Devil's River News. (Sonora, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 1783, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 14, 1925 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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JC vil’ a XUve» STovtb
PCBM9HBD W B IV! T .
STEVE MURPHY. Publlihur.
Z - - — - ~ * -
t :.i « a i r ru i'oMudu *
Bt •
f » ,crnnd-ela«3 maM.-r.
-I'MCKin/ox fj * YKaM is
auvanci
h m rr* i*v%a • 1 rtjruaiy 14. u;5
Get Back Your
Grip On Health—
or NO COST!
Take
mm
The Amarlng Neu
Medical Stnuum
<i. \V. Wbitebead <Jt Sorti Ibe
jj i»i week »hipp*-*i 375 h*nl of
|i,i^4 fruiii .lubtiaon ailing to hurt
Worth, wtncb brought from 3c to
8: p-r pound. Approx in»t«rI>
tit.a I were shipped froiu the
8*!u« poiot luesdiv and ttednea
d.y to L. A. lullj.oi Uuoro, to
whom tb< t wi re ai»!d at a cfpulat
k t p ice pr bei t. Tut* Lueio
pjiCLiaaer is to lake tbo balance (
ibatcau be (fathered iff the big
Wbiteh.ul bearlquarlei* ranch in-
if|i« northern port oa of tbe touo
i v, where the hog^ shipped were
l» I ii-feil,“"1 Jei K.o Herald
RIftCJt'S
GOAT COAT
Medical henuitior
Notice the quick difference In
the way you cit. deep, look anJ
feel —flic remarkable improve
■Mat la your health, ‘trcn ;iii
ar.J energy, after taking 2 bot-
tle'! If not, the Kamak agent
will refund your money.
Kirnsk It ‘o il in ivon/ira at the
(Minors Dm* Store, aril bt leailing
lining i> « in ey.-rjr town.
Mr. and Mr*. G B Duke re
fi'.;,,i learned that they bad be- j
« •». _ eat grandpireufr, a child'
li, , ibeen born to their grand
Allen. of ;
A lien is a
J MO Ml 1J.X IX A M l-
.sll i:i.L.
\\ In ? Single person^ who had
oet income of $1,000 or more or
gro-s ircr itie i«f f5,000 or more,
und matried couples wr.o bad net
income of $?.,Vh) or more or gm--
income of j.i.uuO or miro uiu-t
file Jretnrns.
V lien? I be filing period is
fn m dunuaiy 1 to March 15lh
Where* (’ullectnr of interna!
revenue for tbe dial net in which
•Uagn . :r, Mrs, Tom
laousditle, Calif, Mrs
.I lugbter of Mr. Hnd Mrs, Jo. ([,r pep.on lives or has his princi.
league formeilj of Del Rio. Lon pj| p!ll(-0 (,f business.
F.. ait: lations to all prilies cou- Hon'* I n ■ t met inns on Form
to all
due l—Del Kio News.
L". s. A F 'telgh p.iler.l* p.r.dlrpj
II. M. II A 1.11 kit I da Vs
Konora, T< x»«. Dec. IS. H2L
Captain H. W. IHeck.
Ilovsrseit. Itia*.
Mr Dear Cap I a ||: —
Having tri.d c.ul : 51) of your cost
e<>st» Let (prirg cr> | art or mi ft. < k o*
registered Angora din In kidr.ing I
am in wall pleaia/l lha i wnat 3 :0
more f tbetn in »s*..rfed >l/«a.
1 «‘iea'i d Ilia d of show gr»t» Jan
lit., and put coat* On inc tu and they
• to ,<1 the ood WeA'har hi tter thnn the
go*’* tha were not ». ceri d I »he led
I->U Coes enr y—March I — p:ito ai» n
rhe;n an>l tarm d them loo.o in a S0J
acre P»»rnr3 to kid i r .1 they did wel
arid rala.d a better p reent-txa of kills
ih oi th« il < a ke. i / round the r neb.
fcd.sbadded und kidded t/v ha d.
.•o I c./eatl.r yoar gnat C'ata rot
only goi.t •avers I ut labor aid worry
nrt.'i as w» I'. I am
V* urs Duly.
[s grad] ii. v. II vlbvrt.
H. \V. RIE ’K,
Roosevelt, Texas.
