Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 8, 1936 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE 2
PALACIOS BEACON. PALACIOS. TEXAS
October 8,1936
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Airplane* at $750 Each
Perils of Pacifism
The “Mun of Calcium”
Improving Unman Breeil?
Fourteen concerns have offered to
build small airplanes to cost as little
as $750. That Is
k k ★ ★
Cu/iA&nt pi
IN REVIEW^rx
bij &Um/id ID.
France Devalues Franc;
Gold Standard Dropped
PRANCE nt last came to the con-
P elusion that it could no longer
support the franc and Premier Leon
Blum's government Ue :ldcd to
abandon the gold
standard and de-
valuate the franc to
between 4*4 and 5
cents. The Nether-
... . .lands, Latvia and
wdl be more ma- SwjtzcrlanCi immedi. ,
chines in the air ____.•__a 1
than there
automobiles
important avia-
tion news; the
bureau of air
commerce is to
be congratulated
on its effort to
encourage indi-
vidual tlying.
The day is com-
ing when there
Arthur Urlabune
ately determined to
follow suit. To save
the world from a
currency war, the
„„ . , .United States, Great k
000.000 airplane. |BHtain and France *
entered into a "gon-
the ground
More than
are ;
on I
now. |
25,-
Leon Blum
The exact
I nature of this agreemen. was not
• may sound like exaggeration.
But it sounded like exaggeration ! ^cnV agreement,
aome years ago when this wrlter j nalure o( lhis
published editorials urging citizens | revea]cd but ^ Unjtcd Statcs
not to spread tacks and cut glass iscd t0 employ jts 000,000,-
on roads, to puncture automobile 0Q0 stnbi|ization (und t0 head ofT
tires because before long, auto-i^ fcarcd Btrufiglc. Certain it is
mobiles would be used by workers ^ each of the three natlong re.
going to and from work. That pre- les thc rjgM tQ depart from the
diction came true. 'pact if and when its own interests
require such a course. An expected
Some one preparing u list of ten
things that Christians would and
would not do says:
"There would be no private
wealth; Jesus denounced great pos-
sessions as alien to His gospel, and
fatal to His kingdom.
“There would oe no poverty and
no war, because real Christians
would refuse to fight."
In this civilization, if Christians
outcome of the now general drop-
ping of the gold standard may be an
international conference for stabili-
zation of world currencies. This
probably would be held in Washing-
ton.
Blum called a special session
of the French parliament to pass
the necessary legislation, and his
plan was given grudging approval
by the chamber of deputies. Its
refused to fight, they would rapidly adoption by the chamber, where the
diminish in numbers and the Pacific
coast would be settled by Asiatics.
The founder of Christianity taught
that what was due to Caesar should
be rendered unto him.
If He were on earth now He
might say the same of organized
capital, knowing that it supplies, in
our complicated system, the possi-
bility of steady work.
Nobody, not even a clergyman,
can be positive ts to what Christ’s
commands would be if he returned
in this age of flying machines, auto-
mobiles, public schools and the
strange problem of too much of al-
most everything, combined with
want among many thousands of
families lacking food and the gov-
ernment wondering occasionally
what to do with millions of bushels
of wheat.
Before long you may have foot-
ball coaches feeding calcium to
their players. You know what we
call “a man of iron" is really the
“man of calcium."
The metal calcium in the blood,
in quantities that do not change, or
that change little, produces a steadi-
ness of nerve lacking in men with
a fluctuating calcium supply.
It is said that experiments made
on four young men at an eastern uni-
versity showed that a drop in cal-
cium brought on "moodiness, de-
pression and pessimism.”
If there is high calcium content in
the blood serum they are in a “hap-
py, cheerful, optimistic, emotional
state.”
But ask your doctor about it.
Don’t swallow calcium recklessly.
London thinks something should
be done about “more than 250,000
mental defectives,” and steriliza-
tion, on the German plan, is sug-
gested, on condition that the indi-
vidual consents. With such a law,
government sterilization agents
would have few customers.
