The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1936 Page: 4 of 8
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The Teague Chronicle
Establishd in 1906. f
Published Every Kriday.
CRADLE TO GRAVE.
No sadder word* were tl ei
pen ru'd than those contained in a i
dj—
. _ .... ] little,} JJOenri /now appearing in f ■
Chronicle Building, 319 Main St. j ^.papers all over the .country, | |
Wm i ,-J “nd no more truth was ever writ-i
Wm^. Stringer, Publisher. . (ten-in the same number of Words.
Subscription Rates:
Under 60 miles, one year $1.50
Under 50 miles, six months .75
Over 60 miles, one year 200
Over 50 miles, six months . 1.25
Entered ’at the postoffice at
Teague, Texas, for transmission
through the mails at second-class
rates of postage, under the Act
of Congress of March 3, 1879.
Obitu'aries, resolutions, cards of
thanks, and other such matter not
usually considered news is to be
paid for at regular advertising
rates.
Any erroneous reflection upon
the character, standing or reputa-
tion of any person, firm or corpo-
ration which may appear in the
columns of. the Chronicle will he
cheerfully corrected upon being
brought to the attention of the
management.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 19,36.
YOUTH IN POLITICS.
Elderly citizens in Teague and
Freestone county should be inter-
ested in reports now coming fv >m
many sections of the country
relative to the activities of young
people_ in politics. Never has
there .been su*-h concerted effort
to organize young men and
young women voters by both of
the old-line parties.
•Selfish motives are behind such
schemes, it is true, for both p ir-
ties are seeking to line up as
many votes as possible. Rut in
organizing the young people the
politicians are doing them a
favor, for they are interesting
youth in the affairs of govern-
ment, and such interest is certain
to be of value to the country.
The older generation hasn’t
done exactly the square thing by
our young people. We have sad-
dled upon them the bu den of
many billions of dollais of debts
which they will have to pay,
debts which we are too cowardly
to pay ourselves, although the
money is being used to get us
out of the -situation into which
we plunged ourselves. Young
men and women of today should
be interested in politics. They
should realize that the questions
involved in our social and' econ-
omic order are even bigger than
those of politics. They are the
ones who are going to pay the
bill for our waste and experi-
ments and extravagance. Why
shouldn’t they have much to say
about the size of the b«Tl, m well
as the manner in which ft Iris
been contracted ? Their future is
the one we are mortgaging.
--0---
UNEMPLOYMENT. .
It is quite, clear that nobody
has any exact information of . he
number of unemployable persons
still unemployed in the United
States. That is, the number who
would take jobs if they were
available. To the claim there are
still eleven1 million Industrial
workers unemployed, the reply
has lately been made, based upon
government statistics, that at no
time, even at the peak of pros
perity, did industry ever employ
more than - nine million persons,
and as there are now mor- thu;
seven million
rolls, the unemployment in *h*
field cannot amount to more that:
two million.
In one sense, of course, all of
the persons on relief are unem-
ployed. But it does not follow
that all of them were employed
before they went on relief. In
the best rif tunes there have al-,
The writer of the poetry,., if you
want to- call Jt by that dignified
name, realises that 'axes begin
with the cradle and end with the
grave, just as most everyone
around Teague realizes the same
thing. He took his pen in hand
to indite the folowing stanzas,
which he calls “Taxes,” and which
thousands of Americans, are now
reading and smiling over:
When you light the evening lamp,
You pay a tax.
When you buy a postage stamp,
. You pay a tax.
When you buy the baby clothes.
When you read the morning news.
When you buy a pair of shoes—
You pay a tax.
When you buy an ice cream cone,
You pay a tax.
For the water that you drink,
You pay a tax.
When you buy a loaf of bread,
When the doctor says you’re dead,
When the final prayers are said—
You pay: a tax.
-0--
WOMEN DRIVERS.
If any Teague motorist wants
to argue that male drivers are
safer than female drivers, that’s
his priviledge. But here is jne
newspaper that doesn’t propose
to engage in any such argument.
But for those seeking material to
use in such an argument it is in-
teresting to note that Judge Con-
dee, of the traffic couH of Los
Angeles, declares that women
drivers, compared with the same
number of men driver*, figure in
more auto accidents yevery yeai.
