The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932 Page: 4 of 4
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1932.
FOUR
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PROGRESSIVE
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OUT OF THE ORDINARY
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Full Line of
youngsters that will be enjoyed:
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See Us Before Buying Your Suit of Clothes
THE STORE WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE
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Big Help to Yanks
DEPARTMENT FOOD STORE
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Good Fishing—but for Women Only
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Americans on Old Caravan Route
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
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UNION MADE SUITS, SHIRTS, TIES
HANDKERCHIEFS, SOCKS, WORK
CLOTHES and LADIES DRESSES
Fruit and Vegetable
Coffee Department
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PETER RABBIT SEES
THINGS HAPPEN
Dr. S.H. Fridner, Optometrist, Manager
Ground Floor Trust Bldg. 2224 Postoffice Street
BONERS are actual humorous
tidbits found in examination pa-
pers, essays, etc., by teachers.
Grocery
Delicatessen
Bakery
Meat Market
Johnny Allen, though a first year
man with the New York Yankees, is
classed as a veteran because of his
impressive string of winning games.
His right-hand pitching has done con-
siderable toward keeping the Yankees
at the top of the American league
column. Johnny, once a hotel clerk
in Greensboro, N. C., came to New
York from Toronto.
The climate is hottest next to the
Creator.
I wish we had the wisdom
Of flowers on a sill.
Would turn away from shadows gray
And seek the sunlight still.
Though grief is all about us,
And trouble hard to bear,
I wish that we would turn and see
The beauty ev’rywhere.
Pa
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______
KITTY McKAY
By Nina Wilcox Putnam
--
FACE THE
LIGHT
A celibate is one who cleans out cel-
lars.
“John Drinkwater” is the name giv-
en to the United States by the Eng-
lish people since prohibition. (It used
to be Uncle Sam).
The rose can teach a lesson,
The pansies point the way:
Be done with doubt, look up, look out,
And seek the dawn of day.
Behind you may be shadows,
But skies ahead are bright;
And, when you grieve, be brave, be-
lieve,
And turn and face the light.
©, 1932, Douglas Malloch.—WNU Service.
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New Farms in Shadow of the Pyramids
1
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An Indian reservation consists of
a mile of land for every square Indian.
$ STORES §
$ No. 1 Store — 2017 Market Street |
| No. 2 Store — 2711 Market Street |
| No. 3 Store — 33rd St. at Avenue O |
s No. 4 Store — 35th St. at Broadway 3
| No. 5 Store — 14th St. at Avenue E
I No. 6 Store — 18th St. at Avenue N |
| No. 7 Store — 39th St. at Avenue N%
g No. 8 Store — 23rd St. at Avenue M |
| ALL OWNED BY A GALVESTON CITIZEN |
| GALVESTON IS MY HOME |
| C. P. EVANS, Owner |
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The ABC Stores, Inc.
21st and Postoffice Streets
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VV foods talked about and recipes
for using them in ways that are differ-
Photographed the Eclipse in Color
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PIERSON’S UNION STORE
2317-2319 Market. Phone 851
***
The horrors of the Inquisition were
imitated in America by Cotton Mat-
tress.
SalvenCticalC
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The girl-friend says she’s never had
a photo taken of herself that did her
Justice, and isn’t she lucky?
(©, 1932, Bell Syndicate.)—WNU Service.
PETER RABBIT sat on the bank of
— the Laughing Brook staring across
at a little hole near the top of the big
sandbank opposite. Billy Mink had
just vanished in that hole and Peter
knew why. He knew that that hole
was the entrance to the home of Rat-
tles the Kingfisher, and he knew that
somewhere back beyond that entrance
was a nest, and in it were the babies
of Rattles. He knew, too, that it was
for those babies that Billy Mink had
entered that hole in the sandbank, that
Billy meant to make a dinner of them.
