The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 27, 1934 Page: 3 of 8
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THE ALTO HERALD, ALTO. TEXAS.
F!ame oS the Bordey
CHAPTER XIII—Continued
—16—
iWHWl''; "Without a sound," said Sonya, and
bent forward to unlace her boots.
Swiftly n)ic too!: them off.
t Concha rose iike a [tuff of smoke,
<o stlli she was and gracefui in the
dark.
' With her heart racing to suffocation
Sonya rose too.
The Mexican girl reached out and
tool: her by the sleeve. That hatred
in iter wouid not tet her touch her
Cesh. Softiy, step by step, the two
young things crossed the siient room,
listened at the partiy opened door, siid
through it. In the iong dark passage
they iistened again, then went south
along the waii toward a door which
aiso stood ajar.
; Through this—and the night sky was
above them, the tait cottonwoods
outiined against the stars. Like
^ Wraiths of the gloom they entered the
grove, passed through it, came out on
hind
uitig
has
; re-
'itht-
s is-
tite
tttes
tails
the
the open ianding tieid.
/ Before the iittte hangar Sonya saw
in the stariight the ghostly shape of
a Uttie gray ship. They made toward
it swiftiy. and as they reached its
protecting wings a man stepped out
front the hangar behind: a taii man,
[; naked to the waist, his itead bare, his
Meet aiso, a man who was prepared for
'Spreading up" on the morrow. Starr
Stone drew them both against the
ship's side.
Kg "Sonya !" he whispered. "Oh, Sonya!"
Then, "Listen. We have one chance in
\.a miiiion. This piane is stiii warm
front a trip Manuel took tiits afternoon,
ji'iteard it come in about dark."
M"Yes," said Sonya, "so did I."
^"It is fueied. They are always so.
Sank God—and Concha—we are
Here. I have just disabted the other
One, i think, though not as permanent-
ly as 1 coutd wish. We've got to take
<,jthat one chance, Sonya. It's our oniy
^chance, Sonya. It's our oniy one. Get
quick."
R' With his hands under her elbows
;'iE^SBMHcnya went up aiong the side, dropped
the iittie seat, felt swiftiy for the
HRsfety beit.
^^^B;"Safe?" the man whispered tenseiy.
^M"Safe," site attswered puiling the
}';±.-!,backle tight.
Kg^Fhen she saw Starr Stone turn to
Cfoncha and take her in his arms.
KM"Conchita," he said softiy but ioud
& enough for Sonya to hear the whis-
red words, "I ieave thee. It is fate.
But never wiii i forget thee, nor this
hing which you have done. Aiways
tile I iive wiii I remember. Adios,
Mttle one."
Kg And, bending his tail head, he kissed
ter on the Hps.
"Ready." he said, and, pushing the
H beyond the place's wing tip, ho
iitaught the propeller's biade.
Up and down he swung it—one, two,
ptree, then a fourth vehement time,
ad came titheiy up and over into the
!,pilot's seat as the roar of the catching
)mgino thundered into the night.
The moments that foilowed were
Res iong to Sonya, desperate moments
Of aiiowing the ship what of its warm-
BRpg time was possible.
^gTerribie moments, fraught with
puna, with heart-breaking suspense.
R Starr Stone, watching the dark house
ttd the popiar grove, gave what ho
pttid to safety, attd then, as dim lights
jtshed in the house, among the trees,
gave iter the gun a iittie—a Iittie
tore—more yet.
HtThere came the Iittie surge forward,
)<c heavier one, the lifting of the tail
they rocked away aiong the tieid,
}te gathering of speed, and then the
ft wave of stillness as they lost con-
tact with the earth and saiied away
[to the starry heavens.
^nd Sonya Savarin, looking down
Nth wide drawn eyes, had seen, just
they surged for the start, a iong
spurt of Hame where Concha stood
i the shadows, heard, above the roar
i tiie motor, the faint, sharp crack of
Shot.
f'Oh, God!" she cried, a sob in her
jfoat. "Oh, God i Conchita!"
Conchita, who, saving her love yet
bid not save him apart from his,
made the last great sacrifice for
j^e itseif.
pte pouring crowd that flowed aiong
Beid, lighted now, couid wreak no
hgeance on her, for Concha, too, was
be among the stars.
CHAPTER XIV
On Lone Mesa's Top.