He handles as many as 1600 traf-
fic accidents a week in his court,
and fines sometimes run as high
as $35,000 a month. He says
women drivers figure in more ac-
cidents because rtiey are slow to
get out of the „ way of danger;
because they have a tendency to
drive in the middle of the street
and otherwise take the right-of
way. He claims the greatest
number of traffic accidents are
due to the great disregard most
drivers—both male and female—
have foi the right-of-way.
---0- '
We Drivers
i Series of Brief Discussions on Driving, Dedi-
cated to the 'Safety, Comfort and Pleasure
of the Motoring Public. Prepared
by General Motors
No. 3—MIST AND FOG
LIGHT
BEAM
STAGGERING FIGURES.
Figures just completed at Wash-
ington show that the total nation-
al income of this country for the
year 1934 was $48,561,000,000.
The same figures reveal that pay-
ments received by individuals in
this country from federal, state,
county and local governments
totaled $8,381,000,000. And every
dollar of this amount came from
taxation. This figure of $8,381,-
000,000 constitutes a sum that is
more than twice the income of all
farmers apd farm hands. It is
eight times the— income of all
miners, and eight times the in-
come of all utility employes. It
is nearly twice the income of all
transportation workers, and ten
times the income of all men in
the building trades. Bureaucracy
is fattening itself at the expense
of the taxpayers. It always does,
and it will continue to do so until
the voters and taxpayers demand
that jobs at the public crib and
payments from the public funds
be curbed.
—v'■■■■yi&ijv ■
MORE GOOD V^ILL.
Teague citizens who have, heard
that quotation about “it is more
on industri pay | Messed to give than to, receive,"
usually used in' church to herald
the coming of the collection plate,
will upon second thought agree
that it also implies with the daily
intercourse with our fellowmnn.
We can give a smile or a cheer-
ing word, and they will produce
greater good than money. There
is satisfaction in doing good 1°.
your neighbors; it brings-*comfort
to the giver and receiver alike.
So do the good deeds today and
postpone the bad ones until to-
morrow. Envy, ingratitude and
enmity will meet their reward,
and good will will eventually
bring its return. Human hate
can never reach one who dwells
in the atmosphere of good will.
Keep that in mind as you plod on
through the year that is only
fairly started. You’ll fjhd your-
self happier and far better off
when the year comes to an end.
-0—-
Correspondence schools can’t
help you get a government job
Oo loxc as there is light we may skip around at a lively rate over UJs o ii
*3 globe ot oura. we may span oceans in surprising time. We may cross the
continent from sun-up or. sun-down.
But every now and then Mother Nature decides
to put us In our place, and ot an .ter devices to may.
us slow down, none is more effective than mist and
fog.
Now we may not have to contend with tog and
mist very frequently, but we’re bound to now.and
then, and when we do, it can cause us a lot of annoy-
ance and trouble.
When a good heavy fog comes—on land, at sea
or in the air—everything that moves, moves with
caution. The ocean liner slows dorwn several knots
an hour. Lightships Signal, buoys sound and foghorns
boom. Airlines ground their planes and cancel tripe.
Even trains on tracks reduce their speed—and we
drivers on the highways, too, must mr.!:e our way
cautiously through that baffling screen. For one thing is true. In spite of All
our progress, transportation still depends on pairs of eyes in human heads.
Scientists who have studied fog, say that it L'
composed of tiny drops of water. These drops art
so small and light that they hang in the air, and sc
close together that light can hardly get through
them. Instead, these little drops act like tiny convex
mirrors. When we try to pierce them with a beam oi
light, a'great deal of it is thrown right back at us
so the effect is just like A great, gleaming white cur-
tain in front of us.
L Experienced drivers say that the first thing to dc
is to get our lights right. The main thing Is to direct
the beams downward. If we have them shining
straight ahead, those little mist-drop mirrors reflect
the rays back in our eyes. But if they’re pointinj
downward, the rays are deflected toward the road.
' Then they say It's a good idea to guide by the road edge at our right,
and If we have a spotlight on our Par,’to focus it right on that road edge,
close to the front of the car, so the edge will be clearly
lighted But we have to keep a good weather eye
ahead, too, because fog veils more than the road. It
hides not only tilings on the road but such things as
roadside warnings of curves and hills and inter-
sections. Even the traffic light’s red and green signal
rays have the same hard time that our headlights
do getting through that strange haze. In fact, in a
good heavy fog. the best we can do for our vision Is
none too good. And so the main thing is to slow down.