Tears were in Peter’s eyes as he
stared across at that little hole, for
there was nothing he could do to save
Q EV. THOMAS D. BARRY (left) and Dr. Paul A. McNally of Georgetown
• university with the equatorial telescope equipped with two astrographic
lenses which they used in photographing in color the recent eclipse of the
sun. The expedition did its work at Fryeburg, Maine.
Every new idea in fitting
eyes is studied by our op-
tometrists. Entrust your
eyes to our care.
Over 65,000 Satisfied
Clients.
" HIS Egyptian peasant with his primitive team of oxen is one of thousands
A who will be benefited by the adding of 29% feet to the height of the great
Assuan dam, 551 miles south of Cairo. The vast irrigation project, which is
being carried out by the Egyptian government, will permit the cultivation of
7,000,000 acres of land now lying barren for a part or all of the year in the
vicinity of the Pyramids of Giza, shown above. It will supply 5,000,000,000
cubic meters of water from the River Nile.
3
and then the tail of Billy Mink fol-
lowed by Billy’s long slim body. Billy
Mink was backing out of that hole,
and he was doing it in a hurry!
Just then there was a sharp rattle
from up the Laughing Brook. Rattles
the Kingfisher was bringing home an-
other fish. He reached the sandbank
just as Billy Mink was half way out
of the hole. Dropping the little fish
he had brought, Rattles shot down
like a fury and his sharp bill struck
Billy Mink, leaving a red mark where
it had torn Billy’s coat. Billy squealed
and then he rolled over and over down
that steep sandbank. He didn’t stop
to come down gracefully. No, sir, he
just rolled over and over any way to
get to the water.
Billy Mink was a sorry sight. He
certainly was. His coat was torn and
there were bright red marks on the
top of his brown head. Hardly was
Billy out of that hole when the spear-
like bill of Mrs. Rattles followed, and
then she herself, as angry a kingfisher
as ever was seen. As Billy dived into
the cool, welcome water of the Laugh-
ing Brook both Rattles and Mrs. Rat-
tles shot after him. But they were
just too late. Then, rattling excited-
ly, they hovered over the water waiting
for Billy to show his head. But he
didn’t show it. He knew all too well
what was waiting for him. He swam
under water until he could crawl out
for air at a place where the bank over-
hung the water and he couldn’t be
seen. There he licked his wounds and
then, whimpering softly, made his way
down the Laughing Brook toward the
Big River, taking the greatest care to
keep out of sight. He had lost all ap-
petite for young kingfishers.
As for Rattles and Mrs. Rattles, they
flew about excitedly watching for Billy
and ready to give him more punish-
ment. At last when they were quite
sure that he had left and there was no
more danger they flew to a little tree
near Peter, and then how their tongues
did fly as they talked it all over. As
for Peter, his heart fairly bounded
with joy. The little kingfishers were
safe after all. He, like Billy Mink,
had forgotten all about Mrs. Rattles.
He might have known that with
babies there she would not be far
away. As it happened, she was right
in the nest with them, as Billy Mink
had found out to his sorrow.
Peter watched Mr. and Mrs. Rattles
for a few minutes. Then he kicked up
his heels and started for the dear Old
Brier Patch to tell little Mrs. Peter
all about it, and that it really is true
that Rattles the Kingfisher lives in a
hole in the ground.
(©, 1932, by T. W. Burg-ess.)—WNUService.
Pineapple Salad.
Take one cream cheese, three-ounce
size, one-third of a cupful of walnut
meats, the same of raisins cut into
bits, make into small balls. Arrange
on crisp lettuce leaves in the center
of a slice of pineapple, add a spoon-
ful of mayonnaise and a spoonful of
whipped cream. Garnish with dates
cut into quarters. Add a tablespoon-
ful of lemon juice to the four slices
of pineapple.
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Vitamin Salad.
