Love, Laughter, and Enchiladas: A History of The Old Borunda Cafe and the Women Who Made it Famous Page: 4
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Page. 4
adept at healing with herbs and other remedies.3
Carolina Palomo's hand never healed properly, because
the bones in her wrist and fingers were shattered. As time
passed, the hand assumed a claw-like appearance, and Caro-
lina Palomo never had the full use of the hand again.4
Shortly thereafter, Domingo and Pascuala got a di-
vorce. Each parent took two daughters, and Carolina Pa-
lomo and her sister Ana Maria, went with their father. Do-
mingo remarried Juanita Landram, the daughter of Larken Lan-
dram, for who he had worked on a ranch south of Marfa. Do-
mingo, with his two daughters and new wife moved back to
Fort Davis. He and Juanita later had two sons, Domingo Jr.,
and Rafaelo.5 Domingo lived in Fort Davis but maintained
a small store in Balmorhea. On one of his frequent trips
to Balmorhea, Domingo was killed. No one knows who the mur-
derer was or the motives behind the crime.6After her husband's death, Juanita Landram Palomo took
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Lujan, Lupe J. Love, Laughter, and Enchiladas: A History of The Old Borunda Cafe and the Women Who Made it Famous, text, 1965; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth87663/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Marfa Public Library.