Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 19, 1936 Page: 7 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
March 20, 1936
PALACIOS BEACON. PALACIOS. TEXAS
PAGE 7
Tough Jake
Chineie Boys Learn Embroidering.
Dy JAMES F. GREENE
© McClure Newspaper Syndicate*
WNU Bui vice.
UK’S tough. That Johnny llartl-
•I* gun, 1 nioiin. Tlmt'M whut li«
la nil right. Plenty tough.
He weight* nhout two hundred and
fifty pomidH, Maybe more, lint lie's
never out of condition, really. Ills
hamllke lists, broad shoulders, thick
hull-llke neck, narrow mean look-
ling eyes, red bulbous nose and over-
sized mouth set In u large shaggy
I head would scare a more coura-
geous Individual.
If the appenrance of Johnny Hart-
Igan alone didn't scare you, you’d
do well to look Into Ids record. At
twenty-five a contender for
Poultry
30Y BEANS MAKE
POULTRY RATION
Meal Is Satisfactory Pro-
tein Supplement.
Alp. Poultry Kxtonalon Spa
Unlv*»r*lt!
Pea-Shooters ns Dueling
Weapons Was Twain’s Idea
Mark Twain once found himself
a second In n dud und It wns up
to him to suggest the weapons to
he used.
Ills first suggestion was pen-shoot-
er* ut n mile's distance. Hut as no-
body would get hurt they wouldn't
know how the duel mine out. The
next suggestion, axes at one foot's
distance and ruled out as altogether
too serious. Eventually he got them
to accept small pistols at a compara-
tively great distance.
DUTY OF BEING HAPPY
There Is no duly wo so much nn-
derrnte ns the duty of being happy,
lly being happy, we sow anonymous
benefits upon the world, which re-
main unknown even to ourselves, or
when they are disclosed surprise no-
body so much ns the benefactor.
ir It. n
Unlvvri
WNU Survtoe.
Soy bean oil meal Is n sntlsfnc- Rrvvqt PIRI cl
tory protein supplement for the DUioI UIKL.O-
poultry rations If the ration also Rend the Grape Nuts ad In another
contains sufficient mineral. jcolumn of this paper und lenrn how
For growth und egg production Idzzy T>enn Winners and
soy bean oil meal, supplementedjw^n valuable free prizes. Adv.
the 'with sufficient minerals of the right
Prepared by National Geographic Society,
Waehlnston, U. C.—WNU Service.
A MHHICA'S first foreign trade
ns u new-born Republic was
*• with China. From A.......
aboard ltrltlsli vessels Imd come
the teu which was dumped over
board at the famous Itoaton ten par-
ty. Within six months uftor Eng
land had accepted the Independence
of the Thirteen Colonies, our own
first luerchunt vessel, the newly
christened Empress of China, was
-'Vfrendy on the high sens, bound for
.'Canton—and ten. Both Canton and
BIucuo then figured prominently
oarly American trade.
One can picture the feverish nc
tlvlty of New York harbor during
those eurly days of 1784 when the
little ytKMoD ship was reaching the
final stages of her overhauling und
was being loaded with 30 tons of
ginseng (Chinn’s “dose of Immor-
tality"), 2,000 fur skins, 1.270 cam-
lets, and small quantities of cotton
lead, and pepper.
Then came sailing day, Washing-
ton's birthday. The departing Em-
press of China voiced a salute of
13 guns; the battery responded
with 12.
In Ills pocket Captain Green car-
ried a sea letter, penned by the
young congress and addressed to
the "Most Serene, Most I'ulssnnt,
High, Illustrious, Noble, Honorable,
Wise and Prudent, Lords, Emper-
ors, Kings, Itepubllcks, Princes,
Dukes, Earls, Barons, Lords, Bur-
gomasters, Councillors, as also
Judges, Officers, Justlclnns, and Ite-
gents of all good cities and places,
whether ecclesiastical or secular,
who shall see these patents or hear
tliein road.”
Thirteen months Inter, after four
* months at Whampoa, anchorage for
-Canton, the sturdy ship was hack
in New York, her holds filled with
403,000 pounds of ten, 002 pieces of
chinnwnre, 400 pieces of silk, 42 nan-
keens, and 2,700 pounds of cassia.