Government Takes Over
Volcano Research Work
Cirru| . f the Hawaiian volcan<.|
1 /»rviitory Ins be ii transferred
fron tie* weather bureau to the goo-
c*tc,it survey. Dr. Thomas A. Juj-
gar remains as director.
This ■' rvatnry, which stands at
•li‘.* e lgo of the j tnc crater of
Kn wes first planned in 100.1.
it I of I’roft
far, tbui of the Massachuactt* In
at;, te i f Tv iinology, an.l fiiude
were ra•-<••! fur its establishment anil
si.,--; ;t among the publio-spirited
citizen* of Hawaii.
lingular .c:rr;tifie studies wen* 4c-
pttn at the crater in It* 11. In lt»lV
an observatory building was nse-,
sente ! by the town of Hilo, au'l «ys-|
teimtic recor’s cf volcano anJ,
rurtli'|iia!-:e activity have been maiu-j
ta ; •' e that time under the dt-
rcetion if T>- . t■ r Ja^gnr. Ill De-|
cei: r, I'd 1.1, the local committee|
in cl ;:•_*• of funds organized the
If'. . Volcano Research a.ssoci-
at ; , wbi. h f ; ; .rte-1 the observa-;
torv until lf>lS. when it was trails-!
fern-1 to the United States govern-!
incat.
Dead Sea Dynamos
Plans fir tbe olectrilication of
Pnli>lini* by rai/ ng the level ' f tip*
'ea «cf (illik-e an 1 harm* ■‘HU? tl"*
liftnrie River Jordan, in*• • Tvinji nu
initial expcmlitur of ^51 <i. >iHJ,tkm».
are dcrcril>ed in ••pglc-tiuc: Its
' cmirerc al Resources, With I artic
ii If* r Iicferencc to American I r.n
bv Addison If. Sontliaid, American
consul at .fernoilem, ju-t punli-dicd
;*v the Dcjiartlimit of (.‘.diimercc.
Where “The M*n Without •
Country” Originated.
Tort Adams, la Wilkinson county.
Mississippi, deserves a place niii./ng
the historic forts of the I'nited States
i.e.-nusi; it nave to us the greatest The same project < alls for the canul-
iration of the Jordan valley from the
*■ *i «if ti lib ■ in the H1'.id sea,
cut a Country.- It was from n letter a 01 . 1 .- .
written l y t:,n. James Wllklnsoi!.! where, under irrigation, it is e\]>m-
ecj jn.iniU r in el. ef of the Auiei li nn eJ that eo;>io'i» crops of dab >, rice.
siory i-n patriotlsui »'*r nrltleo—let
ward liveretl llales ' i'l.e Man With-
liA and For m 1040; also the
— _. — | law and regulations,
Firo of unknowm origin com- W hat .* fivo p-r cent normal tax
pl. tely deatrovcil tb« U.geb.rn «»n the fir.-t $t.000 of net income
...the E K Fawcett ranch lust Jth* mch-s of personal exen.p
‘i iiursdsy night when property to and credits, h/.ur per cent
tue value of $5,000 was destroyed, 'i-ruial t«x on the next $4,000.
•ihe bsrn was vrecte.l u litlle ovei iN,x P‘'r "'*•1 ,ux ,,n ,l,e
n year ago to replace tbe o!d one
licit bad been destroyed by fire.
J; is expected that a new barn will .........
tio erected on tba site of the one j 'itnrsnieed hns ery, emp e you
destroyed last week.—Del Hioj z* fie* to »g»/'ts tile i
Herald, in p'ottion paying $75 ( 0 W“»k
__, u' I 11xns. f 150 an h ur spur
Two Purposes Serve J
* by ihe Modern "Poet”
People u?od to write poetry. Some
do now; but some of the smartest j
]>.■•. t3 just throw n line or two it]) n
the page and let us do the rest. It
savin their time and cultivates our
imagination.
Here’s a specimen page of a book j
Equipped for Offer,Si of i - ms. It’s cot much to 1 d: at.
mi .-'Jy margins. A’on have to read |
White Rhinoceros Not
Actor ling to Dr. Herbert I.ar.g,
who studied the great white rhinoc-
eros in the valley of the Nile, this
animal has several very remarkable
peculiarities. Its lowir lip is armed
with a plate of horn as a proteo
net income in excess id? 10,000! tion tiu^t tho sharp sword-grass, exciting. ^ It s l.ke watching
which constitute; " ' ’ ’
nnny in llit* early day* of ft.e repahlle,
ill l-'orl Aih.ma. that Haie ft ihe
name Philip Xclun for tho hero of his
story und inan) of the scen.s In tha
honk- ere laid in nnj about Poll
Adams.
