Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE 2
PALACIOS BEACON, PALACIOS, TEXAS
August 18, 1938
"Weekly News lie view
Failure of Democratic Purge •
Gives Republicans New Fear
Politics
If Franklin Roosevelt ever
planned to "purge" his Democratic
party of undesirables, he now knows
the purge has failed. On the presi-
dential black list may have been
Iowa's Gillette, Nevada's McCarran,
Colorado's Adams, and Missouri's
Clark. By last week these New Deal
haters were either renominated or
assured of winning their state pri-
maries at the expense of administra-
tion favorites.
News of purge failure has recent-
ly sent the most dour conservative
into ecstasies. For once, it appears,
Franklin Roosevelt's domination
over the party is at ebb tide. But
last week a few foes began thinking
instead of effervescing:
Is purge failure helping untangle
fcadly twisted United States political
lines? Decidedly the contrary. Is
purge failure eliminating Franklin
Roosevelt as a third termer? Prob-
ably not.
Originally the purge idea sought
to Uuusiurm Hie Democratic party
into an instrument of coherent lib-
eralism, implying formation of an
equally coherent conservative party
on the other side. Eut when con-
gress convenes next winter the Unit-
ed States will see instead a hodge-
podge of multi-colored political
thought from which little but bicker-
ing can be expected.
Deeply tanned from his 20-day
fishing trip to tropical Pacific wa-
ters, Franklin Roosevelt was back
in his 48 states last week, still mum
about third term rumors that have
kept newsmen busy since he left.
Of all rumors, most thought-provok-
ing was that purge failure robs the
President of party control, robs him
also of the right to name a succes-
sor in 1940. Not willing to be robbed,
enthusiastic New Dealer Roosevelt
■would rather run himself than pass
the mantle to a less ardent New
Dealer.
Kentucky
Blue Grass politics was red hot
as Kentucky prepared to choose a
Democratic senator. At Jackson,
Former Sheriff Lee Combs and his
brother attended a rally for their
own faction, then walked brazenly
into a rally of opposition forces.
When the smoke cleared, Lee Combs
•was shot dead. A few minutes later
his father organized kinfolk to
search for William Combs, who was
no relative but the alleged slayer.
KENTUCKY'S ALBEN BARKLEY
It was surely a fine day.
Said Police Chief A. S. Sizmore:
"I'm a Republican so I'm not on
either side. They were all het up
from politicin'."
Two days later Kentucky went to
the polls. At Versailles, Gov. A. B.
"Happy" Chandler muttered, "Down
the hatch" as he chivalrously voted
for his opponent, Majority Leader
Alben W. Barkley. At Paducah, Al-
ben Barkley deposited his ballot,
glanced at the skies and predicted a
record vote.
By midnight it appeared that
Happy Chandler should have voted
for himself. "Dear Alben," with
presidential blessing, was renomi-
nated and political theorists tried to
figure out what it meant.
F oreign
Since 1931, when Japan marched
into Manchuria, Tokyo and Moscow
have been "on the brink of war."
Last week they appeared to be fight-
ing two wars: In one, at the iso-
lated Russian-Manchukuan-Korean
frontier nobody knew who was win-
ning. In the other, being waged in
the Moscow office of Soviet Foreign
Minister Maxim LitvinofT, it ap-
peared that Russia had the upper
hand.
Amidst a barrage of incidents,
communiques and curt notes, Asia's
two powers were attempting to set-
tle ownership of a shell-pocked hill
near the village of Changkufeng.
Russia-Jap hostilities in this sec-
tor date back to 1931 when Japan
marched into Manchuria and looked
longingly at land patrolled by Rus-
sia's autonomous Siberian army.
But not until mid-July this year did
the five-year "secret war" break
into the open. Since then both pow-
ers have attacked and counter at-
tacked for days on end, moving
troops, artillery and planes to little
Changkufeng.
• Already tired of one war (see be-
low), Japan was anxious to avoid
another. Finally Ambassador Ma-
moru Shigemitsu at Moscow re-
ceived word to open peace negotia-
tions. Last week it appeared proud,
stubborn Japan would have to eat
crow if she wanted peace with
prouder, more stubborn Russia.