The ships have to do it, the trains have to do it, and
we have to do it too. If we won't make up our minds
to that, they tell us the best thing we can do is to
pull off the road, or if we have not yet started out,
we had better just stay home.
. 1fn f0« aJld mist *3 only half the story. We not only have to see,
but we also have to be seen. Our headlights properly adjusted are strong
enough to do their duty in pointing us out to people
coming from the opposite direction. And, in addition,
some drivers use their horns like foghorns by giving
them a toot evc~y now and then. But another thing
we have to thir.,c of is to be sure drivers behind us
spe us. That’s why it’s so important to have our stop-
signal and tail-light working when we’re driving in
fog. And so it’s a good thing to make sure that these
lights are working and to wipe off those little red
glasses if they happen to be covered with mud. If
the weather’s clear and our tail-light has gone out, the
other fellow’s lights may point us out fairly well. But
if his headlights are fighting fog, they can’t do much
to protect us.
. ,, - . . S?- when ®B is said and done, driving in fog is
just a matter of having our headlights and tail-lights right and being a lltt! ->
more careful. If we do that, we can drive our cats safely, even throue?
Nature s stubborn obstacles of mist and fog.
Bruce-I
BARTON
hod*
Lights of i
A new danger i* threatening the noble j,y en-
Insidious enfrnies are seeking to und*T"1' the rumba. And
conraging the young people to go in for the £ •
the foxtrot. , corrupted by
“Not offly our youth, but our workers are Moscow-."It is
these dancing teachers,” says a Communist wri er ‘ Iinot believe
impossible to foxtrot and be a good c°mn?UIl'f j. r muet Jbe an
tSJLTJ&rssxv sxk&A*
writer «
no” tremble tfhTlTUU'LX el’n
a drearier lot of human beings than the solemn tac < ,j,e
Soviet? Is it conceivable that Hitler ever sees a joke? Or that j ^
august front of Mussolini could heave and quake in
By L. L. STC\
•—■' "i—-- i.
A bunch ot newspaper
sitting at a table
persons und even royalty
met in the course of
when one of the group to
cident that occurred when
| liis wife, and another co_
Ihtnrine Alarms Russia returning from Europe on'
liner. One evening, as tbs
sitting iij tlie smoking
Englishman—he was the
knows who- everybody lg
the ship within 24 hours
and said that a most dlstig
passenger was desirous of
the group, buying a drin
if permissible, dancing Wl|
ladies. He was informed
..(ranger would i»e made
so be brought forward a y»
acutely conscious of the
belly-laugh?
be
Soviet mind—a few girls with a dozen young men around them,
dozens of girls with none. .... »ha
/The Soviet has sought to level down sex-appeal by Putt,nK ,ne
women into ugly costumes and making them as homely as !>■'»' •
But once let the pretty girls make themselves up fancy, an< K
away the competitive spirit breaks out like measles all over t >e " •
The smarter ones immediately want to make more money in orcier
to outdo their rivals. Indeed, the principal prop of capitalism is tne
desire of a man to make more’’money so that he may get the gir
he wants and give her more after he gets her.
By all means let Stalin stop this business of dancing and laughter.
A first-class funny story will shake the Kremlin to its foundations.
And dancing presently will suggest to the minds of youth that the
Five Yearf Plan is not nearly so important as the Plan for 1 omght.
+ i . . The Fast, Fast Years
An unknown, slender young fellow set an airplane down at the
flying field near Paris, and said; “I am Charles Lindbergh. Lalvin
Coolidge was in the White House New highs were being recorded
daily in the stock market. Model T Fords out-numbered other cars
on the road. People were flocking to Florida to make fortunes in
real estate.
Stream-lined and air-conditioned trains were unknown, and some
of the smartest motion picture men were sure that the "talkies” never
would amount to anything. Hardly any one heard of Rex Tugwell
or- General Hugh Johnson or Huey Long or Father Coughlin.
Mussolini was beginning to be taken seriously, but Hitler was as
obscure as an unlaid egg.