Although Hale's story Is purely fic-
tion, there was s real Philip Nolun,
win} uns in fact a “man without ii
country" hut not. ns Hale wrote It.
because be cursed the tinme of Ids na-
tive lend. Tills real Philip Nolan ires
nn Iri -ii i' lit; al refugee who had n t
h n in his adopted country long be-
fore lie was Joining Aaron P.urr In n
consp!r; y against it and eventually
w;s k.iied by die Spanlsli governor of
Tetri! s.
The site of Port Adams tins long
heeu a historic one. The first while
man to visit It was Father Dfl'lon. u
Krenelgiiiin, who erecteil a close there *
and culled il Itoclie a I>avion. It wn .
later called l.nftus Heights, nfter a
I rliish major who with 400 nierr was
ntnl.U'-hed there by the Tunica Indians
in 1701.
During Prrsldpnt John Adairs' ad-
ministration t tie government bought
this site from Francis Jones, who held
It under a Spanish grant, nn.! built
there Fort Adatus. named in honor of
the Pr.ot. There I.jcnt. Mori-
weather Lewis was stationed for a
-rfT.ir cane, flux twid cotb/n ‘nfi be
produced. Provision for »,000 miles
of motor bigliw u' comniercializa-
iioji of ilie Hagduii-t Biro air roub'.
traversing Syria, ntid agricultural
credit 1 :.nks arc Himdig tlw other in-
novations con! v.plated in the mod-
ernization of the 11 !y I.and, u- re-
lated by Mr. Southard.
I' tween the lines, ami all ar. ■. nd. | while before going to the capital to
liil/iiiiit of net income >uitax
ce ling gu rnieed h -iery t
r; nt'i-t w.oir cr repine-'
HO (j II. k K i IH —, re. /-Hi *-'(1 r-
IN IV.liN V i ION A I, STOCKING
Mil. 1.8. No-rlft..wn. Pa. 71 It
T. J. Coffman, a prominent and j ^
highly respected lancOiiMti from1
toe Carta Valley territory, an.l
Airs. AI in a Tracy, a well known
Mii.l popular lady of this city,were -
imrrieil in Bracketlvill* last s.it-
:.tJay They expect to reside; WOOD FOR SA.L/E.
Zu Li^cak
....... to tho ..cob ... .b. Can. or fcfiinoak wood any
Valley country. Tbe frlends t f SiZG,by tll6 CD; Cl OF 10(Xti
fie couple extend them lhe usual phollO 4 ring3 Oil 83.
U .nd wishes. —1>. I Kio Herald,
a | art of its food.
The strangest tiling is that tha
great horns which it carries on its
nose—the fjont one of which is
about twice as long as the rear one—
do m t grow from the bone, but from
the skim This is .continuous under
the I;,;.-, of the horn. The horns are
Ihe pet is a ma.-ter and revealing!
Von will notice that lie begins as
if ho were going t / say something,
ai d then he doesn't. That makes it
a man
on sk; at a winter tournament. ID
c.'-liics like a Etr.ak down the icy
slide to the jumping oil place and
then shoots through the air for a
!n;n !roil fe-t or so. The tin ill come-
wl.f-n you f^e him going ofT through
‘pan*, and you don’t know whether
he will land on his head >,r on his
atta' bed to the skin bv slender fibers -'".t. Samuel Mi < hord Grothers,
and two days after the animal is 'b -M antic Monthly.
dead they can be plucked ofT with
ea.-e. ’J hciofore, tiiisc huge horns
are not wea])ons of offense and de-
fense, but merely tools which the big
animal uses for pushing its way
through the dense jungle.
Camels Passed Cut
The National Zoological Park
that the two camels that were
become President .Tefftrsnnf* secre-
tary r.n.I from there Governor t.'b.l-
1 rne and General Wilkinson started
' New Orleans for tho formal cere,
n . ay of receiving ihe Louisiana Pur-
chase.