Muttering that "the time has come
| People
At Callander, Ont., Olivia Dionne's
famous five children failed to ap-
pear before ^heir daily tourist audi-
j ence. Dr. Roy Dafoe, who has guid-
j ed the four-year-old quintuplets
since birtn; reported they suffered
jfrom upset stomachs. Next day
Pappa Dionne worried publicly over
Emilie, who had taken no nourish-
ment for 24 hours.
• Two days after former cinema
actress Pearl White died in Paris,
Warner Oland of "Charlie Chan"
fame succumbed In his native Swe-
den of bronchial pneumonia.
• At Hammond, La., Governor Rich-
ard W. Leche poured coffee, served
| sandwiches to pickets surrounding a
■ box factory.
Religion
Improved
Uniform
International
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
•" L E S S O N
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D.
Dean of The Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.
© Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for August 21
HANNAH: GODLY MOTHERHOOD
LESSON TEXT—X Samuel 1:8-18; J:
1*5.
GOLDEN TEXT—Her children arise
Up. and call her blessed. Proverbs 31:28.
"Godly Motherhood" — All the
power and grace of the infinite God
working in and through the most
_ , . , , , tender ard at the same time most
2" t,r'.±r ,hnhzi:»»»b»™„
hood! There indeed is the solution
of many of our national and social
problems. For we agree with the
that Jesus was coming . . . tooli
brunettes of palm trees, and went forth
to meet Him, and cried, Hosanna:
Blessed is the king of Israel that Com-
eth in the name of the Lord.
1 Thus wrote St. John in Biblical
poet that man, who regards himself
as being mighty, ruling over land
Pretty Frocks Easy to Sew
FF YOU'RE one of those women
1 who so often say "Dear me.
I wish I could sew!", then by all
means try your hand on these
smart designs, and like many,
many others, just as inexperi-
enced as you are, you'll find that
you can sew, and enjoy it! Our
patterns include detailed sew
charts that show you just what
to do, step by step.
The Woman's Dress.
Here we have a diagram de-
sign, which means you can finish
it successfully in a few hours. And
days. Since then his words have j an(j sea( must defer to a mightier
been unchanged, but last week
American clergymen began study-
ing the Bible as rewritten under
I Adolph Hitler's direction to conform
j with Germany's Nazi ideology. Said
, the Naziflcd St. John:
"Then they took green branches,
went to meet him and cried: HEIL
power.
"For the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.'
Hannah was the mother of Sam-
uel, who became one of Israel's out-
standing leaders—a priest, a proph-
et, and "the maker of kings." Gnd
needed a great man, so He chose
! to him that comes in the name of , forn hir" " mother.
God. HEIL to thee, thou shalt be ! 0ur stuc,y for today w,n be toplCfll
our king."
Eliminated are all references to
"The time has come . , "
to terminate these endless inci-
dents," Foreign Minister Litvinoff
matchcd Tokyo's proposals with an
even better set:
(1) Immediate cessation of hos-
tilities, with mutual withdrawal
behind a fixed line.
(2) That line to be determined by
the Russ-China treaty of June 26,
1886.
(3) Appointment of a bilateral
commission, two Russians, one
Manchukuan, one Jap, to negotiate
for redemarcation of the line on
basis of the 1886 treaty.
While Japan boasted after two
weeks that 1,500 Russ soldiers had
been killed and wounded against 180
on her own side, two tattered Soviet
deserters walked into her Siberian
camp to air their grievances against
Moscow.
They deserted because their fa-
thers, well-to-do Kulak farmers, had
been heavily taxed, heavily op-
pressed in the Soviet drive for col-
lective agriculture. "Our slogan is
defend the fatherland of liberty,"
one said, "but how can we soldiers
defend such a system when the cows,
horses and even their barns are
taken away."
To Japan it looked like Russia's
poor Siberian administration was
her ally.
0 Last week weary Japanese troops
were still more than 100 miles down
the flooded Yangtze river from their
goal, Nanking, long since deserted
by the Chinese government. While
defending troops claimed the invad-
ers had been repelled in battle after
battle, crafty Japs were evidently
resorting to brains instead of brawn
to capture another part of China.