^onya ciuttg to the cockpit's edge
ciutchitig fingers, her eyes,
^ned dry of sudden tears, fixed on
1 future, if future there was to be.
) aching sorrow for the ioveiy Mex-
t giri who had ioved Starr Stone
Sk deep in her heart, never to be
!te eradicated.
y'fe—that couid do such ghastiy
!t:s to its poor devotees—was caii-
i front the starry skies. They were
p, together, site and this scarecrow
with the wiid bronze hatr, the
ted torso, the bare feet, and she
led no more of destiny.
^er brave heart ieaped high in her.
sou] was ready for anything it
)tt encounter. She iooketi up, attd
e was iaughter on her white face,
hung iierseif to destiny and giorled
he hazard.
ie memory of ail satte and or-
'd things was dim and far away—
ranch house that was home, the
9 of Serge attd Liia and the chiid.
Id itodncy niakel With a shock
remembered h!m.
was a stranger to her. She
recnlt !^s face with any
tncsR. There was on!y one face
her. The face of this man "a
By V!NC!E E. ROE
WNU Sorvtca
miracuiousiy snatched from death to
life, this man who drove an airship
through the midnight sky toward life
and love and iiberty.
i'resentiy, watching tenseiy, she saw
the great paie ribbon of the Hio
Grande.
The Border!
The international line)
She heid her breath as they passed
above it, and iet it out in a great Bigh.
Ei Capltan Diablo — Manuei — the
strange adobe house in the poplar
grove—they ali seemed to fade, to be-
come unreal, like the figures In a fright-
fui dream.
A iittie longer, and they wouid be
safe.
Safe—and home.
Home.
At that thought Sonya Savarin sat
sharply up within the contines of the
buckled beit.
Homei
What would it mean to her and to
Starr Stone?
The stern face of her brother—Rod
Bhtke who had so grimly promised
that no peopie, no country, no man
shoutd ever take her from him—and
Marston of New York, the man who
came to find who sent tho contraband
from Mazatlan to the coast!
They had not cheated destiny after
all. They were headed straight for
this, and Starr Stone knew it I For
that he would not teave her to save
himseif she knew fuli wei].
Confronted with this new knowledge
of disaster Sonya wet her dry Hps, cast
6-
Through This—and the Night Sky
Was Above Them.
desperately about for something she
might tel] these three grim men, and
found nothing.
But site would not give up, she told
herself again, wouid never sink. They
had passed through too much to fall
at last. Something wouid happen;
some way would open.
And then, leaning iter face across
the cockpit's polished edge, she be-
came conscious of something; feit
something with a seventh sense. Ex-
actiy as a dog senses danger which he
cannot see, so this glri of the wiid
land sensed new danger now. It was
as if the haclttes of her spirit rose.
What could it be?
She !ooked at the back of Starr
Stone's head, its bronze hatr whipping
In the backwash of wind behind the
low windshield, and wished she could
see his face.
If she couid have done so she wouid
have seen it set ]lke a mask, for tong
before she fe)t the presence of this un-
seen danger he had been conscious
of it.
He knew that not so far behind them,
not so high above, another little gray
ship droned steadily out of the south—
that Nemesis incarnate was on their
trait. He knew that In that ship there
was, In alt probability, a machine gun
In the hands of El Diabio himself, who
was an expert In its use. What the
end wouid be, he did not know. Only
that it wouid be an end. There was
no doubt of that.
El Capltan would never In this
worid let him get away with what ho
had done, with the knowledge he had,
with the stand he had taken to for-
swear him and ail his works. He
meant to kill him—to kili them both,
If no other way was possible—to shoot
them down, if they would not iand.
There was a white line about the
man's mouth. His blue eyes were
black with spreading pupiis. He
thought desperately of the iow adobe
house where her people lived. A iand-
ing there, maybe, a tight from the
house itself . . . Perhaps, If he could
make It before Ei Capitan sensed his
plan. But that high spot against the
sky was coming nearer.
And where could they iand with any
chance of safety?
Well, it was fate—as he had told
poor Concha.
And then Sonya looked up and back
—and saw.
Saw the soft silver thing that fol-
lowed like a pointing sword.
She did not gasp or cry out, but
watched it with wide eyes and a hand
across iter mouth.
After all!