Under one law suggested, the
health minister would order the
sterilization of "physically ailing
persons shown to be carriers of
transmissible disabilities."
The world is preparing to regu-
late and improve the human breed,
as it has long regulated and im
proved breeds of cattle, swine and
other creatures; a step in the di-
rection of uniformity that may not
be desirable.
One of the most enlightened edu-
cators in America tells teachers and
undergraduates that the important
thing is the general welfare, not the
individual welfare. An excellent
idea to put into the minds of young
people.
They should also be told that in-
dividual welfare and striving, with
selfishness back of it, is the founda-
tion of general welfare.
"popular front" has a big majority,
was taken for granted, but a fight
was expected in the senate. The
general project was divided into five
sections, as follows:
1. Fixes the new gold content of
the franc at a point between 43 and
49 milligrams of gold, prohibits the
export or import of gold, and cre-
ates an equalization fund.
2. Permits the requisition of gold
by the government, obliges individu-
al citizens to declare ‘heir gold
holdings, creates a tax on profits
made from devaluation of the franc,
and obliges market traders to re-
veal their operations in foreign ex-
change since September 20.
3. Creates a movable salary scale
and makes various readjustments
in the civil service, peusioi rates,
etc.
4. Provides for readjustment of
certain specific taxes such as those
on oil, coffee, pepper, tea and sugar.
5. Makes certain changes in the
debt structure of such public insti-
tutions as cities and communes ne-
cessitated by devaluation.
From the Chicago Journal of
Commerce is taken this plain state-
ment as to what France's action
means to the ordinary American
citizen:
"Reducing the amount of gold
represented by one franc will mean
that the average American will be
able to travel cheaper in France
than for the last two years. French
wines should be cheaper in this
country and women should be able
to buy French perfume for less.
That should be true of nearly every-
thing else that France exports to
the United States—unless this coun-
try hikes the tariff on French ex-
ports or French prices boom out of
proportion to devaluation. Indirect-
ly, franc devaluation may keep
Americans from war as the act may
be a wedge for currency stabiliza-
tion the world over and more broth-
erly relations between all nations'.
But don’t lose any sleep over it un-
less you are getting an income from
someone in France. In chat case,
since it will take more francs to buy
dollars, your income will be cut. Ev-
eryone should have an interest
in developing sound foreign trade
and if franc devaluation starts the
ball rolling in the right direction
the eventual hope for development
is free foreign exchange move-
ments. It's necessary for one coun-
try's money to be negotiable in all
capitals of the world if trade is to
flow freely. That’s the big goal.”
The baby wiggling its arms and
kicking its legs in the cradle is build-
ing up one more strong baby, for
its own sake, not for the general
welfare, to which it, nevertheless,
contributes. The man, concentrat-
ing on his career, and or. the care
and education of his children, has
chiefly in mind his career, children
and family. But he also is building
up the general welfare. Each tiny
coral builder worked only for its
own speck of coral, but beautiful
islands are the result.
After four years of study, wise
men discover that ideas are im-
pressed on the minds oi children
more deeply by moving pictures
than by reading books. Less than
four minutes is required to estab-
lish that fact.
O Kins FsaturM Syndloau, las*
* WNUBnrrios.
Russia Hotly Denir-s
Morgenthau’s Charge
SECRETARY OF THE TREAS-
3 URY MORGENTHAU excitedly
told the correspondents that soviet
Russia attempted to upset the "gen-
tlemen’s agreement" between the
United States, Great Britain and-
France. The state bank of Russia,
he said, moved to drive down the
price of the pound sterling by or-
dering the sale in New York of
1,000,000 pounds sterling “at any
price." He said he frustrated this
scheme by buying the pounds of-
fered with money from the Treas-
ury's stabilization fund.
The Soviet State bank declared
Morgenthau’s assertion as to the
bank’s purpose was without founda-
tion and a nonsensical invention;
that the transaction was an ordi-
nary banking operation. The secre-
tary’s statement, the bank contin-
ued, "appears to be an undignified
anti-soviet attack which is not based
on defense of international currency
equilibrium and the value of ster-
ling, but had some other aims.”