In the past Manchuria and Peking
governments were undermined by
palm-rubbing Tokyo agents and dis-
gruntled Chinese officials. Result
in each case has been a puppet
state, completely divorced from Chi-
na. Last week at peaceful Canton,
only a few miles from Britain's
Hongkong, came reports of secret
negotiations to sway South China
from the central government.
Promising to prevent recurrence
of disastrous bombings which left
Canton a bloody shambles last
month, Jap agents would set up an
independent government closely al-
lied to Tokyo.
Meanwhile Japan refused to stop
her bombing attacks on Canton. For
two successive days last week war
planes swooped down with their car-
goes of death, finally striking within
400 yards of the foreign settlement
where thousands had taken refuge.
Next day Canton's Catholic cathe-
dral was struck while hundreds cow-
ered in terror within.
Miscellany
Back to London last week from
darkest Africa came Missionary
John Harris with a strange tale. His
story: In Bechuanaland lives Ra-
monolwana Senan. believed to be
140 years old yet still in good health
and boasting all but one tooth. He
has a son more than 100 years old,
and a daughter 16.
• Twenty thousand bathers at New
York's Rockaway beach sought re-
lief from sticky weather last week.
In the distance were unimportant
rumblings of thunder. Suddenly the
air was splintered by a bolt of
lightning that zig-zagged 300 feet
down the beach, killing three, felling
hundreds. Next day investigators
wondered if a huge steel bridge,
passing almost immediately over
the beach, might have drawn the
freak bolt.
• When she was first launched, Eng-
land's proud Queen Mary was also
queen of the Atlantic. Then came
the French Normandie to sct-a west-
ward passage record of 3 days, 22
hours, 52 minutes. Last week her
powerful engines churned the Queen
Mary to a new record, clipping 1
hour, 14 minutes off the Norman-
die's mark.
• Fondled like the museum piece
it is, Douglas (Wrong Way) Corri-
gan's $900 transatlantic airplane was
unloaded in Manhattan last week.
rather than textual and extended to
related portions in chapters 1 and
. . .. . 2. We consider Hannah as a mother
sin, heaven and the Hebrew proph-1 wgs .rft j and sacriflcial,
ets, for the Nazi heaven is now to ,
, ' . . but at the same time practical m
be found in Germany alone.
Domestic
That Pennsylvania's Sen. James
her daily life and service.
I. Spiritual.
Many are the tributes offered to
mothers, but none has deeper sig-
J. Davis has been more successful nificance than the testimony of a
with U. S. Moose than his Tennessee boy or girl that their mother has
Valley authority investigating com-
mittee, was admitted last week.
From Washington to Knoxville, in
the heart of TVA's far-flung power
empire, the committee has dug for
facts, rumors and figures to estab
led them both by precept and ex-
ample to have faith in God. Though
other advantages may be beyond
the reach even of the most self-
denying mother, this most impor-
tant of all benefits she may bring
lish why ousted TV A Administrator ' her children, but only if she herself
Arthur Morgan raised such a hulla-
baloo last winter.
The committee's aim, said Davis,
was to find the "real, true 'yard-
tick' cost of power and the total
is an earnest and faithful follower
of the Lord.
1. Hannah trusted God in her hour
of trial and sorrow (1:10). Although
her husband was a man of good
amount of money going into TVA qualities, he had followed the cus^
development." I torn of hb times and taken a second
Last week, after spending more wife' Hannah, childless in the pres-
than half the $50,000 appropriation, j ®nce °f Penninah and her children,
Chairman Davis decided 85 "per cent was in deep sorrow. But she knew
where to take her burdens; <=*«
of his rummaging was concerned
with uninteresting auditing and ac-
counting. Named to investigate for _ , ,,
the investigating committee was a ; 'e?^llyjju tn 1.
private investigator, M. C. Conick,
she
brought them to the Lord in prayer.
2. She prayed—fervently and ef-
whose personal headache TVA now
becomes.
Labor
The nasty word "Communism"
hung like a spectre last week before
the eyes of C. I. O. Mogul John L.
Lewis. At Detroit and Los Angeles
his henchmen were having trouble.
Ex-Preacher Homer Martin, who
heads 375,000 members of the C. I.