Her successful voyage signaled
the expansion of our merchant ma-
rine. Tiny ships, manned by youth-
ful American sailors, were soon
prowling the eastern seas, beating
the monsoons up the China coast,
and cluttering the Canton harbor.
The China trade wns oh.
■ Swift Growth of Trade.
Homes in Salem nnd Boston, and,
<0 a lesser degree, In New York and
riilhulclphht, became veritable mu-
seums of Chinese goods nnd curios.
In 17IH) the Chinn trade represent
«d approximately one-seventh of
our foreign Imports. Within nnoth
«r fifty years our vessels were
bringing home nhout l.r>,000,000
pounds of ten annually. This trade
also gave birth to the swift clipper
ships.
American enterprise, however,
-came to Chinn much Inter than that
of European Buttons; Tor, he It re-
membered, the disappointing new
continent's wildernesses, inhnhltcd
by savage redskins, appeared on the
horizon when Old world adventur-
ers sought Chinn’s riches by sailing
westward.
But wlmt of the China coast to-
day, the lodestar which attracted
those early explorers?
Macao today Is a transplanted
city, a bit of medieval Europe
tucked In a Chinese setting. The
pink, blue, nnd other pastel-colored
buildings that line the water front
A and dot tlie hills up to the walls of
historic Monte fortress, the weath-
ered churches, nnd government of-
fices are Portuguese. True, the ma-
jority of shops are hung with chro-
matic signs bearing Chinese Ide-
ographs, for the city's population
Is 97 per cent Chinese, but the ban-
ner that finals over the tiny area
of little more than eleven square
miles Is the red and green emblem
of Portugal.
Here It wns that early In the Six-
teenth century Portuguese traders,
extending the oriental sen route
which Vasco da Gninn had carved
around Cape of Good Hope to India,
first opened commercial relations
with opulent Cathay. Here they
founded the pioneer European set-
tlement In the Far East and held
the monopoly on Chinese trade un-
til the Eighteenth century.
In 1357 the Portuguese received
conditional cession of tills territory
.fbecuuse of their assistance to the
Chinese authorities In an attempt
to subdue the pirates that Infested
the const anil the river approach
to Canton. Pirates still lurk Just
around the Island corners to {Bun-
der hapless vessels, and the Por-
tuguese still control the rocky pen-
insula nnd two nearby Islands,
■yhere they gained their first foot-
hold.
Macao Still Important.
Here came the Dutch to be re-
pelled by Portuguese battleships
And Buiy
There are “sell-made" women, too;
heavwelght boxing crown. At twen ' kinds. Is about equal to meat scrap!
arm of the Enst India company Cv-slx lie retired nnd became a hoot- nnd fish meal, somewhat better tlmr
stretched across the sea to reach logger. He wns known as a square- tankage, gluten feed nnd cottonseed nnd they always seem to he In Imsl-
Into Macao's rich trade pocket. To shooter to the mob, and many of Ids 'meal, and not quite as good us drj ness.
all early sea trade with Canton, rivals learned that It paid to he on milk products. ,
Macao served as gateway. Even the level with Johnny. j Both soy beans, fed w hole 01
Hie Empress of china laid to slop "Tough Jake" they cnlled him. ground, and soy bean oil meal rausl
here to get the official Chinese per- He liked the name and the mob of ,be supplemented with sulllelent min j
inlt before she could proceed to rowdies. It wns Ills home, there ends. The minerals needed are cal j
Wlmmpoa anchorage. by the waterfront, nnd rich ns he clmn, phosphorus, sodium and chlo-j
How truly the little possession became during the golden era ofjrlne. These can he supplied by s
served as the China outpost Is re- prohibition, lie never forsook the |mineral mixture containing 2 poi
voided by reading the epitaphs district, lie Isn't rich now, for you cent hone meal, 1 per cent ground
limestone und 1 per cent salt.