After a]] the monstrous anguish, tin
fear, the sorrow, and the hope!
Verily Starr Stone was paying for
his sins, and she paid with him fot
that love which had redeemed him to
manhood's high estate, which had
made of her a fugitive, an outcast
from her own, but which burned in
her sou] with indestructlhie beauty.
So be ]t, thought Sonya Savarin, so
he it.
*******
Down in that dim worid below, the
last act of this drama of the sage land
was preparing for enactment. Possa
after posse, scouring the tone ieveis,
had turned back toward the ra))road
attd the town. Baffied, wondering,
they sought new reinforcements, ntade
more extensive preparations to search
the canyons and the Bad Lands coun-
try. Onty Serge Savarin. the twonten
with him, rode and would not give up.
Two Fingers, Hosteen Nez, Hosteen
T'so hunted patientiy in ever widen-
ing circles that had covered ait the
face of the tint land.
In the quest of these three silent
trailers there was more than a mere
search for a lost white woman. There
was the dim and gentie shadow of that
iegendary deity the Bine South Wom-
an who "made her hogau" in the
whtte giri's heart.
So the Navajos rode steadliy, would
ride untii they found her, either itving
or dead, if site was anywhere in the
wide iand, and destiny came to meet
them.
They had done with the sagebrush
levels. Lone Mesa ioomed before
them. Siiently save for the ciicl: of
the ciimbtng hoofs, they ascended, fan-
tastic tlgures from a iong dead past,
the iow moon red behind them.
And ]n the magnificent heavens Starr
Stone, iooking desperately down ahead,
caught the dim outtine of Lone Mesa's
crown, Its shining white stone level.
Here was a landing piace. Hera
were waiis against which a man might
make a stand if he were armed, find
sheiter behind which if he were not^
providing he could get the time to
ieave his plane and gain them.
Sonya at his back felt the ship be-
neath her tiit in a long smooth do-
cilne, saw the mooniit earth come up
toward them.
And she too saw and recognized
Lone Mesa.
It was aimost ievei with them—was
so—the ship was leveling off—dis-
tance, height, had dropped away—they
were skimming the mesa's surface—
touching—bouncing on the uneven rock
—were stili.
Behind them that other was at the
very edge—above them—passing over.
Starr Stone, with his arms about
Sonya, dragging her over the side, cast
one flashing glance ahead.
"Kismet I" he said with white Hps.
"They beat us after a]]! They're
down between us and the puebio!"
So they were, the rocktng gray sh]p
still a hundred feet beyond. And Ei
Diablo, Manuel, deadly shapes of
menace, were ciimbtng out, coming
toward them.
Calmly Sonya stood beside her man.
"Come back," she said touching him,
"toward the cilff. It is our only way."
With h)s arm around her Starr
Stone turned, and, stumbling, hurry-
ing, they crossed the space between
them and that sheer lip whero once,
ages ago, it seemed, they had looked
info each other's tragic faces and
found their destiny.
"Dariing," the man satd softly,
"hold to me—tight—don't be afraid."
Sonya Savarin iaughed, a Iittie low
sound.
"Afraid?" she said, running. "With
you?"
"Halt!" came the great voice of EI
Capitan Diablo. "Haiti Or I firet"
There was yet a moonlit space for
the running feet. Death might catch
them before they ieaped to meet it.
Crack! Crack! Crack!
The sharp barking of an automatic,
not the machine gun.
Builets whined about them, clipped
into the rock beyond.
And Sonya Savarin iooked up for
the iast time into the face which had
fitted her heart, her soul, to the exclu-
sion of a]] eise stnee that wild day in
spring here on this wind-swept height,
when she had first beheld it.
The man looked down, slowed in his
stride.
One moment more—a kiss, maybe,
and this giorious adventure wouid he
done forever—sealed like a deathless
flame in the casket of eternity.
And then, high on the thin biue a!r
there came a sound as oid as the
ruined wails behind, a sound to chii]
the blood, to shock the very sou].
Ctear and high and savage, primitive
as itfe itseif, the war cry of the Nav-
ajos. It pealed above the cracking
gun, stopped tho man and the woman
tike a hand upon their shoulders.
And out from the dusky shadows of
the crumbling wails three shadows
enme iike darting ttames. In tho very
act of whlrilng to meet them El Capl-
tan and his henchman were caught in
their onsiaught. went down beneath
them.