O. United Automobile Workers,
found himself marked for liquida-
tion by the four vice presidents he
recently found guilty of consorting
with Communists. Their charge:
That Martin himself has been con-
sorting with President Jay Love-
stone of the Independent Communist
Labor league.
To bewildered C. I. O. workers it
appeared that U. A. W.'s trouble was
simply a fight between Stalinist
Communists and Lovestone Commu-
nists, each willing to fight for their
own beliefs no matter how many
! unions are destroyed. Standing on
the sidelines at Detroit awaiting the
opportune moment was A. F. of L.'s
Francis Dillon who headed the U. A.
W. when it was a respectable Labor
Federation affiliate.
Meanwhile at Los Angeles, four
C. I. O. unions voted to withdraw
from Radical Harry Bridges' Indus-
trial Union council, charging he had
brought the body under Communist
control.
Aviation
Since its birth shortly after the
World war, U. S. commercial avia-
tion has been bounced back and
forth by a dozen government agen-
cies, has suffered from repudiated
agreements and constantly chang-
ing administration. Worst blow was
the government's repudiation of air-
mail contracts five years ago, an
experiment that ended in headaches
for all.
Last winter congress established
a Civil Aeronautics authority to
manage commercial aviation per-
manently and sensibly. Its job: To
administer air mail contracts, su-
pervise commercial air lines and
private fliers and study aviation
safety.
Last week the new authority took
over its job, two weeks before the
act goes into effect. As Chairman
Elmer J. Noble of Greenwich, Conn.,
walked into his office for the first
time he hoped to regulate avia-
tion as successfully as another pol-
icy-forming board, the Interstate
Commerce commission, has super-
vised railroading.
Sports
Several weeks ago a young Chi-
cago broker, Fred Tuerk, bet his
partner half a $30,000 plantation he
couldn't play 144 holes of golf from
dawn to dusk without going over
95 on any 18 holes. Partner J.
Smith Ferebee took him up, start-
ing out one morning last week. By
nightfall ail 144 holes were played
at an average of 86 strokes per 18
hole.". Next day Broker Ferebee,
still golf hungry, played again.
5:16b). Mother's prayers have fol
lowed many a wayward boy and
girl and brought them back to God.
When every other influence for good
had been swept aside, they have
been unable to forget mother's
prayers. One wonders what will
happen to boys and girls who go out
to face a wicked and bewildering
world, with the memory of a prayer-
less, worldly mother to blight rather
than to bless them.
3. She recognized children as a
gift of God (1:11). And surely they
are. Christian men and women
should protest by both word and
deed against the vicious modern
theory that children are a sort of
biological accident to be avoided
II. Sacrificial.
The most precious possession a
woman can have is a child of her
own. It was, then, the deepest and
finest sacrifice of a noble mother-
heart when she
1. Dedicated her boy to God, even
before his birth (1:11). Yet this
act so fine and commendable was
in reality only an intelligent recog-
nition of the fact that children are a
gift of God. Your children and mine
belong to God. Let us not stand
in His way (or their way) as He
graciously leads them out into serv-
ice for Him.
2. She kept her promise (1:24-28).
Many parents have solemnly dedi-
cated their children to God before
their birth, and then later the pros-
pect of separation from them has
been too much for the parents,
and the promise to God has been
thrust aside. The writer has on
many occasion-- seen young men
and women weep with broken-
hearted dismay because a mother
or father has forbidden them to go
to China, Africa, or elsewhere at
God's call. Mother, have you kept
your promise to God regarding your
boy, your girl?
III. Practical.
Hannah not only promised her
boy to God; she made the comple-
tion of that promise certain.
1. By guiding her boy in the right
way (1:24). As a matter of fact,
she went with him to the temple.
A mother who "sends" her boy to
Sunday school or church will never
help him like the mother of whom
it may be said "she brought him
unto the house of the Lord."
2. By providing for her boy (2:10,
19). There is no more tender and
meaningful story in all literature
than that of Hannah bringing her
boy hi3 "little coat." It Is still Uut!
that the best "support" a mission-
ary of the Cross can have is a home
that "stands by."
