are feel-
Oh, hateful!
And she thought again, desperate-
ly: Perhaps Mr. Falkran can per-
suade some woman to say she was
Arthur’s mistress, that he went to
her that night. Pay her to say it,
perhaps. No price would be too
high, to save him!
And she reflected that by thinking
this, she was admitting to herself
her actual opinion of Mr. Falkran;
and she felt a contamination of the
spirit. Felt herself unclean. To be
pitied by her friends, to seek the
help of scoundrels . . .
Nevertheless, for all their sakes,
if Arthur wife to be saved, Mr. Falk-
ran it must be.
7
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gk r
1. Take 2 Bayer 2. You should feel
Aspirin Tablets with relief very quickly. If
a full glass of water pain i-
the moment you feel severe,
either a rheumatic or c"r',!’'C
neuritic pain coming
on.
To relieve pain of rheumatism or
neuritis quickly, try the Bayer
Aspirin way — shown above.
People everywhere say results
are remarkable. Yet Bayer Aspirin
costs only about one cent a tablet,
which makes the use of expensive
“pain remedies” unnecessary.
If this way fails, see y »ur doctor.
He will find the cause and correct
it. While there, ask him about tak-
ing Bayer Aspirin to relieve these
pains. We believe he will tell you
there is no more effective, more de-
pendable way normal persons may
use-
When you buy,
always make sure
you get genuine
BAYER Aspirin.
Pads Under Rugs.—According
to the U. S. bureau of standards,
linings or pads prolong the life of
rugs and carpets almost one-half.
« * *
Improving Ham.—Half a cup
each of vinegar and brown sugar
added to the water in which you
are boiling a ham will greatly.im-
prove the flavor.
* * *
Picture Cords.—Picture hang-
ings should always be concealed.
Cords and wires invariably spoil
the effect. All pictures should be
hung flat, not tipping forward.
Very large frames must be hung
on cords or fine wires from the
molding. The square or rectangu-
lar picture should be hung with
two parallel wires.
* ♦ *
er, mother.
him.”
“But a reporter, Barbara!”
Carl Bettie chuckled. “Whoa,
there, Mrs. Sentry!” he protested.
“Reporters aren’t so bad, nowa-
days. You’re prejudiced!”
“I’m prejudiced against
young man who meets my daughter
secretly.”
Barbara cried: "Oh, now, moth-
er, that’s silly! It’s not secretly,
with grandmother there; but even
if it was—”
Mrs. Sentry said, yielding: “Of
course, dear. I’m afraid it really is
prejudice. Ask him to have tea here
too, Barbara, if you wish.”
“I’m at grandmother’s now more
than I’m at home,” Barbara re-
minded her; and this was in fact
true. Old Mrs. Sentry had since
her son’s arrest surrendered to
physical immobility. Her mind was
as keen, her tongue as sharp as
ever; but she stayed in her room at
the hotel where She lived, had her
meals served there, even submit-
ted to an indignity she had long de-
clined, and hired a companion who
was also nurse and masseuse.
And Phil had used the old wom-
an’s helplessness to dissuade Bar-
bara from her desire to see her fa-
ther. “You and I have to make it
as easy as we can for mother,
Barb,” he pointed out. "And moth-
er can’t be with father and with
grandmother too, and she can’t go
to the jail without me, so grand-
mother’s your job! Don’t you see?”
So Barbara yielded—Phil thought
she yielded #ery easily—and spent
much time with her grandmother;
and old Mrs. Sentry by degrees for-
got to use toward her that tone of
sharp disapproval which had so long
been her habit toward both girls.
There was during these weeks some-
thing deeply and wistfully appeal-
ing about Barbara. She was thin;
her eyes seemed larger; her color
had faded; she looked at people
eagerly, anxiously, as though hop-
ing someone would say—what no
one ever did say. And Grandmoth-
er Sentry was very gentle toward
her, warned Mrs. Sentry once:
“That child is ready to crack,
Ellen. Look out for her.”
Mrs. Sentry nodded. “I—do all
I can!”
Grandmother Sentry sought in her
own ways to serve; she welcomed
Barbara, and welcomed Professor
Brace, or Dan Fisher, when one or
the other came with Barbara to be
with her.
The old woman did not like Pro-
fessor Brace, and she told Barbara
so. "He’s a Middle-Westerner, of
course, but he’s a rank Puritan at
heart, Barbara. Believes in the mor-
tification of the flesh or something
Believes in duty. The
If he were a Spartan
he’d nurse a gnawing fox to his
bosom. Any man with sense knows
that you ought to dodge suffering
when you can. He’s the ‘grin and
bear it’ type.”
“He’s been sort of nice,” Bar-
bara argued. “Standing by.”
"I know. ‘The boy stood on the
burning deck!’ Anyone but a fool
would dive overboard!”
“ ‘Whence all but him had fled,’ ”
Barbara reminded her. "But there
are a lot of us still on the burning
deck, grandmother. And he doesn’t
have to stay. He’s just doing it to
be friendly.”
"Like him, do you, child?”
“It’s sort of nice to
friends—”
The old woman saw in the girl’s
eyes a secret terror, a mounting
fear she had seen there before; and
she was silenced. Whenever they
spoke of Mr. Sentry, and Barbara
cried, "He didn’t do it, grandmoth-
er!” old Mrs. Sentry always assent-
ed, always spoke quick reas-
surances. Barbara was grown so
pitifully frail . . .
(TO BE CONTINUED)
WHAT “MAKIN’S” TOBACCO
really rolls fast, firm, neat?
smokes cooler, mellower every time?
3^ tastes ripe, rich, full-bodied?
Upcoming Pages
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Read, David. The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938, newspaper, October 27, 1938; Silsbee, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1403364/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Silsbee Public Library.