For laying liens the following
tnasli containing soy boon oil men
Ims been found satisfactory: Kit
pounds ground yellow corn, Ifif
pounds wheat bran, 100 pound!
carved on some of the tombstones can’t make a fortune ns a bookie,
In the little Protestant cemetery, nnd, you see, Johnny Is taking bets
Names or gnllormen 11ml merchants on the galluses. He Is making n llv-
from Bouton, Salem, und British Big. though, nnd a fairly good one
ports appear frequently. Here, too, at that.
rest Robert Morrison, (lie noted It happened at Tide's Tap. There
British missionary; Edmund Rob- were only six customers at the ground oats, 50 pounds meat scrap
erts, special diplomatic agent of the time nnd Johnny wns buying beer 50 pounds soy henn oil niciil, If
U. S. A. to several Asiatic courts; for four of them, Including him-!pounds alfalfa leaf meal, 10 pound!
Tliomns Waldron, first consul of self. Johnny Hartlgan never drank'steamed bone meal, 5 pottndi
the United States for Hong-Kong, nlone, and It was "drinks for the ground limestone or oyster slid
nnd others who featured in the house" when lie showed up at I’ete’s laud 5 pounds salt. The grain mix
early Intercourse with China. jTap. Two customers, a man and tnre suggested is one-half corn nnc
Macao lias lost much of Its cow- a woman, with an aura of respect-
mcrclal luster since Uong-Kofg ability that helled their appearance
sapped Its vitality; yet today Its at the beer stulie, sat In one cor-
COLDS £ COUGHS
Due to Coldt
STOPPED-
PREVENTED!
Tima
Tested
RESPIRATORY
Will Do It
# A Doctor’s Prescription that is guar-
anteed in the treatment of COLDS,
COUGHS, due to cold*. BRONCHITIS
and similar affections.
Get it from your dealer or send 11.00 for
large size bottle.
EMULSIO CO., Inc.
106 S. Alamo San Antonio, Tex.
FREE!
Sample of New
Pile Ointment
Hospital tests prove that Sua vinol,
a wonderful new ointment for
piles and rectal itches, quickly
relieves discomfort and promotes
healing. If you suffer from piles,
we want you to find out for
yourself how Suavinol can help
you—free of charge.
Tear out this ad and mail it with
your name and address and tho
name and address of your drug-
gist to Schoonmaker Laboratories,
Caldwell, N.J. Sample of Suavinol
will come to you in plain wrapper.
For Hardware, Mill.
Oil Well Supplies
Automobile Tires,
Tubes Accessor i es
F. W* Heitmann Co.
Houston, Texas
CLASSIFIED ADS
brrui
drear
und Fortune THlinr llook. All your
■nfl Interpreted. How to tell fortunes
by cards, tea < up. etc. Send ^Sc to M. D.
SMITH. 1.17:1 Howard st.. Ctiiesco. 111.
f»0 Household Nrcmitjr Formulas with In-
| formation how to manufacture and sell
I your own products. All for II. KAPHA
riCODlXT8. ‘.'8ill N. Sprinelleld, ( hicaco.
one-quarter each of wheat and ontil
nr barley.
Whole soy beans are not very sat
volume of commerce Is greater than ner aloof. They were outsiders nnd Isfactory, since they contain u largt
amount of oil
which makes It nee
Be
in early years, although Insignlfi- |Tough Jake did not condescend to
cant In proportion to (lie Inlnl speak to them,
trade now carried on In tills region. I When the telephone rang Johnny
With recent harbor constructions Hartlgan stirred n hit nnd glanced
at the cost of some $2,300,000 and towards the booth In the corner, j during warm weather,
a reclamation project of 130 acres, Often Ids customers called him at j°f whole soy beans ns poultry feet
It again makes a hid for greater nt- the Tap in the evenings. Then some- , does not measure up to that of com
tentlnn. .limes there wns n cute little trick i merclnl soy bean oil meal. An
Fish, firecrackers, opium, and on tlie wire making a touch or ask- 'other factor to he considered when
gambling nre now Macao's chief Ing for a date. He wns not dlsap- beans form a large part of the ru
stock In trade. The Important, col- pointed, for the bnrkeep motioned
orful fishing Industry employs to him. He lifted Ills ponderous
some 2,0(10 Junks und 3(1,000 men frame nnd swaggered to the booth.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff -StoptHtlr Failing
Imparts Color and
Bounty to Gray and Faded Hair
ity to Gray and Faded Ho
60c and 11 00 at Drosgiats.
Hlacrvx Chctn. Wkt.. Fstehogae. N 1
essnry to feed them sparingly.