The story is told of a missionary
candidate who had no "board" back
of her but the "washboard" of a
godly mother, and who made a
valiant and useful servant in the
foreign field. Such an arrangement
may not be the most desirable and
it really should not be necessary if
God's people would give, but it has
its glorious advantages.
Such a mother as Hannah would
have such a son as Samuel of whom
it is said that he "was in favour
both with the Lord, and also with
men" (2:26).
you'll find it one of the most be-
coming and comfortable you ever
wore round the house. It's made
on easy, unhampering lines, with
darts that make it slim, but not
tight, at the waistline. The short
sleeves are slashed, which makes
them easier to work in, and
prettier to look at. Sleeves, neck-
line and pointed closing are
trimmed with ricrac. Make this
dress of gingham, seersucker, per-
cale or calico.
The Little Girl's Dress.
This dress will make your small
daughter look even more ador-
able, with its high, snug waist,
square neck, puff sleeves and full
skirt. You'll probably want to
make her half a dozen dresses
just like this! And she'll certainly
beg for at least one little sweet-
heart apron, to wear when she is
helping you—or thinking she is!
For the dress, choose dimity, dot-
ted Swiss, gingham or percale.
For the apron, organdy, dimity or
lawn.
No. 1559 is designed for sizes 34,
36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size
36 requires 4% yards of 35-inch
material; 2Vi yards of ricrac to
trim as pictured.
No. 1468 is designed for sizes 2,
4, 6 and 8 years. Size 4 requires
1% yards of 35-inch material for
the dress; % yard for the apron.
Six yards of ribbon or braid to
trim dress; 1 yard for belt. Two
On the Highway
v
Some of the most important
rules for safe driving:
Never drive fast over a road
you don't know like a book.
Learn what you can expect of
your car.
Always expect the worst. If
there's a tree beside the road
ahead, figure a car may come
from behind it. If there's a
house near by, a child may run
across the road there. If there's
a parked car, count on its cut-
ting suddenly onto the pave-
ment.
Signal your intentions to all
persons who may be affected
by your acts.
and one-half yards of ruffling to
trim apron.
Success in Sewing.
Success in sewing, like in any
other field, depends upon how you
approach the task in hand. To
help you turn out clothes profes-
sional looking in every detail, we
have a book which plainly sets
forth the simple rules of home
dressmaking. The beginner will
find every step in making a dress
clearly outlined and illustrated
within its covers. For the ex-
perienced sewer there are many
helpful hints and suggestions for
sewing short cuts. Send 15 cents
(in coins) today for your copy of
SUCCESS IN SEWING, a book
every home dressmaker will find
of value.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1020,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
INSECTICIDES
OPPORTUNITY
Build your own business. Local represent-
ative for full or part time work wanted
by progressive, growing Old Line Legal
Reserve company of highest rating. Good
contract and liberal commissions. Writ®
today. BANKERS UNION LIFE INSUR-
ANCE CO.. 1300 Grant St.. Denver. CoIq.
SCHOOLS
ANNAPOLIS—WEST POINT j
COAST GUARD ACADEMY1
High School graduates, undergraduates, 16 to ZL
Write Llout. A. W. Bryan. USN (liet.) Annapolis*
Md. Oct. Civil Service exam for appointments.
AROUND
the HOUSE
Items of Interest
to the Housewife
Coffee for Ginger Cookies.—Try
mixing ginger cookies with cold
coffee instead of water.
♦ * »
Beautifying Wash Stand.—Rub-
berized cretonne if pasted around
an unsightly wash stand will cov-
er ugly plumbing and make a
bathroom attractive.
* * *
When Sugar Gets Lumpy.—
When sugar gets hard and lumpy,
put it in the refrigerator for two
or three days and you will find it
will become quite soft again.
* * »
Onion Absorbs Paint Odor.—If
an onion is cut in halves and
placed in a room that has been
newly painted it will absorb the
odor of paint in a few hours.
* * *
Don't Soak Brushes.—If clothes
and hair brushes beccms very
dirty wash with water in which a
little borax has been mixed. Dip
brushes into water and wash with
another brush covered with a light
coating of soap. Never soak in
water.
Napkins From Tablecloths.—
When tablecloths wear^thin in the
center, cut up the outside into 12
or 16-inch squares and hemstitch
them. These make napkins which
will wear for some time.