Then, as Starr Stone ran toward
them, as Sonya foilowed. tali Two Fin-
gers rose with the dapper pliot held
by the neck in his powerful hands.
Behind hint Hosteen Nez. Hosteen T'so,
came struggling up with the great hulk
of Ei Diablo fighting iike a tiend be-
tween them.
"South Woman," said Two Fingers,
"what have these done to you and to
your man?"
He spoke in Navajo, and Sonya an-
swered, panting.
TO UN OONTtNUHB,
[MPROVED
UNtFORM tNTERNAHONAL
QUNDAY ]
OcHooL Lesson
(Hy REV. P. B. FITZWATHR, I) D.,
Member of Faculty, Moody Bible
institute of Chicago )
Lesson for September 30
REViEW—GOD IN HEBREW HIS-
TORY
aOf,DEN TEXT—Thy kingdom is an
Psntm" 145^13."'"'""^ "" """"
PRIMAttY TOPIC—The Goodness of
God.
JUNIOR TOI'tC—God Working
Through a. Nation.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP-
IC—Discovering God's Standard for My
Lifo.
YOUNG PEOPT.E AND ADULT TOP.
The method of review must always
he determined ity tho genius of the
teacher, the aptitude of the pupils, aud
the particular grade in the school. For
the senior and adult classes three
methods are suggested:
. t. The Blographicai.
During the quarter the following
prophets have figured: Ahtjah, Elijah.
Eiislta, Mtcaiah, Amos, ilosea, Mlcah,
and Isaiah. Assignments of these
characters to representative members
of the ciass should he made the week
before, so that they may come pre-
pared to present the vital characteris-
tica of these men.
ii. The Application of the Prophetic
Messages to Modern Life.
Assignments shoutd be made the pre-
ceding Sunday, so that the members of
the class may come prepared to make
applicatton of tho vital messages of
the prophets to the affairs of modern
life. The following questions may be
considered as representative:
1. What application can be made of
the prophets' teachings as to the iand
question in the United States?
2. What bearing do the prophets'
teachings have upon the problem of
pauperism? Do they offer a cure for
poverty ?
3. What beartng do the messages
of the prophets have upon the prob-
tem of capita] and labor?
4. Do the prophets throw light upon
the theological controversies of the
present time?
5. Do the prophets have any mes-
sage for the modern woman?
6. What word has the prophet bear-
tng on the cause of prohibition?
7. Do the prophets have any word
concerning modern amusements?
Hi. The Summary of the Facts and
Teachings of the Lessons.
The following suggestions are of-
fered :
Lesson for July 1.
Ahijah, in a most striking symbolic
manner, ntade knowu God's purpose to
wrest the kingdom from Solomon and
give ten tribes to Jeroboam.
Lesson for July 8.
In spite of the handicap of idolatry
and immorality fostered by two for-
mer kings, Asa did that which was
good and right in the eyes of the Lord.
Lesson for July 15.
Because Elijah faithfuliy deciared
God's message to Ahab. God miracu-
iousiy cared for him through a long
famine period.
Lesson for July 22.
Though Miijah faithfully and cour-
ageously stood for God in a time of
great distress, he now tied for his life
from Jezebel.
Lesson for July 29.
Jehoshaphat sought advice from the
Lord after he had formed an aliiance
with Ahab. This shouid have been
done beforehand.
Lesson for August 5.
Eiislta. in heipiug the widow, de-
manded tho use of that which she had.
Tho Lord ta pleased to use that which
we possess, whether it be much or tit-
tle.
Lesson for August 12.
Formal worship when the heart Is
out of fellowship with God is an abornt-
nation.
Lesson for August 19.
A iife of temperance concerns other
things than tndutgence in intoxicating
liquors. Our age is intoxicated with
pleasure, love of money, and pride.
Lesson for August 26.
The retgn of Jeroboam II was out-
wardly prosperous. With this pros-
perity came luxury, Immorality, and
apostasy. Hosea's message is a vital
one for our age.
Lesson for September 2.
Those who oppress tho poor slia)l
come to judgment at the hand of God.
Lesson for September 9.
The only way for a sinning people
to get back to God is around the cruci-
fied Lord Josus Christ.