If at this period you had predicted the imminence of the nation's
worst period of depression, the collapse of thousands of banks, the
abandonment of the gold standard or the appearance in Washington
of J. P. Morgan with a circus midget on his lap, .you would have
been regarded as a fit subject for pathological observation.
From alj the above you may suspect that the writer has been
fiddling around with a newspaper nearly ten years old, and you are
correct. It is an interesting experience, once in a while, but as a
daily habit it would be depressing. Qnel is reminded too vividly of
the rapid flight of time. L
✓
ways been five or six million pe |
sons without jobs, either because
they preferred not to work or
were unable, for various reasons,
to attach themselves to payrolls.
A large proportion of these h ive
always been recipients of charit-
able relief, and it is impossible
imagine a situation in which
will not be a very large
ir of people who wiH de-
for subsistence upon the
generosity of public or private
relief organizations.
In the meantime, however, more
people are going back to work
every day and the outlook is
hopeful for...* job within a yaat
or so for everybody who is wil-
ling and able to work, ■>
—-0--
One reason' why some people
very far is they side-
to shake hands
because they can’t introduce you
to some Insider with a pulL
The1 future looks bright for
politicians. Every year reduces
the pulling power
promise to reduc*
SUMMYKHOOI
LESSON
ly Rev Charles E. Dunn
Jesus Declares His Purpose
Lesson for January 26th. Luke 4:16-
30.
Golden Text: Luke 4: 18, 19.
At the beginning of his Galilean
ministry Jesus visited his home town,
Nazareth, a piece of no importance
where he had spent the obscure years
of his 1 boyhood. 1
There, “as was his
custom, he went to
the synagogue on
the Sabbath, and
stood up to read.”
In the Master's
[Jay there, was a
synagogue not only
in every town, but
also in every vil-
lage able to pro-
vide a congregation
of ten men. In the
services of worship
passages from the .....
I-a,w and the proph- *sv. Ctai. t Dm*
ets were read, prayers were said, and
a sermon preached.
Now Jesus, although he was an or-
dinary member of the congregation,
was permitted to read the lessortl.
Thus his fellow-worshippers were not
surprised to see him arise and read a
familiar passage from the beautiful
61st chapter of Isaiah announcing the
deliverance of the exiles in Babylon
from their captivity. He then closed
the roll, and gave it back to the pre-
siding officer. A moment of silence
ensued while all eyes were directed
toward him. He then began to preach.
“Today,” said he, “is this. Scripture
fulfilled in your hearing.”
What a bold assertion! We can1
imagine whispered murmurs spread-
ing through the congregation. Some
were delighted at his winsomeness and
manly charm. Others were offended
“Who is he,” they asked themselves,
“that he should instruct us ? Is he
not the child of Joseph, the common-
place carpenter? Why should we
listen to this upstart?”
Jesus knew what they were thinking.
But he did not allow their resentment
to soften his message. With charac-
teristic audacity he showed how God’s
favors are showered upon outsiders
like the widow at Zarapfigth (1 Kings
17) and Naaman (2 Kings 5), and are
denied to those, like the Nazarenes,
who expect them but are unfit.
TUis was- too much. In fury the
people wanted to cast him out of Naz-
areth. Some even were eager to kill
this foolish prophet. But they did not
dare to todch him.
The way to get a good cook in
most parts of the country is to
say: “With this ring I thee wed.'-
In spite of all the unemploy-
ment today good jobs are still
waiting for better men to fill
them.
It would right and proper to
refer to the Chicago thief who
stole 150 bath tubs as a “dirty”
crook.
If Teague women do all the
gossiping, then why does their
stock of juicy scandal increase
when they get married?
The chief objection to the new
“dry” songs is that a.lot of peo-
ple will think you’re drunk if you
sing thorn.
All you reed to win the good
will and support of spmg. people
around Teague is tff^reach the
point where you don’t need it.
WIVES AND MOTHERS —
. When we were young almost all wives were mothers. Now, I
wonder sometimes, if mothers are becoming the exception rather
than the rule—and why.
I notice certain writers and quack propagandists Condemning
the medical profession for what is termed the high mortality-rate
for American mothers. They point out that the Hottentot mother
bears her children easier than our American wives do and with a
far lower death rate. This, the quack propagandist savs, is because
of the inefficiency of the American obstetrician.