* * *
Shoe Health.—If your brown
shoes are looking a bit scuffed,
give them a dose of castor oil,
rubbing it well into the leather and
then polishing in the usual way
with shoe polish. Castor oil gives
brown shoes their color back
again, and preserves the leather,
too.
* * *
When Cooking Rice.—Try add-
ing a few drops of lemon juice to
rice the next time you are cooking
it. It makes it beautifully white
and keeps the grains whole.
* * *
Fruit Juice Ice Cubes.—If you
have a gas or electric refrigera-
tor, try using fruit juices for ice
cubes instead of water. They are
very pretty in fruit beverages.
Lemon cubes are lovely in iced
tea.
ASK ME
ANOTHER
?
A Quiz With Answers
Offering Information
on Various Subjects
The Questions
1. Is there an active volcano in
the United States?
2. Which of our Presidents
coined the phrase "benevolent as-
similation"?
3. What does the term neologism
mean?
4. In what year did our govern-
ment under the Constitution be-
gin?
5. What is considered a perfect
game in baseball?
6. What is the significance of
the state name of Delaware?
7. Are all shooting stars entirely
hot when they strike the earth?
8. How do Australia, Canada,
Brazil and continental United
States compare in area?
The Answers
1. Yes, Mount Lassen in Cali-
fornia.
2. President McKinley.
3. A new word or phrase which
has not yet been accepted as good
usage.
4. In 1789.
5. One in which there are no
runs, no hits and none reaching
first base.
6. It was named for Lord de la
Warr (or Ware), a governor of
Virginia. A friend of his explored
the river and bay.
7. In some cases they are very
cold. The Colby (Wis.) meteorite
was covered with frost when
found shortly after its fall, al-
though this occurred on July 4.
The interior of the meteorite was
freezing cold.
8. Australia, 2,974,581 square
miles; Canada, 3,694,863 square
miles; Brazil, 3,285,319 square
miles; United States, 3,026,789
square miles.
Time to Hold On
When you get into a tight place
and everything goes against you,
until it seems as if you could not
hold on one minute longer—never
give up then! That is just the time
and place that the tide will turn.
—Harriet Beecher Stowe.
fox TH/S
MoNumm
FRE/Gtir
PGBPAin
Other Sizes from
$19.50 to $79.50
Genuine Marble Monuments
Write for details and low prices
MARBLE PRODUCTS, Inc.
Llttlo Rock Box 167 Ark.
UNA and INAon the Hottest Day of the Year
GOINQ TO BE A
real scorcher.
isn't it mrs.
gray?, v\
V
terrible!... and i have mv
card club today i'm just
i going to order ice cream,
j / expensive - - but it's too hot
//to fuss with fancy dishes. -
wwy don't you
MAKE ice cream,
mrs. gray? with
that grand
refrigerator
of yours, its a
well, i've tried it- but i
didn't have much luck.
you ought to try it with
jell-o ice cream powder
— shouldn't she, una?
LOOK HOW MUCH
ONE PACKAGE
MAKES, MRS. GRAV
•-A WHOLE QUART
AND A HALF.'
AND
JELL-O
ICE CREAM
POWDER
ONLY
COSTS A
FEW CENTS.'
DON'T TELL
ME YOU
MADE THIS
GRAND
SMOOTH ICE
CREAM IN THE
REFRIGERATOR.'
BE A SPORT AND GIVE
US THE RECIPE.'
IT'S JUST A
LtTTLE SECRET
GOT FROM UNA
AND INA
WE COOI.PD EM OFF/ AND OURSELVES
TOO,'CAUSE JELL'O ICE CREAM POWDER
IS THE KIND THAT MAKES PLENTY*
ORDER ALL fa FLAVORS FROM
VOUR GROCER — MAKE ICS CP SAM
THIS VERY —
OAV.i
STRAWBERRY - VANILLA - CHOCOLATE
LEMON - MAPLE - UN FLAVORED
l
p->:
1U|'
IV./
'
A
?
t.
• , <V.,
I A.f TV., ar
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Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1938, newspaper, August 18, 1938; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth411454/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.