Lesson for September 16.
isnialt presents the consummation of
the redemptive purpose of God in the
establishment of Messiah's kingdom.
Lesson for September 23.
Hezeklalt's behavior shows thnt the
dwcHing place of God Is a sure anil
safe retreat for his people in times of
distress.
Something to Live For
Do something" worth living for,
worth dying for. is there no want, no
suffering, no sorrow that you can
reiieve? la there no net of tardy jus
tice, no deed of cheerfui kindness, no
]ong-forgotten duty that you can per-
form?
Tru.tfui as ChMdren
The normai ehHd is insl Inctlvely
trustful; and this )a one of the mean-
ings of the saying of Christ that Itia
foHowers must become as iittie chil-
dren.
That Body
of Yours
By
JAMES W. BARTON, M. D.
The Use and Misuse of
Mineral OH
THOSE Individuais who have tried
^ to do without laxatives or purga-
tives by eating fruit, raw vegetabies,
bran and other rough foods are to he
praised because the rcguiar use of
drugs for this purpose is unwise.
There are times, of course, when a
dose of epsom salts or castor oil is
the best possible treatment; in fact,
the regular treatment with many phy-
alciatts unless there is some abdomlnai
condition where purgatives wouid be
dangerous.
Some nre now ustng minerai oil, or
Russia^ oii to help the system get rid
of its wastes, and if tills plain oil is
taken in proper quantities tt is cer-
tainly a simple nnd safe method. Ir
was formerty thought that the otl
passed through ttie body unchanged,
but Drs. S. E. Newman and G. E. Gru-
enfeld in Journal Missouri Medical As-
sociation state that although minerat
oil Is not affected by the action of the
digestive juices, it is broken up in
the same manner as fats, although not
to the same extent.
However, minerai oil has proved It-
seif so effective in preventing consti-
pation by heiping the waste to pass
readiiy through the large Intestine,
that the daliy use of one-half table-
spoonful or more of the oii for several
days at a ttme is advised.
The oil seems to prevent some of the
iiquids of the food from being ab-
sorbed tnto the body, and this iiquid,
being sttii in the wastes, hetps to make
the wastes butky. giving tho muscles
of the Intestine more to grasp and
push downward. Naturally, the mus-
cles of the walls of the intestine with
this buik to handle are kept In much
better tone or condition than when the
wastes are dry and scanty.
However, Doctors Newman and Gru-
enfetd point out that if the quantity of
oii used ia too targe, tt may nceuma-
iate in the iower part of the iarge in-
testine, act reaily as a sort of irritant,
which keeps the bowe] overacttve and
may cause spasm or cramps.
The thought then Is that the use of
mineral oil in suitabie doses for a few
days at a time may be heipful when
there is a tendency to constipation.
Too much mineral oii may cattae Irri-
tation, crnmpa, and spasm of tiie mus-
cles of the intestine.
Vitamins
^TOU are reading and hearing a
I great deal about vitamins these
days. Food manufacturers, drug ex-
perts, even restaurants are telling the
world about the magic qualities of
their products, because these products
contain vitamins.
Thus, the first impression one might
get ia that a vitamin or vitamins are
a new kind of food substance, or that
these manufacturers are putting this
new food subatance Into their prod-
ucts.
As a matter of fact, the varloua vl
tamlua are not in any way ailke; one
vitamin being aa different from anoth-
er vitamin as meat la from bread.
Further, the average man, woman,
or child doea not need to buy these
products advertised to contain certain
vitamins, tn order to get enough vi-
tnmtns. The daily diet of the average
inteiiigent middie class individual con-
tains all the necessary vitamins and
In the amount necessary for the main-
tenance and workings of the body.
Take tho average diet and it will be
found that cereal, miik (perhaps some
cream), toast, a little bacon and some
tea or coffee with sugar and cream
will make up the average breakfast.
Lunch will consist of bread and but-
ter, milk, tea or coffee, some fruit or
a salad.
Dinner wiii consist of soup, usually
vegetable soup, meat, potatoes, one
or two other vegetabtea and some fruit
or pastry for dessert.
An indtviduai eating the above diet
and getting out Into real sunshine
daily—not the sunshine of the dust
and smoke-laden atmosphere of any
city—need never think of vitamins.
W' do not get the full value of the
oltra violet rays in cities.