Place a leaf or two of crisp lettuce
on each salad plate. Place a slice of
pineapple on the leaf and fill the cen-
ter with New Orleans molasses. Cov-
er with a thick slice of orange, top
with a slice of apple (or a square),
topped with a cherry. Just before
serving pour over the following sirup:
To one teaspoonful of molasses add
the juice of one orange and one-half
a lemon. This will serve four salads.
‘p HOMAS H. BECK, state fish and game commissioner of Connecticut, an-
A nounced the other day that his department was about to lease a stream
which would be set aside for the exclusive use of women anglers. Three of
the fair experts are shown above trying their luck in the stream.
Billy Squealed and Then He Rolled
Over Down That Steep Sandbank.
those babies. He didn’t want to stay,
and yet somehow he couldn’t make up
his mind to go. He knew just how
dreadfully Rattles would feel when he
returned and found that home empty,
and it made his heart ache. So he sat
staring at the hole in the bank across
the Laughing Brook and wishing with
all his might that there had been some
way for him to save those baby king-
fishers.
Suddenly he noticed sand begin to
trickle down from the edge of that
hole. First there was a little, then
more and more. Strange noises reached
him, smothered noises. There was an
angry spitting sound and growls and
little squeals of pain. No baby king-
fishers ever made sounds like that.
What could it mean? Peter crept to
the very edge of the bank and stared
across with eyes that looked as if they
were trying to pop right out of his
head. He didn’t have long to wait.
More sand poured out of that hole,
39
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30
17
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Frank W. Quinn
Independent Candidate
For
Sheriff
General Election
November 8, 1932.
Twenty years of Public Service.
In the army an officer, in Gal-
veston chief ranking United
States Civil Service officer of
the Port of Galveston. A mem-
ber of Organized Labor for over
30 years.
RESPECTFULLY SOLICITS
YOUR VOTE AND
SUPPORT
(Political Adv.)
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Patrick Henry was a great states-
man. He was married at an early age,
then said, “Give me Liberty or give
me death.”
ent, we come to molasses, the good old
sweet that comes to us right from the
sugar cane. Here is one to serve to 3
* * *
What do you know about nitrates?
They are cheaper than day rates.
« • *
(©, 1932, Bell Syndicate.)—WNU Service.
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A A. LEE of New York (center), formerly of Pittsburgh and Cleveland, and
A. F. Kane of Milwaukee, as they appeared with their small native at-
tendant and pack mule, en route from China to India via an old Chinese cara-
van route. The party journeyed overland from Saigon, French Indo-China, to
Calcutta, and is shown halting for a swim in western Yunnan, China.
Tea Ice Cream.
Take one cupful of milk, three egg
yolks, one cupful of sugar, a bit of
salt, one-half cupful of strong tea in-
fusion, one cupful of thin cream, two
cupfuls of heavy cream. Freeze and
add two cupfuls of whipped cream,
and finish freezing.
© by Western Newspaper Union.
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CHE’S set them in the window.
— Geranium and rose,
A window-box of pansies, flox,
And ev’rything that grows,
Hydrangea, verbena,
And even daisies white—
And ev’ry one has sought the sun,
Has turned to face the light.
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Veal Stuffed Tomatoes.
Take out the seeds from six toma-
toes after slicing off the top. Sprinkle
well with salt and pepper. Cook two
tablespoonfuls of butter with one-half
tablespoonful of chopped onion for five
minutes. Add one-half cupful of
chopped cold veal, one-half cupful of
bread crumbs, the tomato pulp, sea-
son with salt and pepper. Cook five
minutes and fill the tomatoes with this
mixture. Place in a buttered pan,
sprinkle with buttered crumbs and
bake for 20 minutes.
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Noah’s Ark steamed into port with
bands playing, smoke pouring from its
funnels, whistles blowing and the
American flag flying at the bow.
* * *
Pluto was a racketeer—he was king
of the underworld.
* * *
A fog horn is an instrument made
use of by the weather bureau to blow
the fog away.
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932, newspaper, September 23, 1932; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1426441/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.