Considering the repeated charge
that President Roosevelt is being
supported for re-election by the
Communists, the "other nims"
seemed clearly discernible to op-
ponents of the administration.
Harry Woodring Named
Secretary of War
MARRY H. WOODRING was
LI named by President Roosevelt
to bo secretary of war, filling the
vacancy caused by the death of
George H. Dern. This is a recess
appointment, for the place had to
be filled within thirty days. It may
be the President will submit the
name of another man to be perma-
nent secretary early in the next
session of congress. Those most
often mentioned for the place are
Gov. Paul V. McNutt of Indiana
and Frank Murphy, commissioner
to the Philippines, who Is running
for governor of Michigan. Should
Murphy win in the election, Mc-
Nutt is expected to get the cabinet
post.
Woodring, who was Gov. Alf M.
Landon’s predecessor in office in
Kansas, hns been acting ns head
of the War department since Dern
died.
Spanish Fascists Capture
City of Toledo
EN. FRANCISCO FRANCO'S
vJ furious Spanish Fascists
reached the ancient city of Toledo
and drove out the government
troops with shell
and bayonet. The
rebels fought their
way through strong
defense and as they §
reached the center
of the city there
was a great shout f
from the Alcazar. Is
Out of that battered
citadel rushed the
ragged, battered
and half-starved ca-
dets who had with- Gen. Franco
stood a terrific siege for almost ten
weeks. This heroic garrison joined
the insurgents in charging the de-
fenders and finally the Socialist
troops scattered and fled south-
ward over the Tagus river. Their
way to Madrid was blocked by
Franco’s columns.
Fascist bombing planes made sev-
eral destructive raids on Bilbao,
killing a large number of the citi-
zens, smashing innumerable build-
ings and damaging two warships in
the harbor. The enraged govern-
ment sympathizers demanded that
Fascist hostages held in the city be
executed in reprisal, and finally a
mob of anarchist amazons swarmed
aboard a vessel on which ninny
hostages were kept and brutally
slaughtered 210 of them after put-
ting them to the torture. The sav-
age women were on their way to a
prison to kill CO woman hostages
when they were dispersed by civil
guards.
That the Spanish government re-
alizes its precarious situa.ion is evi-
denced by its proclamation ordering
Madrid to prepare for a siege, fol-
lowed by a manifesto calling on ev-
eryone, women as well as men, to
rally to the defense of the capital.
Spain Warns Nations
Not to Interfere
Q PAIN'S representative in the
League of Nations, Foreign Min-
ister Julio Alvarez del Vayo, sol-
emnly warned other nations mem-
bers of that body that they must not
interfere with the Spanish civil war.
which he said forbode a future war,
not between states but between po-
litical concepts.
“The bloodstained soil of Spain
already is the battlefield of world
war,” he contended in what other
delegates construed as an attack
on Germany, Italy and Portugal for
allegedly arming the Spanish Fas-
cist insurgents. He assailed the Eu-
ropean nonintervention agreement
as "direct and positive interven-
tion in behalf of the rebels" and
as a "blockade of the lawful Span-
ish government.”
British Foreign Minister Anthony
Eden, in a rather pessimistic ad-
dress, said his government stood
for an amendment to the league
covenant to enable the league to
intervene in the early stages of a
dispute. He also proposed: Negoti-
ation of regional pacts, separation
of the league covenant from post-
war treaties, measures to restore
international trade; inquiry, under
league auspices, into the question
of access to raw materials, and re-
duction and limitation of arma-
ments and publicity for armament
expenditures.
Minneapolis Strike of
Mill Workers Ends
A BOUT 1,800 mill workers of
Minneapolis returned to their
jobs, their strike having been set-
tled. It had lasted for a month and
had paralyzed the great milling in-
dustry of the city. The mill own-
ers agreed to recognize the right
of collective bargaining and to per-
mit employees to choose their own
representatives. Four hundred na-
tional guardsmen who had been
mobilized by Governor Petersen for
strike duty in event of an emergen-
cy were sent to their homes.