Cause Of tills high flit Content FLORESTON SHAMPOO- Ideal tor a«e in
ground beans may become rnnclc conn«tionwUiP«ker',H.irB»i»m.M»ke»the
* , .hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at druff-
1 he VHlU< gitu. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchoyue, N. Y.
Ride the Interurban
[HOUSTON
from to
GALVESTON
Frequent Service
KAHN KXTRA MONEY seMInir dellcloua
California Fruit Product. No experience
needed. Send 25 cent^fo^sales kit whle
Includes trial box. MIDWEST SAI FS < oH
HLDG.. DALLAS. TEXAS.
TO WOMEN EVERYWHERE
The Franco-American Hygienic Co.,
Chicago, the home of CTTK.IKNF, the
famous night cream, wants women repre-
sentatives to sell their fine line of Tuilet
Preparations and Household Products,
e Old reliable Company Splendid chance u»
develop Interesting and substantial sales
HI CHASE,
Chicago, III.
develop Interesting and substantial sales
profits. AddretM NKLLIC BLYTHK CHASE,
17SO South Michigan Avenue. Chk
and women.
If rpcent years have brought lit-
tle change to Macao, tlm same can-
not lie said of Canton. The ancient
southern metropolis has been un-
dergoing long-needed beauty treat-
ments, nnd from It a new Canton is
emerging. Little more than a (lec-JPr of beer,
ude ago Canton presented much
the same appearance ns when the
dipper ships were lading their car-
goes from Its musty gmlowns. It
was Chinese—deliberately, stubborn-
ly Chinese.
Today old suspicions have been
''Hello," lie fairly yelled nt the
mouthpiece. “Who? I don’t getchn.
Speak up now. Speak up. Oh, It’s
you. Is It? What?"
The Imrkeep rattled his glasses
nervously, nnd In wiping the ma-
hogany dry knocked over n contain-
For a moment the
tlon Is that flocks do not relish tilt
taste of beans until accustomed It
this type of feed.
Stone Age Heater Good
to Warm Poultry House
Michigan State college men ltavt
gone all the way back to the Stoni
age to find an economical way tr
heat poultry houses nnd smni
Tittone
PUTS THE FARM
ON EOS
minimized. The Bund, formerly a ness In Martlgnn's eyes as he again
muddy track lined with rat-trap'snarled at the mouthpiece before
crash broke the tenseness of the I greenhouses. The work litis beer
room. Everyone was on edge, for
It wns evident that Tough Jake was
displeased. A slight sound might
set hint off on a rampage, nnd no
one In Pete’s Tup dared rouse his
Ire. There was a look of fishy eoltl-
hulldlngs. Is now a wide, well paved
thoroughfare fronted with modern
eight and nine-story hotels, depart-
ment stores, commercial houses,
and an up-to-date custom house.
Narrow streets nnd alleys, accessi-
ble only to the traffic of wheel-
harrows and sedan chairs, have
given way to wide streets to such
an extent that tour conductors find
difficulty In playing up the ‘‘tortu-
ous channels" of old Canton.
Canton a. It la Today.
The visitor who a few yeurs ago
wrote that “you have to choose your
place to knock the ashes off your
cigar, or they will alight In a dish
of soy or dried duck, on the one
hand, or n pile of wonderfully
wrought silk embroidery on the oth-
er,” could now whisk through CO
tulles of wide, paved streets In one
of the thousand or more motor cars
that honk their way through the
city. Thousands of buildings were
razed and much of the old wall de-
molished to provide for these mod-
ern nrterles of hustling Canton.
The great tire of 1927 also assisted
In clearing ground for these sweep-
ing changes.
‘Everything new originates In
Canton," say the Chinese. I'ollt-
lonlly there Is much truth to this
statement. Here Is where Sun Ynt
Sen found followers for Ills three
principles of Kunmlntnng. By pop-
ular subscription, a modern monu-
ment and memorial auditorium, In
which new political Ideas nre horn
nnd talked Into vigorous activity,
has been built as one of Canton's
forms of recognition of the late
leader.
Two new bridges are being con-
structed across the Cliu Klang
(Pearl river), linking Canton city
with Ilonan Island. Some of the
old temples have been converted
Into school rooms and the Can-
tonese hoys and girls enjoy tennis,
linndhull, nnd basketball on courts
laid out In the ancient enclosures.