In lt« early years Fort Adams 4ns
one of the most Important military
posts In the Middle West. It vvrs at
this fort that General Wilkinson ne-
cotiute.l with the Indians for opening
n toad from the fort tlwotigh Natchez
to Nnslivllle nn/1 that putt of the road
between Natchez and Nashville he-
rtuae the ft:, ons "Nntehex Trace."
Tl ere !> li good st/try told ill out otto
of General Wilkinson's subordinates j
at the fort. The general hail lost his j
queue and ordered all of h'.s ofitoera to ;
have theirs cut off. Mai. Uiclinril Hut-
ler not only refuse;!. Imt to'd Doctor
f'urmlelinel. the post surgeon, that In
case of his death lie wished to have a
By No Iff car. s
“Amcrhuns u-<- trie word ‘oldiged'
in ii- oi l fi-use of pleas'd or gruti-
fie-l." cotui.t- lit- ft London paper,
adding, “the alove ex| hmation is
p./.ctssary in order to exp'.'in to Ivng-
| lish n-a !.•: - tl. p /in of a ilenlditfu!'
';ti .- v eo. •; rnin • Mr. Cyril
V;. . ho neu-tiv r tiirntd to the
United -States to resume I113 part in
the play, ‘Ain’t Wo All?’ The fa-
mous nc'.or was once iutro/luced to a
certain financier, who greeted him
rather superciliously with the stock
phiase over there, ‘I'm obliged to
know you.’
•• -Not necossnrly!’ retorted Mr.
Maude.”—San Francisco Argonaut.
Guatemala Advancing
Foil wing the \ i-it of a delegate
to t!" United States, (luateniala i.«
rushing plans for the improvement
of highwit'.s througiiout the republic
and paving streets cf (luateniala
City, the capital.
Must Be Progress *
Much of the world’s work is still
being done "as father use 1 to do it.”
Too frequently this involves waste
and extravagance. If there is a bet-
ter and cheaper way the old is inde-
fensible. 'l itis is a world of prog-
ress.—Grit.
ONE DAY BATTERY
-a' - lel.ll lee 1>'U mill..- i.e.v "' 1' |,„rC(| |n |,|3 eoflill til .1 Ills qUette
imported into tins country a num- i.uited through It s., that the general
her of years ago far the purpose cf , would know that lie defied him even
Doctor Lang savs the white rhinoc- experimenting with than as a means j >*> »l"ath!
eros is a sociable and inoffensive ‘or transporting mail in the arid I
beast. It never attacks men and regions of the Southwest were al- J
never quarrels with its own kind. It • >wevl to run unmolested through
has the habit of taking a daily mud the desert country. These animals |
bath. It is estimated that only about bred, which resulted in the increase !
3,Out) white rhiuoceroues remain, the of the herd, and for many years af- |
others having been slaughtered as Dr their offspring roamed the eoun- j
were tl: ■ American buffaloes.—Our, lr.v- The remaining few specimens
Dumb Animals.
AUTO BUS
SERVICE
BETWEEN
Sc.n Angelo and
Del Rio
Going by way of Corn-
stock, Juno,Sonora,
Eldorado, Christoval
and San Angelo.
Chax’gingf Service
I
Saves Time and Money
for You
Get your Mattery in before
9 a m. and it is ready by 5
p.m. the same day with a
better, longer lived charge
than you ever had before.
No Long Expensive
Waits or Rentals
Our equipment is recoin-
Leaves Landotl Hotel, mended by all the leading
every day at 8-00 a m. L^jUery manufacturers 1 his
t a-i. a*. i improved charging method
Leaves the St. Charles ltn|:thcn, ballety BIc Jnd
Hotel, Del Rio, every cannot harm the battery.
day at 8:00 a m.
Will leave McDonald
Hotel Sonora, going
30Utb about 3 p.m.
gt>ing north 3 p.m.
Comfortable Service
Assured.
W. E. SIMPSON,
3‘hono Del Bio.
; A
gives
well charged battery
your car more power,
Eggall
Important Message
GUARANTEED
EGGS
E-'gall guarantei'd to
increase your egg production
I to your own satisfaction,
cure Cholera, Limhor Ntck,
Diarrhea, etc.
Eggall is sold on a posi-
tive money back guarantee,
without ijuestion.vour money
as cheerfully relundtd as
accepted.
Sold at grocery ar.d drug
stores everywhere. A.-k
wire killed quite a few years ago.