Ethiopian Delegates
Seated by League
riAILE SELASSIE couldn't whip
LI the Italians In the Ethiopian
war, but the fugitive emperor won
the battle if Geneva
and put Uei.i.o Mus-
solini's nose out of
Joint. After an ex-
citing debase, the
League of Nations
assembly vo ed, 39
to 4, to seat the
Ethiopian delega-
tion, now headed by
the emperor’s Amer-
ican ndvls’er. The .|||
negative votes were
cast by Hungary, Halle Selassie
Austria and Albania, all under the
thumb of Italy, and Ecuador. Ethi-
opia, Portugal and four otaei coun-
tries refrained from voting. Rather
surprisingly Great Britain and
France espoused the cause of Ethi-
opia. though It had been thought
they considered the co-operation of
Italy in the league of more Impor-
tance than justice to the African
realm. The heated debate was
closed when Capt. Anthony Eden,
British foreign minister, said:
“Enough of this nonsense! There
never has been any sufficient ground
to unseat the Ethiopian delegation."
Sir Samuel Honre, first urd of the
British admiralty, ndded to Italian
resentment against Great Britain by
declaring in London that the British
intended to maintain their suprem-
acy in the Mediterranean and would
modernize and consolidate their na-
val, military and air defenses be-
tween Gibraltar and the Suez ca-
nal "in the light of recent experi-
ence."
New Wage and Hour Law
Formally in Effect
-pHE Walsh-Healy act, setting
I wake and hour standards for
certain concerns doing business
with the.federal government, is now
formally in effect. The law was
passed just before the last congress
adjourned. Its chief provisions are
requirements that holders of gov-
ernment contracts which amount
to more than $10,000 must pay pre-
vailing wage rates and pay over-
time wages if their employees work
more than forty hours a week.
Oregon Towns Destroyed
by Forest Fires
r? OREST fires in southwestern
" Oregon worked terrible havoc,
and at this writing were still un-
controlled. The towns of Bandon
and Prosper were entirely de-
stroyed, eight persons losing their |
lives and 2,000 being left homeless. I
Thousands of refugees were shel- ,
tered in a tent city, and that, too,
went up in flames. Armies of for-
esters and volunteers were working
desperately to check the conflagra- j
tions and rescue those in peril. The ;
property damage, including de- J
stroyed timber, may run above
$2,000,000.
American Legion Names
Colmery Its Commander
\T ETERANS of two great con- '
V fiicts, the World war and the |
Civil war, held their annual con-
ventions, the America’ Legion
meeting in Cleve- i
land and the Grand
Army of the Repub-
lic in Washington, j
The legion elected
Harry W. Colmery, |
a lawyer of Topeka, |
Kan., as its nation-
al commander and
awarded next year's
convention to New i
York city. Mayor
La Guardia person- i
ally led the Gotham
delegation in the big
parade. This delegation included
an impressive display of police and
fire department bands, motorcycle
squads and mounted officers
In its business sessions the legion
adopted a resolution asking the
United Stales governmen t with- ;
draw its recognition of soviet Rus-
sia. Other resolutions approved
called for a 90 per cent reduction
in immigration quotas and deporta- '
tion of all aliens who are anarch-
ists, communists, or affiliated with
the Third Internationale; the remov- ;
al from public relief rolls of aliens
who have not applied for citizen-
ship; universal application of the
fingerprinting system in this coun-
try. and an investigation o methods
used in disseminating “subversive
doctrines.”
C. H. Williams Ruhe of Pitts-
burgh, who ran away from home 72
years ago to join the Union army
when lie was only a lad of fifteen,
was unanimously elected com-
mander-in-chief of the G. A. R. und
Madison, Wis., was named us the
encampment city for 1937.
I*
Harry W.