All of the old, however, Ims not
disappeared. In narrow lanes one
finds secluded restaurants selling
snake meat, served in broth. Else-
where men and boys work elaborate
embroidery patterns on silk In half-
lighted rooms. Nearby a boy Is
weaving magic colors In shimmer-
ing silk on a crude loom, Ills dingy
cubicle Illuminated for night work
by a single smoky oil flume.
In other nlleys one watches labor-
ers cut and polish jade rings nnd
bracelets on primitive font-treadle
machines nnd marvel nt the skill
with which they shape the resistive
stone. Here Is the center of the
jade workmanship that has attained
and the Monte guns; later, the long j world-wide renown.
him.
"Didn’t I tell yon not to he both-
ering me. I got business to 'tend
to, see? I don't want no old dame
bawlin' on my shoulder. What yuh
say?"
Tough Jake’s face grew livid. A
deep (lush rose back of Ids door
knob ears. His voice boomed louder
than ever. Hartlgan wns furious, no
doubt of that. "I said," he thun-
dered, "that If I hail anything to
do with It, It’s my business, see.
When I feel like doing anything, I
do It, and all your bawling won't
help a bit. Get that, straight an’
don't bother me no more."
He hung up the receiver with a
resounding crash and strode to his
table. His cronies viewed him with
awe. Finally one gulped at bit and
said:
“What wns It, Jake? Some dirty
business?"
The waterfront lion flushed a
deep crimson and glared.
“Nnw," lie stated at last. "Just
an old dame.”
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Randall, the
middle-aged couple who had been
sitting In the corner nt Pete’s Tap.
cast one hurried glance nt Johnny
Hartlgan and scurried for the door.
Mr. Itandnl! wns a broker and loan
shark nnd lived In the respectable
section of the city. When their
ear had broken down nenr the wn-
terfront, Mr. Randall had chosen
the tap room ns the only place to
sit and wait until the necessary re-
pairs were made, lie was glad to
get away.
“Isn’t It dreadful," said Mrs. Ran-
dall Indignantly, "a beast like that
living In our city."
“Yes," Mr. Randall agreed, with
a careful glance about him. "I'll
speak to the mayor personally about
lliese slums."
In the sparsely populated sec-
tion outside the city limits nn old
woman with tears of gratitude shin-
ing brightly In her eyes, hung up
a phone receiver with great effort.
She was over eighty and alone in
the world. She knelt nenr the win-
dow nnd raised her withered hnnds.
"Dear God," she said, “please pro-
tect Johnny Hartlgan nnd bless Ids
sole. I thank you, dear God, nnd
Johnny for saving my home from
Mr. Randall. May you never forget
that Johnny paid my mortgage and
saved the only thing I have left."
She rose nnd straightened her
bent frame. With a look of defl-
nnce on her face she said:
"Mr. Rnndnll, to be sure. Bad
'cess to ’uni.”
Did I say lie was tough? Sure,
that's him. Tough Jake.
done where winter temperature!
make heat In laying houses profit
able, observes the Country Home,
Their heater Is made of nn einptj
oil drum and a pile of stones. A
fire door Is cut In one end of tin
drum and a hole for the smoke pipe
In the other, and the oil drum li
placed on its side on a bed of sunc
or masonry. A blanket of stone!
from 12 to 18 inches thick Is thee
placed around the sides and ovei
the top of the drum. The stove li
fired with wood; when the stone!
nhout the oil drum become thor
oiighly heated, they will radlat!
warmth for hours. In temperature!
as low as 30 degrees below zero, ll
Ims not been necessary to fire thi
stove later than nine o'clock ai
night to furnish ample heat In tlit
poultry house until the next morn
Ing. One winter's experience It
heating a 10-by-19-foot greenhousi
was also entirely successful.