As You Look at It
Qualifications for a good wife are
many and include among other
things ability to cook, household
management, ability, executive
Vofunfccr Cook
“What puzzles me most about
cooking a meal," said the man whose
wife has been away for a visit, “is
how n person .on start a meal of|
three separate di-lies and arrange it
so that they all become ‘done’ at llie!
siune time. I’ve been cooking t.tv[
own meals for throe days now, and
I’ve tried it every evening, and every
evening 1 register failure upon mv
noble ami expressbe brow, to say
nothing of what my vocabulary does
to the atmosphere. I’ve come to the
is
training, ami what not. But a man
has b. ti f'.ind who wants his wife! conclusion that no human being
to he but a good singer. He heard
a singer at station WBZ recently,
able to conk canned corn, fry y>,itn-
toes, and broil lamb chops and have
and in writing to the station slated j diem a.l done at once. ] have been
“ft “ot ght to < - t hat !« 1 get the lamb ch >pa well
•Miss’ to ‘Mrs.’” Could this fairly | cooked, and while I was watching
.. tab'ti for a prop, al or was he them the corn stuik to the bottom of
wishing the job on
timorc Sun.
another ?—Bal-
brightcr lights, b^uick start, 'olir r* 'M 1
plenty of pep.
Gnats Like Smoke
A swarm of gnats, estimafjpd at
several millions, lodged in a cornice
of tlu* First National Bank building
at Conncllesville, l’a.. and resulted
m a fir.- alarm being sounded. A
pedestrian saw what he believed to
be smoke i.-.-uiug from the cornice,
hut the ftrenim could discover no
blaze. It was found that the swarm-
the stew pan, and after I got that
stuff loosened up, th<» p-Mat >«*.- be-
gan to burn, and by that time the
chops, which had been removed, were
cold. I’ll tell the world that cook-
ing is a gift.”—Detroit News.
Refused a Bride and Throne
Toseha Seidel, the German vio-
1 mi.-1, recently finished a very suc-
cessful tour of Australia, New Zea-
land and several South Sea is'iamls.
His music certainly touched the,
ing of tit" gnat.i ap|x'ar. l from the ; Ravage brea-t, for on one of those!
sidewalk to he just like smoke.
have it in stock, send $1.00
j direct to us for a prepaid
Rotpry Clubs’ Membership
Marly in 1 !»•?4 the dub member-
ship of Rotary was 5>3,5!U) in l..'>87
clubs in the United States, Canada,
- Newfoundland, Great Britain, Ire-
Try our one day battery package, j land, Manama, China, India, Cuba,
service just once and you’ll „ . . . , ...... South America, Norway, Australia,
always . have your battery M2nufactlJrcd anJ Distributed by New Z.aland, Hawaii, the Philip-
, I piix'«, Japan, France, Denmark,
.ii-p.OvCd .......i_ .. *.j._ Holland, Spain, South Africa and
Belgium.
charged
method
by this
Sonora Motor Co.
ST.
JOHN HAGELSTEIN,
MONUMENTS
Made ot the Olebratnl Llano Uranlt*
San Angela, Texas
BUYING if HCME HELPS.
GEORGE HOVEL
DALLAS.
\Vhe*e you will fed »’ home.
If only to apend a d«y to
Dalit/*, tii/ike our Urg.. lobby
tint our .pacioup pirlori your
!«tiog pl*ca,
170 Bormr, 60 B.th«.
SI 50 ,>• r day aod up
the center of tho buriueea
diatrict.
t UAKLRU HODGES,
Pr>-1 rictor
Gaanaty Produ:ts
M g CO.
l!*ll l/p-cmili Street
Foal HO Kill, 1’KXaS.
1 n
FOR SALE
Steel Oil Drums
good for ashes,
garbage, etc.
Price $1.00.
[SONORA MOTOR CO
Temple Destroyed
Tho Choz*>n temple in Oimura—
. ne cf the oldest and most fauious
temples in Japan—has been de-
stroyed by ttre. The temple was
opened more than 500 years rco by 1
Musokokushi. famous Buddhist 1
islands the natives decided that the
visitor had Icon sent from their
heaven and if possible should he re-
tained among them. They tried to
persuade him to marry the daughter
of their dead king and thereby Is,*-
come their rttler. They could not
understand why he should decline
and it was only with some difficulty
that he made his escape without a
black bride on his arm.