However, most of us iive indoors, get
iittie sunlight, nnd not enough of one
important vitamin—vitamin D—which
Is needed to keep our bonea, attd prin-
cipally our teeth in good condition;
hence the decay of teeth in the ma-
jority of children and adults.
vitamin D and uttra violet rays have
the same eil'ect upon the body.
To get vitamin D, children are given
more sunshine, are treated with ultra
violet rays by special lamps, and aiso
given cod liver oii. In other words, if
we lived outdoors, ottr ordinary dtet
would he perfect. As we do not iive
outdoors, eggs and cod liver oii may
be necessary to supply vitamin D.
CopyrtKht.—WNU Sorvtco.
Modern Method* of Mining
Modern methods of mtnin'g were
cradied in eastern Europe. Dr. Ed-
ward Brown, a Fellow of the Hoyal So-
ciety, visiting the mines of Uhremnitz,
Hungary, in 1673, reported the use of
pumps driven by water wheeis, attd a
newly-invented crushing mil). Then,
says Tit-Bita Mngazine, came steam
pumps, steam miiis, nnd rock drilia.
In 1887 the brothers Forest nnd Mc-
Artitur Invented the cyanide process.
It mado profitphie the treatment of
thousands of tons of oro which other-
wise could not have been worked ex-
cept st a loss.
ALUMiNUM TO FOLLOW IRON
Mankind has progressed through
the Stone and Bronxe ages nnd Is
now at the end of the Iron age, ac-
cording to I'rof. Colin Funk of Col-
umbia university. There ia mora
aiuminum than Iron in the earth's
crust, he says, and aiuminum la
lighter and can be ntade just us
strong aa steel for most purposes.
Raiiroada, he predicts, wiii ilghteti
their equipment hy using this metal,
and speed up trains to 100 utiles an
hour to compete with the growing
air tratllc. Transatlantic boats wiii
also be much lighter and operate at
higher speeds, while buildings will
do away with heavy wails and be
constructed almost entirely of glass
and light metal. He predicts that
we will be weli Into the new age in
another ten years.—I'atitQnder Mag-
azine.
A Few Drops Every
Night and Morning
Will Promote a Clean,
Healthy Condition!
M /Mf Drug <y?ore.t
WnteMurIneCo.,Dpt.W.Ch:c<lo,forPfceBoo^
Eruptions on
Sca!p !tched
and Burned
Healed by Cuf/cura
"My sister's skin became Itchy
and, before long, sore eruptions be-
gan to appear on her face and scalp.
They were red and soon began to
weep. We thought she would have
to have her hair cut and be bald.
Her scalp itched and burned, caus-
ing her to irritate it by scratching.
"She began to use Cuticura Soap
and Ointment. The first week the
eruptions became fewer and in two
weeks she was healed and no sign
of her trouble can be seen." (Signed)
Mrs. Emma Youska, 706 Monterey
St., McKeesport, Pa., April 12, 1934.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c.
Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. Pro-
prietors: Potter Drug & Chemical
Corp., Maiden, Mass.—Adv.
Bihousness
Sour Stomach
Gas and Headache
du* to
Constipation
commodates parties; BOo tiny por person.
Bafa parkin# free. Home-like.313 West COth
3% blocka west of State otreet.
MAN
dealre* work in painting—Arta.
J. ti., 7M16 Hickory, New Orleans, La.
Ride the !nterurban
[HOUSTON
front To
GALVESTON
Frequent Service
For Hardware, Mm,
OH WeH tSuppHes -id
Automobile Tires,
Tubes Accessor i ea
F. W. HeMmann Co.
Houston. Texas
PARKER'S
FLORESTON SHAMPOO —Men) for UHO in
connection withi'arkor'aHairHalsafn.MakcB tho
hair aof t and Hufly. &0 ccnta by mail or at dmg-
giata. Ui3cox Chemical Works, Patchogua,N.Y.
Do you !ack PEP?
AM you ait tn, tir.d and run down?
WW
Wit) rid yon ot
and bu!!d you up. Und for 65 ytart for ChMk*
ftvtr, Malaria and
A Genera) Ton!c
60c .nJ tt.OO At Aii Drusci.H
t
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Weimar, F. L. The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 27, 1934, newspaper, September 27, 1934; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth214717/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Stella Hill Memorial Library.