Trapnesting Pullets
Pullets do not lay with such mn
chlne-llke regularity ns to enublt
the trapnest to murk desirable bird!
at each month's closing. The num
her of eggs In or ut a given time li
hut one Indication of proapectlvi
value. Early maturity, or produc
tlon at a comparatively eurly age
is nil Indication of good yearlj
production, though this should hi
accompanied by good weight am
should not he at the expense ol
size and tiesli. A high rate of pro
duction Is also u murk of value, at
It Is commonly accompanied by gone
annual production. These Indlen
lions may he observed In the first
three or four months of laying
The evidences of vigor and nhllltj
to maintain weight during produc-
tion nre also to be considered It
culling, which, after nil, cannot hi
conducted upon a cut-and-drled
formula, with number of eggs laid
within a given time the oulj
criticism.
Poultry Lore
One hundred pullets should eat
about 25 pounds of feed dally.
* • *
Water Is nn Important factor Ir
the production of winter eggs.
* • *
Thinness In poultry Indicates luck
of proper feed or Inability to digest
what they eat.
* • •
An older nnd more popular dlst
than either peacock, goose, or tur
key, Is the homely duck.
* « *
In the Canton, Chinn, distrlcl
there are duck farms that carry at
many ns 3,000 ducks on one-third
of an acre.
Good fattening feeds for geest
Include rolled hurley, ground corn
bran nnd a mash of ground barlej
and alfalfa meal.
• • •
FIRESTONE
GROUND GRIP TIRES
SPEED UP FARM WORK—MAKE
IT EASIER—MORE PROFITABLE
Harvey S. FIRESTONE pioneered and
Firestone engineers developed a pneumatic tire
which is the greatest contribution in recent years
to more efficient and economical farming. Farmers
using Ground Grip Tires on their tractors are
saving more than 25% in time and fuel.
On all farm implements the Ground Grip
Tire has proved of practical time-saving and
money-saving value. Wagons, combines, mowers,
sprayers, grain drills require up to 50% less draft
to pull them. Hauling is speeded up. Plowing is done with
more uniform depth. Vines and roots are not injured or
cut, allowing closer planting and greater yield. Ground
Grip Tires do not pack the soil and give greater protection
to equipment.
It requires only a minimum investment to put all your
equipment on Ground Grip Tires. With Firestone’s new
demountable rim and cut-down method of applying the
rim to the original implement wheels, one set of tires will
fit several implements. Tires can be changed quickly
from one implement to another—you need only two or
three sets for practically all your implements.
Firestone patented Gum-Dipped cords, with two
extra layers of Gum-Dipped cords under the tread,
holding the patented super-traction tread to the cord
body, made this great tire possible.
See the nearby Firestone Tire Dealer, Implement
Dealer or Firestone Auto Supply and Service
Store today—and in placing your order for new
equipment, be sure to specify Firestone Ground
GripTires on your new tractor or farm implement.
Listen to the Voice of Firestone featuring Richard
Crooks or Nelson Eddy—with Margaret Speaks, Monday
evenings over Nationwide N. B. C.—VVEAF Network
FOR CARS
HEAVY DUTY
4.40/4.50/4.75-21.
67-85
89.60
4.75/5.00-19
8.SO
10.60
4.50/4.75/5.00-20.
t.3S
*0.35
5.25/5.50-17........
10.55
12.50
5.25/5.50-18
10.85
12.75
6.00-16
11-95
14.15
Olh*f Slits Prictd Proportionately Low
FOR TRUCKS
32«6Tn» *27-65
7.50-20 $35-20
32x6 H.D. 36.25
7.50-24 . 39-00
6.00-20...... 16.95
8.25-20 49-30
6.50-20.. 21.95
8.25-24
54.75
7.00-2 0 29.10
9.00-20
60.75
Othar Silts Prictd Proportionately Low
FOR TRACTORS
5.00-15 t 9-35
8.25-406 68.40
5.50-16 9-95
9.00-36
66.55
6.00-16 11.15
11.25-24
59.95
7.50-18 15-70
12.75-28
86.85
Othtf Sitti Prictd Proportionately Low
FIRESTONE TIRE AND RUBBER CO.
Dept. WNU-321 Farm Division—Akron, O.
Please tend m* a copy ol your new
Farm Tire Catalog
NAME.
I farm..—Acres, I own « ...
TOWN________R. F. D____
—Tractor
STATE..
FOR CARS • TRUCKS • TRACTORS and FARM IMPLEMENTS
© 1936, F. T. & R. Co.
I
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 19, 1936, newspaper, March 19, 1936; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth726216/m1/7/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.