Room for Development
A - rding to statistics published
in the 1923 Year Book of the 1V-;
partment of Agriculture, there are
in all about 608,000,000 acres of po-1
tent ini crop land in the United
Stat.s. That is. land physically
capable of being utilized for crops
some time in the future. Waste
land, that i«, land that is absolute
priest. It was widely known as one
> f the six gnat temples of the Kam- j desert, r-'. k. etc., comprises 67,000,-
abnra peric 1. 000 acres.
'■VARDLAW & ELLIOTT
Attorneys-at-Law,
SONORA
TEX.
* HI i/fkOtice la all the State ana
fi.u Cavru
Armistice Halts Arrest * !
When two detectives of Liverpool,
England, went on Armistice day to
arrest a man. they arrived at the
house just as the city sirens sounded
a two-minute silence and they waited,
at the door with their heads hared,
for two minutes, then effected the
arrest.
Post It Ran the Historic
"Read to Oregon”
To write tin* liLmjy of ihe sn.U|
Wcm without ui' Ulhawef l-'ort Laramu,
would he like plajiug Hamlet without
(lie mel.iuchol, Dane. Few posni |luVtt
I -111 ,i i-il a more stirring part in tim
tery of the trimtlcr than It. Fr./;,,
the (laic of Its ikUibllBhiueut In IS3S
by liobcrt (.'uMpbeil, who uunii-U it
Foil William In honor of William Suh-
'telle, his iwrtner In ftir trailing, iiovu
to Hu- end of the Sioux wars, Fort
Luruuile wax always ua iuiporlttni ecu-
ter il uilliity in ihe ui/ruiern plain*.
'i'lie Aiuericun Fur couipuny r.>
uatued li Fort John, In honor of .l.d.a
.Swryiy. one of the partners In that
company. Hut even before they d.o-
nuihlleU the post und moved II u miio
further up the Nurlh i'lutte, some time
iu Ihe middle -Hi's, it becHiue known ns
l-'ort Li.ruuiie, thus helping perpetu-
ate the memory of u certain Lu ttaiaii>,
ah early I'rouch Canadian irui.p. r who
had lo.-t his life In an encounter with
hostile Indiana near there.
Although Fort Laramie wns one of
the be t known rendezvous of the old-
time mountain m n. the most Impor-
taut era in Its history begun In is It)
v.Inn the roieminent purchased the
fort fi n the American Fur company,
i nd it became the military eeutlnel ut
till- eastern foot of the ltockiex. As
such It saw that epic migration, the
long trains of “covered wagons" go
winding past along the Oregon trull,
bound for Oregon or California,
The l-'ort Laramie of u later period
was fully as important us It was in
the fur trading and emigrant days.
Here In 1 Sol gathered 10.UW Indians
of Ihe plains to make u treaty guur-
untieing safe conduct for the end-
grants, a treaty which wus soon re-
duced to u scrap of paper; from F..rt
Laramie In 1803 was begun the road
to the l.ew Montana gold fields which
brought on the Ited Cloud war of 18tki-
(57, uud the next year Fort Laramie
saw the signing of another treaty of
peace In which the great Indian lead-
er achieved liis greatest triumph by
forcing the commissioners to grant
him virtually everything he nsked.
When war broke otff ugain in INTO,
Fort Laramie was the center of no-
th Ity for the military expeditions sent
against the hostile Sioux and Cliey-
.lilies, l ut when th;.t war was over
the principal reason for Fort Lara-
mie's existence ended, and from that
time on Its glory and Importance
waned.
It*. 1521, W«tern N«wip»p«r VuJwb )
It
btjCLIVE ARDEN
COPYRIGHT BY
The bodds-merrill company
wl&gx-
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W ithout doubt this story is the work of a master. The
characters are real human beings. They were faced
with a thrilling situation involving a problem too trying
for the average sinner and probably too great for a
saint to handle; nevertheless there were smug individ-
uals ready to condemn them.
If you regard black as always black and white as alway9
white, you may decide that the first word of the title is
most appropriate; but if you can see varying shades of
gray between black and white, you will be able to ob-
serve the peculiar fitness of the last word of the title*
Any way you view it, it is a great story.
WILL BE SHOWN AT THE
SONORA THEATER
Thursday & Friday, Feb. 19 & 20.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Devil's River News. (Sonora, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 1783, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 14, 1925, newspaper, February 14, 1925; Sonora, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth979510/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .