The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938 Page: 6 of 8
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THE SILSBEE BEE
WHO’S
ADVENTURERS’ CLUB
NEWS
STOVE REPAIRS
THIS
>x->
WEEK
Trusty Got the Job
*
7
'h
ft
Gjufr
I
it.
He reared up
on
Up to that time it had
HINT-OF-THE-DAY
WNU—P
43—38
* I
GUARANTEED TO Kill SCRLWWORHS
=i
HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES
OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI
NATIONAL
AFFAIRS
Obeying Honor
Let us do whatever honor de-
mands.—Racine.
Man the Imitator
An imitative creature is man;
whoever is foremost, leads the
herd.—Schiller.
(like
even
Reviewed by
CARTER FIELD
• 5?
AND
!O<
a
k -fl
_______________________________ „
Stoddard’s family newspaper tra-
dition goes way back into the flat-
bed days. His great-grandfather es-
tablished the Hudson, N. Y., Regis-
ter, in 1787. He learned the print-
er’s trade in his grandfather’s print-
ing office at Hudson. A proofreader
on the Tribune at 15, he read proof
on the famous Tilden Ciper dis-
patches, a reporter soon thereafter,
on the Tribune and the Philadelphia
Press. He wrote the first daily tele-
graph letter ever sent out from New
York city.
German interests in this
country fight for reciprocal
trade agreement with Ger-
many .., Congress expected
to approve of greatly in-
creased appropriations for
preparedness ... It seems
the agricultural problem is
likely to be with us for
many years to come . . . the
cotton problem also pre-
sents its difficulties.
D Ea* O I Q £ For Stoves and Oil Stoves
El £r FS5 Funraa^Waterbeaten
■iMiu..,-.. J Every Kind and Make at
A. G. BRAUER iV.ToLJIsco,J'p^
• ASK YOUR DEALER OR WRITE US
Rex Was a High-Strung Thoroughbred.
That worked out pretty well, though, for what the green stable hands
lacked in knowledge and experience, Mary made up with her own.
Mary was born on a ranch in California and had grown up with horses.
Indians’ Flood Protection Plan
Before white men came to the
Mississippi valley, Indians protected
themselves from floods by erecting
huge earthen mounds with flat tops
on which they lived during high wa-
ter.
■f* J
Stoddard on
Shirt-Sleeve
Newspapering^res^ent''
Don’t cheapen yourself
thoughtless acts
indis criminately)
every summer. The monastery was
founded in 992 by a monk named
Segej, who went to Valamo from
Russia. The monastery was de-
stroyed several times in wars be-
tween Russia and Sweden, but was
always restored and its work con-
tinued. After the Russian revolu-
tion many monks fled to the peace
and quiet of Valamo. They and
their fellow-monks work hard.
& “^1
IB-, v 1
“Theodore Roosevelt used to go to
Hitchcock’s frequently, perhaps
with Jake Riis or Eddie Riggs of
the New York Sun, and I remember
James Creelman, Julian Ralph and
a score of then famous politicians
and newspaper men, mingling with
the men from the mechanical de-
partments, arguing over the world
war scare, local and national poli-
tics—everything under the sun. It
was something like the free speech
common in early colonial America,
where you could step into the en-
closure and say what you thought
about the king or anybody or any-
thing else.
“The gusto with which T. R. would
dump a bottle of catsup and a slath-
er of mustard on a plate of ham
and beans, or corned beef and
beans, was something worth seeing
and remembering.
“Frequently, these sessions at
Hitchcock’s were a post-mortem
on the paper, just after press
time, in which any story of un-
usual distinction or a clean-cut
news beat was sure to get a
cheer, and quite as certainly
any of us who had stubbed his
toe was in for a raking over.
My work has made me an ob-
server of our efforts to estab-
lish true democracy in America.
I have never attempted an exact
definition of democracy, but,
whatever it is, I am sure it
was exemplified in this craft
ideal of the old-time newspaper.
The spirit seems lost in the
highly departmentalized, mech-
anized and specialized charac-
ter of modern large-scale enter-
prise, not only of newspapers,
but of business in general.”
Mustard Grows Everywhere
No spice or condiment has a long-
er history than the mustard seed.
Probably in ancient days next to
salt it was used more than any
other seasoning. The reason for
this lies in the fact that it is a
cosmopolitan plant and grows in
many places. The tiny seeds, which
may be brown or yellow, are used
in their own form for spicing pickles
and fruits and for a few other pur-
poses. The ground mustard flour
which we know as dry mustard is one
of our staple condiments. Then we
have a large variety of mixed mus-
tards which vary in flavor, both on
account of the kind of mustard
which is their base and because of
the liquids which are used to blend
them. This is often vinegar and
.sometimes wine
In your own home are materials
for bath which beautify and invigo-
rate. A pound of sea salt, two cup-
fuls of starch, oatmeal, bran, al-
mond meal or a small package of
baking soda thrown into the tub are
of great benefit in relaxing the
nerves and reviving the spirits. If
you have no shower under which
to rinse, then put the meal in small
cheesecloth bags which you can
make yourself. A quarter of a pound
each of oatmeal and almond meal
mixed is a good combination. Scent
your bath if you wish with any scent
you have on hand.
WASHINGTON.—Desperate efforts
are being made by important Ger-
man interests in this country, and
some not interested through nation-
al ties but because of economic
ideas, to have this country enter
into a reciprocal trade agreement
with Germany.
Because of the bitter feeling
among so large a part of the popu-
lation of this country against Hitler,
and because of the disinclination of
Secretary of State Cordell Hull, dad-
dy of the reciprocal trade treaty
These Things
Are Essential
Begin right now keeping yourself
healthy and lovely. Eight or nine,
even ten, hours of sleep each night
(see why mother wants you home
early?). Use little make-up, for
young skins have a definite beauty
which should not be covered. A
rosy lipstick, a speck of good pow-
der. No mascara, eye-brow pencil,
rouge. Why hide that pixie allure
with cosmetics meant for fading
beauty? (Isn’t big brother right aft-
er all?). Let your skin breathe un-
hampered, and keep your cheeks
and mouth rushing with color by
exercising. Walk in low-heeled
shoes whenever.you can to develop
true and glorious posture, and eat
your meals regularly with few
sweets on the side!
Don’t be stubborn about your
clothes. Simple sports frocks for
day wear, full-skirted gowns (never
too revealing) for evening.
Instead of pouting, and tirading
against proper restrictions, spend
those moments keeping yourself
fresh as a daisy, and nicely
groomed with hair brushed to shin-
ing glory and your nails manicured.
And above all, my dear, live
proudly!
through
petting
though you see other girls being fool-
ish! A few years from now when
Prince Charming comes along you
will be awfully glad you didn’t!
M 0 RO LI ne4
SHOW-WHITE PETROLEUM JEUY '
Now improved—better than ever!
EX-LAX
THE ORIGINAL CHOCOLATED LAXATIVE
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
XTEW YORK.—Henry L. Stoddard,
one of the best of all American
political reporters, friend of more
Presidents and cabinet officers than
any other living
man, is the author
of “It Costs to Be
~ just
p u b 1 i s h e d. Its
mine of previously untold stories
quickly transferred it from the book
page to the news page. Having en-
joyed a long acquaintance with Mr.
Stoddard, I dropped in at his office,
overlooking the Old Park Row which
“formed his genius.”
Close in nearly all his life with
wing-collar statesmanship, he want-
ed to talk about shirt-sleeve news-
papering. The latter allusion had
to do with Hitchcock’s Beanery,
where shirt-sleeved waiters served
ham and beans to printers, stereo-
typers, reporters, editors, and poli-
ticians, who mingled in a shirt-
sleeve forum which Mr. Stoddard
thinks helped to galvanize the New
York newspapers of that day—from
40 to 50 years ago.
Sixty-two years in newspapering,
Mr. Stoddard is “up from the case, ’
a printer on the New York Tribune,
an ace political reporter and for
25 years owner and publisher of the
New York Mail.
“It seems to me that every re-
porter ought to know the smell
of printer’s ink,” he said. “The
great newspaper of today, with
all its marvelous efficiency, has
lost something stimulating and
vital in no longer having this
mingling of the crafts. I re-
member that, at Hitchcock’s, a
slovenly reporter might be
called down by one of those om-
niscient old-time printers, or
perhaps it would be the other
way about, with one of the news-
men berating the press room
foreman, and asking him why
he couldn’t manage a decent
make-ready.
• Watch your young-
ster’s face brighten when
you give him a half-
tablet of Ex-Lax. No
struggle. No forcing, to
get him to take a laxa-
tive. Children actually
love the delicious all-
chocolate taste of
Ex-Lax! <
Mali
& - I
I
I
In f
£ •• &&&
s
• • • JKggs
Largest Orthodox Monastery
In Lake Ladoga, at the Russian-
Finnish frontier, is a quiet, lonely
island called Valamo—God’s isle. It
is high, steep and covered with
trees. On this island is located the
largest orthodox monastery of
modern times. It is a huge build-
ing which has been greatly en-
larged because of the thousands of
Sent to jail for a petty offense •
in a Nebraska city, a prisoner was
assigned to take care of the
courthouse lawn. He did such a
good job that his sentence having
been served, he has been hired as
permanent custodian.
This is hardly an ideal way to
get a job, but a job is a job and
this man got one. He says that if
he had had a job he never would
have landed in trouble in the first
place.
The Scriptural promise that a
man diligent in his business shall
stand before kings might be para* .
phrased to say that a jailhouse
trusty who attends to business will
land on the pay roll.—San Fran-
cisco Chronicle.
-y. Stands frost. For
res; new growth in "4
idage only 25c.
DANBURY, TEXAS.
INSECTICIDES
-
KlIlAWOKM
f V'
• iy mr uie auuiente most oi me
; moves are not going to be played
pilgrims and tourists which visit it j in °Psn-
Increased A ppropriations
For Preparedness Assured
Tremendously increased appro-
priations are assured from the next
congress for all kinds of prepared-
ness — army ordnance, airplanes,
cargo ships, fighting rhips, tanks,
motorized equipment • everything
conceivable that would be needed
in wartime.
CLASSIFIED
department
- • ■ ■ • ■
n
I
5^'
ilidated News Features.
WNU Service.
How Women
in Their 40’s
Can Attract Men
Here’s good advice for a woman during her
change (usually from 38 to 52), who'fears
she’ll lose her appeal to men, who worries-
about hot flashes, loss of pep, dizzy spells,
upset nerves and moody spells.
Get more fresh air, 8 hrs. sleep and if you
need a good general system tonic take Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made-.
especially for women. It helps Nature build
up physical resistance, thus helps give more
vivacity to enjoy life and assist calming;
jittery nerves and disturbing symptoms that
often accompany change of life. WELL
WORTH TRYING!
• Your child’s sleep
is not disturbed
after taking Ex-Lax.
It doesn’t upset little
tummies or bring on
cramps. Ex-Lax is a
mild and gentle
laxative . . . ideal
for youngsters!
WATCH
ike-Specials
You can depend on the spe-
cial sales the merchants of
our town announce in the
columns of this paper .They
mean money saving to our
readers. It always pays to
patronize the merchants
who advertise. They are
not afraid of their mer-
chandise or their prices.
Quit hating the fact that you
are still young.
you are missing today. They know
the pitfalls, and because they love
you, and so want to be proud of you,
they seem over-cautious when they
try to steer you clear of them. Why
don’t you help a bit?
Quit hating the fact that you are
still young. Glory in being your age
and live each day joyously. ■ Delight
in your clubs, your frivolous par-
ties, your many privileges—all
yours because you are young! And
every minute, sister, cherish and
protect your fresh loveliness, for
once you lose it, or mar it, you can
never recapture it!
There is an extraordinary una<
nimity of sentiment about this on
Capitol Hill. President Roosevelt
will have no trouble getting all the
money he may ask for the army,
navy, marine corps, cargo ship con-
struction, and for readying private
plants so that they could turn out
war equipment at short notice. For
instance, the little matter of edu-
cational orders is indicative of the
general line of thought.
For years Britain has followed
this practice of educational orders.
The underlying idea is to have as
many factories and plants as possi-
ble ready to turn to government
work in time of emergency with no
delay. Getting ready to produce
many types of military equipment
is a long, tedious process. It in-
volves getting the proper jigs and
dies. It involves training men to do
an entirely new job.
In an ordinary government con-
tract, given to a private manufac-
turer, the government of course
calls for bids and gives the work
to the bidder offering to produce at
the lowest price, assuming of course
that the bidder is demonstrably re-
liable.
But in educational orders the plan
is exactly the reverse. The object
is different. If what is wanted im-
mediately is 1,000 machine guns, for
instance, normally the manufactur-
er offering to produce them at the
lowest price would get the contract.
But under the educational order sys-
tem the government’s purpose
would best be served by giving 20
different manufacturers each a con-
tract for 50 machine guns.
Expansion Not Difficult
Where Needs Are Known
Then, if war or an emergency
should develop three months later,
there would be 20 manufacturers
who had found out how to make the
type of machine guns desired. Ex-
pansion is not difficult where the
exact needs are familiar, and the
workers know how to do the job.
Each worker, for example, can be
put to training others.
But despite the obvious military
advantage of this system of educa-
tional orders, not until right now
has the United States government
ever employed it. And this although
the plan has been advocated for 10
years and its good results in Brit-
ain have been well known.
Agricultural Problem
Stumps Would-Be Solvers
A very shrewd Kansan recently
in Washington remarked that the
farm problem would be with us, un-
solved, 40 years hence. About a
week later, in a speech at Hutchin-
son, Kan., Secretary of Agriculture
Henry A. Wallace said that one who
had been watching the wheat mar-
ket over a period of years would
not be surprised at the fact that
the price had gone down. It was
sure to come, he said, with a re-
turn of “normal weather.”
But a couple of days later the
report of the Great Plains commit-
tee was made, predicting that con-
tinuing of grain growing in the Da-
kotas, eastern Montana and north-
ern Nebraska is futile, and that the
farmers are doomed to defeat and
despair if they keep on trying.
And meantime comes a report
from North Carolina that there is
too much hay, due to the soil ero-
sion policy of the department of ag-
riculture. Which means, of course,
that in the next few years North
Carolina’s production of cattle is go-
ing to leap skyward, as it is im-
practical to use the hay in any oth-
er way. There will be no turning
from hay, either, for the soil-erosion
payments by the government to
farmers guarantee its continuance.
All of which, put together, gives
an idea of what the would-be solvers
of the agricultural
problem are up
against’. For obvi-
ously this present
surplus of wheat
was produced with-
out much help from
the section studied
* Great Plains
VEGETABLES
NEW GREEN MUSTARD
from Jugoslavia and in test over 3 year
Suited to this Country. Stands frost. Fi
table use cut leaves; new gro„... L.
days. Liberal poundage only 25r
L. PECHACEK - -- -
I ALWAYS thought the reason
A Alice Paul never stayed in jail
long was that she was just a wraith
and floated through the bars. The
___ _ . wan, fragile little
, locked
formula for maintaining world
peace, there is plenty of tenseness
in the situation. All sorts of wires
are being pulled by both sides, and
the outcome is shrouded in doubt.
Those arguing for the German
treaty all use the same contentions,
though the two groups are motivat-
ed by entirely different springs. Most
vocierfous of course, are the Ger-
mans who actually sympathize with
Hitler. There are a lot of them, lit-
tle as the casual newspaper reader
might suspect it. Because they do
not wish to penalize themselves by
running publicly counter to the
anger of Jewish and Catholic haters
of Der Fuehrer, most of them are
not making much noise about it. But
they are very active, as every offi-
cial in the State department has
good cause to know.
There is a considerable number
of business men who believe in mak-
ing a profit through trade, even if
they trade with the devil, which is
not surprising but merely what has
been happening since the beginning
of time. Then there is a very small
group of important persons who sin-
cerely believe that the path to world
peace and permanence of freedom
from war depends chiefly on trade—
and not just bilateral trade either,
but world-wide trade.
Lower Trade Barriers
As Preventive of War
The arguments of this little group
are used by both the larger ones—
those who desire to see Germany
made stronger and who glory in Hit-
ler’s “redemption” of the Father-
land from the “strait-jacket” of the
Versailles treaty, and those who
hope for a personal profit.
Naturally, because Cordell Hull
has been preaching the lowering of
trade barriers as the best preventa-
tive of war for low these many
years, both the larger groups real-
ize the arguments of the little group
of intellectuals are the ones most
likely to be potent. Incidentally,
also, both the larger groups are
perfectly sincere in agreeing with
these arguments.