Colmery
Japan Lands Marines
in Shanghai
r?OUR Chinese gunmen in Shang-
” hai killed one Japanese marine
and wounded two others, and with-
in a few minutes a Japanese land-
ing party more than 2,000 strong
had occupied much of the Hongkew
section of the international settle-
ment. The Japanese naval com-
mander declared martial law in
that area and troops stopped buses
and street cars In the search for
the slayers. Tanks, armored cars,
light artillery and machine gun
squads poured through the streets
and on into Chapel, the Chinese dis-
trict that was the scene of furious
fighting between the Japanese and
the Chinese Nineteenth route army
in 1932.
© Now York Po.it.—WNU servlet.
Baseball Immortals
Recall Days When
Game Was Rough
DALLPLAYERS today — unlike
D (hose who starred through thc
last century from 1876 to 1926—must
ever reserve true feelings from pub-
lic gaze. They sit there 111 thc
shaded dugout, wishing somebody
would get something started in the
Old Timers’ game.
Casey Stengel comes along, shoul-
ders bowed under the toughest man-
agerial job in baseball, head carried
with proper pride because he has
done his duty so well. A stout man
attired in a sports costume that is a
symphony of soft brown shades am-
bles up. They talk, unmindful of
onlookers tingling with anticipation
of conflict and the knowledge that
this is another celebration of the
birthday of the national game.
“ ’Member when I first saw you,
Babe," says Stengel. “We were
playing an exhibition In Baltimore
and you were Just a long, lean,
gangling kid. I played back a bit
further than I ordinarily would for
a pitcher, but. after you’c taken a
cut or two, you slammed one over
my bead.
"When I came back to the bench
Robby, who never liked to lose one
and was particularly
1 anxious to win in
Baltimore anyhow,
hopped all over.
'Hell,' I says, ‘that
was only a bush
league pitcher and
H -.’ Well, sir, that
;■ Robby really gets
mad then. ’Lissen,
young fellow,’ he
says to me. ‘You get
that stuff right outta
r-isev Sten eel your mind’ When
Casey Stengel yQU see a guy take a
cut like that, that ain’t no pitcher
even if he misses. That’s-!' ”
A sturdy, elderly man attired in
Pittsburgh uniform, has seen them
and is coming across the field as
fast as bowed legs will carry him.
•'Every time I see you you get ine
arguing again, Hans,” says Babe.
"You were a swell fielder and of
course you could outhit him, but I
never could decide whether you or
Heinic was the greatest Wagner I’ve
ever seen. That Heinie was a swell
fielder. When I was pitching for the
Red Sox we used to have a signal to
catch runners off second base.
"We’d count one, two, three, then
wheel and throw Heinie’d be right
on top of the bag and we’d nearly
always get the runner."
“Boys sure were tough,” Inter-
rupts Stengel. "Remember, when
you were a rookie and tried to get
a turn at the plate, how those vet-
erans really would pour it ou you.”
“Sure, sure." says Wagner. "And
if you forced yourself in and got a
turn up there, like as not they’d
break up all your bats. ’
"Yeah," it is the Babe’s turn.
“When I joined the Red Sox I got
In at noon and
pitched my first
game at 3 o'clock.
Won it, 2 to 1. Next
day 1 was warming
up and I let a ball
through and it sort
of nudged Smokey
Joe Wood. Joe threw
one back and If I
hadn’t ducked just
in time it'd have
brained me.
“So 1 challenged Babe Ruth
him but somebody
stopped It then and after the game
somebody stopped it again. So I
told Bill Carrigan, who was man-
ager, that I had something to say I
wanted everybody to hear. So Bill
says go ahead and 1 say I don’t care
much for anybody on the club and
I’d be willing to take them on one at
a time.
“Well, nobody come on and after
that I never did have a bit of trou-
ble on that team."
"Quite a man that Carrigan,"
says Stengel. "Remember the time
I first came up to bat against you
birds in the ’16 series? Carrigan's
catching back there.
“ ‘You look like you might make
a pretty fair hitter for a young fel-
low,’ he cons me. 'Stand up there
nice and everything like that. Don’t
want to make any mistakes about
you. Guess we’ll sort of have to
pitch to you for a while and find
out-.’ Wham! I drop to the
dirt just in time. Ernie Shore’s out
there pitching and he’s thrown one
right at my head.
But now more and more old tim-
ers have swarmed Into the dugout.
Burleigh Grimes, wearing a broad'
rimmed black hat as befits the man-
ager of the Louisville Colonels;
Charley Hargreaves, Al Mamaux,
Frank DeHaney, Mickey Welch, Ar-
te Latham, Chick Frasier.
NOT IN THE BOX SCORE:
A spat which will make the Na-
tional Open at Baltusrol (where a
reporter got himself sued for 100
G’s) seem like a pink tea soon will
edify the galfing public. This is bc-
eausc the ordinarily well-meaning
Garden City Golf elub has been so
poorly advised as to Issue a thin-
ly veiled edlet eonecrnlng reporters
assigned to report the National Am-
ateur. The press luggs have been
Informed that If they want to get
thc news they ean eomt arouml to
a new servant's entrance and like
It . . . During llie five years when
Joe McCarthy managed them the
Cubs never played a Sunday double-
header. The Sabbath turnstiles
kept rattling so briskly during that
time there was no need of trying
new money-raising devices.
After making faces at one another
for several weeks Jack Curley and
Mike Jacobs have agreed to con-
tinue promoting wrestling at the
Hippodrome. The rift in the firm
came when numerous customers
squawked about paying their money
to a sports emporium which opened
with such a woeful affair as that
Lewis-Wyckoff mat thing. The two
eminent gents made up when a
peacemaker pointed out that the
sad show reaily was the state ath-
letic commission’s child, the boxing
bosses having ordered the malch to
be made and to be held in a down-
town arena . . . Watch for another
Ohio State speedster next year. A
diminutive white sophomore quar-
ter-miler named Harley Howells is
the prospective Buckeye Bullet . . .
Thirty years or so ago Colonel E.
R. Bradley had a gee-gee which
won a heat or two and was named
(of all things) Captain Hugh Brad-
ley.
Strange Things Happen
Even in Football
More things you should know
about this game called football.
(With grateful acknowledgment to
a gentleman who lives in thc Juni-
ata Branch of Altoona, Pa., and re-
quests that his name shall not be
used.)
George Washington U., Washing-
ton, D. C., plays teams from seven
different states but makes no trips.
St. Mary’s college. California, has
a student enrollment of 476—and a
stadium seating 65,000; Oglethorpe
"U,” Atlanta. Ga„ has an enroll-
ment of 500—and a stadium seat-
ing 45.000.
In 1872 a football game between
Columbia and Rutgers was called on
account of darkness.
In 1921 Cornell defeated Dart-
mouth, 59 to 7—after leading by
but a single touchdown at the half.
Walter Camp once placed a Ne-
braska player ou his All-American
team who had graduated the year
before.
In 1916 Bill Fincher of the Georgia
Tech team booted eighteen consecu-
tive goals after touchdowns in a
game that ended 222 to 0 against
Cumberland.
Pat O’Dea drop-kicked 62 yards
for Wisconsin in 1896 against North-
western—in a snowstorm.
Homer Hazel of the 1923 Rutgers
team kicked off to Villanova to
open the game. A few seconds lat-
er he recovered a fumble—scoring
on his own kickcff.
Walter Camp played an the Yale
team six years; Foster Sanford
played on the same team two years
before even entering the institution.
The game of tcotball was almost
banished in 1897 in Georgia due to
the fatal injury to Vonalbade Gam-
mon of the Georgia squad.
Bradsbury Robinson made an 87-
yard pass in a St. Louis-Kansas
game In 1906. In 1920 “Brick" Mul-
ler of Ohio State snapped the ball
for a mere 70 yaras.
Thad Brock of Davlasou college’s
(N. C.) 1929 team made a run or
102 yards - yet failed to score
against Duke. He had attempted to
kick from eight yards behind his
goal line, changed his mind, ran.
and was downed -n Duke’s six-yard
stripe.
Woodrow Wilson was the first
Princeton football coach to defeat
both Harvard and Yale; he origi-
nated the double pass and was re-
sponsible for the modern eligibility
rules.
The outstanding David - Goliath
football game is still Centre's con-
quest of Harvard in 1921. That was
back when "Unk" Moran coached
Centre. His last coaching assign-
ment was at Catawba college, Sal-
isbury, N. C., two years ago.
Centre college was one of the first
Southern teams to defeat a North-
ern team on Northern soil.
Earle Clark of the Colorado col-
lege team scored all the points for
both sides in 1929, the score stand-
ing 3 to 2 at the finish for a Colorado
victory over Denver.
A University of North Carolina
player, Ike Norwood, in 1908 played
in the first game he had ever seen
and then played in every game dur-
ing the season except one.
* • •
Picked Up Here and There—Ru-
mormongers whisper the only rea-
son Gene Venzke does not turn pro
is that nobody mentions the sort of
money Jesse Owens expects to
make. Also that If open track
meets become any sort of success
Gene immediately will hop on the
band wagon but that, meanwhile,
he doesn’t dare chirp about such
things for fear of getting in wrong
with the badge-wearing poo-bahs.
Gene, by the way, now carries a
cane. It la a broken and discarded
javelin he picked up on the Berlin
Olympic field.
Cars in U. S.
More than 70 per cent of the
world’s motor vehicles are owned
and operated in the United States, ^
where motor fuel Is loss than one-
fourth os costly as In some foreign
countries.
PAIH IN I
NEARLY DROVE
HER CRAZY
Got Quick
RELIEF
By Rubbing
Muscles were so
sore she could
hardly touch them. Used Hamlins Wizard
Oil and found wonderful relief. Just
rubbed it on and rubbed it in. Thousand!
say Hamlins Wizard Oil works wonders
for stiff, aching muscles. Why suffer? Get
a bottle for speedy comfort. Pleasant odor.
Will not stain clothes. At all druggists.
HAMLINS
WIZARD OIL
For MUSCULAR AC HES and PAIN S
Duu to RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA
LUMBAGO CHEST COLDS
Their Inspiration
There are many “self - made”
women, too. They have followed
the career they wanted to.
T‘ 'D "ap-Bru.WWiuto, J
JUST A-‘ h*#*
DASH IN C-JATHIAST^
OR SPREAD ON ROOSTS
Serving Others
He best lives who feels
noblest and acts the best.
rpo regain lost weight Is a simple
A matter when certain bodily func-
tions are restored to normal. Of fore-
most importance is the stimulation of
digestive juices In the stomachtomake
better use of the food you eat...and
restoration of lowered red-blood-cells
to turn the digested food into firm
flesh. S.S.S. Tonic does just this.
Forget about underweight worries
If you are deficient in stomach diges-
tive juices and red-lilood-cclls... just
take S.S.S. Tonic immediately before
each meal. Shortly you will be de-
lighted with the way you will feel...
your friends will compliment you ob
the wny you will look.
S.S.S.Tonlc is cspeclallydeslgned to
build sturdy health...its remarkable
value is time tried and scientifically
proven.. .that’s why it makes you feel
like yourself again. Available at any
drug store. © S-S-S. Co.
Quite Trying
Modesty has a hard row to hoe
when it meets impudence.
5$ AND 10$ JARS
THE 104 SIZE CONTAINS 3'/jTIMES AS MUCH
AS THE St SIZE - WHY PAY MORE?
MOROUNE
IT I SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JELUf
face BrokenOuf?*
Start today to relieve the soreness—
aid healing—and improve your akin,
«s^with the aafe medication in m
Resinol
And Out of Turn
Passions and prejudices speak
in a loud voice.
Strength During
MIDDLE LIFE
Strength Is extra-important for
women going through the change of
life. Then the body needs the very
best nourishment to fortify it against
the changes that are taking place.
In such cases, Cardul has proved
helpful to many women. It In-
creases the appetite and aids diges-
tion, favoring more complete trans-
formation of food Into living tissue,
resulting In Improved nutrition and
building up and strengthening of
the whole system.
WNU—P
41—3®
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Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 8, 1936, newspaper, October 8, 1936; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth724416/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.