Those who want to make a profit
themselves by trading more with
Germany naturally are convinced
that the whole world will be more
prosperous as a result. There is
no hypocrisy in this. Nearly every
business man the world over is con-
vinced that if something were done
to improve his particular line of
business everybody in the entire
world would be better off.
It’s a fight, and it’s going to be
worth watching, though unfortunate-
ly for the audience most of the
LADIES
Girls, Women! Valuable premiums, commis-
sions introducing Longlife Silk preservative.
WEBSTER CO., 812 Barry Ave., Chicago.
Br-- .:b7the-
illfz as Obviously, with-
out much help from
North Carolina. Now
if the Dakotas and
other parts of this
Stableman Bolted the Door.
But of course that hot brick with the turpentine sauce was the prin-
cipal cause of it all.
This is the place where the brick and the turpentine come into the
story. Rex had a cold and, try as she would, Mary couldn’t seem to
check it. She called in a veterinary and he gave her some medicine
for Rex. “And another thing you might try,” he said, “is this. Heat
a brick, pour some turpentine over it, and let the vapor get up his
nostrils.”
Mary told the stableman to heat a brick. He did a good job
of it. He brought the brick out to her red hot. And Mary put
that brick on a shovel and went into Rex’s stall.
As she went in she closed the door and the stableman bolted
The stableman had a bucket of turpentine and, from the out-
side of the stall he poured it on the brick. He poured it on with
a lavish hand. It was a case of too much of everything. The
brick had been heated too hot in the first place. There was too
much turpentine in the second. The result was startling. The
turpentine sizzled and filled the stall with a choking vapor. Rex
began to get restive. Then, suddenly, the turpentine burst into
flame, and Rex went crazy.
The flames shot up in the stall—and so did Rex.
his hind legs and began pawing at the air.
“And I,” says Mary, “was in that stall.
seemed like a large stall to me. With this fear-maddened horse, 16
hands high, rearing and plunging about me, it seemed no bigger than
a telephone booth.
“The vapor .started to rise in a thick cloud and I couldn’t see
the horse. I would catch glimpses of his pawing hoofs raised
high in the air and would dodge away to keep out of his reach.
But I couldn’t move far, and the minute I got in one corner, the
plunging, frantic horse would be coming my way again.”
Afraid to Drop Red-Hot Brick.
All that time, Mary was holding the shovel. She didn’t dare set it
down, for the brick was red hot and the floor of the stall was covered
with dry straw. Once the shovel with its blazing contents touched that
straw the whole stable would go up in flames.
And why didn’t Mary just duck out the stall door? Well, there you
have the bolt again. As soon as the flames started shooting up, the
stableman had run away in panic. The door, remember, was bolted
low down on the outside, and Mary, who is only five feet in height,
couldn’t reach down to it. All she could do was hang onto that blazing
shovel, keep it away from the straw—and wait. If she was lucky, the
flames would die down eventually and Rex could be quieted.
And if she wasn’t lucky, she might get in the way of one of
Rex’s flying hoofs. Then she would go down. The shovel would
go with her. The straw would ignite, and that stable would be-
come a funeral pyre, for some fine horses—and for Mary!
It was the toughest spot Mary ever was in, but all Adventures come
to an end eventually. After what seemed an eternity, the stableman
came back and opened the door. Mary was out of the stall like a
streak. “We repeated the treatment later,” she says, “but this time
the brick was not red hot, and I stayed outside the stall while the tur-
pentine was being applied.”
Copyright—WNU Service.
• In the morning,
Ex-Lax acts • .. thor-
oughly and effectively I
No shock. No strain.
No weakening after-
effects. Just an easy
bowel movement that
brings blessed relief.
Ex-Lax is good for every member of
the family—the grown-ups as well as
the youngsters. Available at all drug
stores in handy 10(5 and 25(5 sizes.
Youth Passes
Too Rapidly;
Use It Well!
By PATRICIA LINDSAY
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
T ITTLE sister at the age of three
*-l loves to wear mother’s high-
heeled shoes and powder her nose.
A few years later she wants her
curls “done up” or cut short like
big sister’s. When she is entering
her ’teen age she is so eager to be
an adult that she gets unruly, and
causes herself, and those around
her, a lot of trouble.
Are you a little sister? Why do
you suddenly want to be old? It’s
no crime to be young! Youth is
glorious—being young is thrilling, if
you will just take it in your stride
at the pace you should.
You think mother and daddy are
old meanies for keeping you away
from some parties and asking you to
get home early from others. You
get simply furious when mother in-
sists on low heels and clothes which
you think of too sweet, simple and
girlish. Big brother is a downright
nuisance when he suggests quietly
that you lay off heavy make-up and
petting in dark corners, “or else.”
“Oh,” you wail, “will they ever let
me grow up!”
Of course they will, sister, just as
quickly as you convince them that
you are not a reckless, heady little
tadpole, so eager for adult life that
Ik
CORDELL HULL
Children
Constipated?
Give them relief this
simple, pleasant way I
“Turpentine and a Brick”
TTELLO EVERYBODY:
-*■ 1 Everybody has his own recipe for Adventure. Here’s
the favorite one of Mary Doner of 247 Park Ave., New York
City. Take one brick and a cupful of turpentine. Cook the
brick over a hot fire for twenty minutes. Pour the turpen-
tine over it and serve.
Does that sound appetizing? Well stick around a few minutes while
old Francois Gibbons, the Franco-Fenian maestro of the skillet and the
soup ladle, juggles the pans around a bit and dishes you out a plateful
hot from the kitchen of Old Lady Adventure’s hash house. And before
we go any farther I want to tell you that the very aroma of this delect-
able dish is enough to make a horse go crazy.
'I don’t know what it will do to you—but here’s the tale of how it
affected Mary Doner.
About 10 years ago, Mary and her husband lived in Maplewood,
N. J., and horseback riding is a popular sport out in that neck of the
■woods. They kept a bunch of saddle horses for their own amusement,
and since experienced grooms were impossible to get at the salary they
could afford to pay, they were forced to employ green hands in the
stable.
Rex went crazy as the flames shot up.
Horses were her favorite brand of animal, and she spent a great deal of
her time in the stable seeing that they were well taken care of and not
neglected in any way.
Among the other horses was one, Rex, who was the apple of Mary’s
eye. He was a high-strung thoroughbred, but as gentle as a kitten.
“It always gave me a thrill,” says Mary, “to hear Rex’s
greeting every time he saw me. I gave him twice the care and
attention that I gave any of the other horses. He was clever—
almost human in his intelligence.”
And Rex’s cleverness is to take an important part in our
story. He wa,s kept in a large box stall, and before long he
learned to put his head over the top of the door and push back
the bolt with his nose. Mary had to have the bolt put down at
the bottom of the door to keep him from getting out, wandering
into the feed room, and probably foundering himself. Remember
that bolt. Remember that it’s way down at the bottom of the
door, out of reach of anyone inside. That low-set bolt caused a
lot of trouble.
Secretary
Wallace
Great Plains area turn to grass,
and hence to cattle, it would seem
as though by the time both the
Northwest and the Carolina sections
got down to cattle production in a
big way there will' be an overpro-
duction of cattle as well as a sur-
plus of wheat.
Cotton Problem Also
Is Full of Difficulties
Then there is the cotton problem.
It is the settled conviction of many
shrewd observers that the Old
South, east of the Mississippi, will
not remain very much longer in the
cotton growing game. It simply
will not pay, unless the government
is willing to pay a perfectly enor-
mous subsidy in addition to the al-
ready huge farm subsidies being
paid.
And this, observers agree, is be-
cause the government held up the
price of cotton artificially in the
first few years of the Roosevelt ad-
ministration. For many decades the
whole world has been looking for
another cotton-growing area, or else
a substitute for cotton, in order to
avoid paying the hundreds of mil-
lions of dollars sent to the South.
Until just recently the rest of the
world had no luck. Often a new
area was discovered which would
grow cotton, but always either the
cotton was of an inferior quality or
else was too expensive for economic
production.
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Tiny Feminist feminist,
Sets One Goal up many times in
For Suffrage da?s Past- now
fans up her Na-
tional Woman’s party to the World
Woman’s party, of which she be-
comes temporary chairman. Its ob-
jective is the abolition of all legal
distinctions between men and wom-
en, to which goal she narrowed tri-
umphant suffrage and to which she
has held it ever since. A tiny wisp
of a woman, she is the living refu-
tation of Schopenhauer’s contention
that will and intelligence never go
together.
© Consolidated Ne-
" | committee. And just
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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/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Silsbee Public Library.