A famous humorist and “wise cracker”-said it wasn’t safe to
have a baby in our country—that our prospective mothers ought to
go to Africa where they do things right!
All of which is only wabbling around truth without hitting it
Amencart-obstetricians are among the most intelligent and skillfui
in the world. And still tile mortality rate among child-bearing women
remains high. Where 19 the fault?
If our Women wage, as strong -and vigorous as the pagan women
they would bear children as easily as they, and with practically no
deat*rate ‘herefrom. They would hardly need the obstetrician
Civilization has stepped in That's the trouble. Future mothers
“nit^”Wf^T.gT!^'b,rd heer'S “t SCanly clothin* and living on
paented food! They wear furs about the neck, and atm oat bare
he th Th fh Tf They observe almost none of' the laws of good
health. They, the future mothers, are go.ng to he as pU„y as rabbits
when ‘hey grow up to. that point. You can blame our sham “cii iza
tion for it. The only way to correct it is, to live right.
Back in Biblical days when old
David said “All men are liars”
he must have been listening to
some political speaker over the
radio.
The Teague citizen who lopes
birds is usually the fellow who
would want to lick a whistling
kid for making the same kind of
noise.
THE HOUSE OF HAZARDS
By MAC ARTHUR
HLZARD.'fOUR, OR IS IN PERFECT C0N0ITK
AS PAl TO PAL,INSTEAD Of PATIN6 ME. MONEY)
TO TIGHTEN h BOLT WHY DON'T,
YOU LEARN S0METHIN6 ABOUT,
AN AUTO Y0URSELT
ANDY IS RIGHT,
tF A MAN DRIVES HE
OUGHT TO KNOW
SOMETHING ABOUT
A CAR. AND IM
S0ING TO BE ONE
THAT KNOWS/ >
\
/OH,OH/-SOUND* LIKE V/
I A HIM IN THE DIFFERENTIAL)
GOLLY,I HOPE THAT UNIVERSAL
JOINT IS WELL 6REASED -
H-WA- ACCORDING TO THE
BOOK I SHOULD HAVE
/thevalves GROUND.
THAT BOOK. CLAIMS YOU CAN \
ETECT MECHANICAL TROUBLE BY
THE SOUND OF THE EAHAUST
PIPE - SURE SOUNDS
TERRIBLE/
f..'. I
1 HOPE THE OLD
BUS WILL REACH
ANDY'S GARAGE
1 want a complete overhaul'jor
check the .gnidon system, JOjL
tTRAI6HT£N the fRONT
\ WHEELS-INSTALL a
NEW HORN
vETC^TC
Buying a Teague girl enough
wedding clothes to last three
years is taken by some people to
mean that the groom won’t be
able to buy her any in that length-
X
-
—
V.
iv*> (
. /
*|
man whom he Introduced
prince of Denmark. With
troductlon, the prince click
heels, saluted and carried
quite In the proper manner.
• • •
The Americans, however,
sure they were being sp<>offt
hit, so one of the ladles r«
‘•Glad to meet you, prince, I’m]
Queen of Sheba,” and the
merely smiled. “And I nm git,
meet you, too,” said a
member of the party. “I’ve
wanting to meet somebody
your country for some time
I’ve been wonde'rlntr what is
In Denmark.” The prince
bowed and replied, “There igr
rotten in Denmark.” When
the Americans took him for a
sport nnd made a place for
at the table.
• • •
By and by the conversation 1
around to the ship’s bnrbetr an
prince said he hated to go to I
her shops. That was the
per man's opportunity, *
lie snid, “with that mug of
you don’t need to go to a
shop. Just get one of the
to holystone that upper de
yours.” That evidently np|
to the sense of humor of the ]
He laughed heartily,
* * •
Well, things went along like l
for several days, with the
man who had introduced the
looking pop-eyed at all the jo
But It evidently appealed tol
prince, as he stuck around and|
It. You’ve guessed the answej
course. Investigation showed
he was really Prince Eric of
mark, thoughy several tloie*1]
moved, still In direct line to!
Danish throne.
* * *
More than nine years ago
gust J), 1920, to be exact—Ger
Ederle set a new record by
ming •the English channel lo^
hours and 31 minutes. Thnt
battle that left her deaf. Now!
is fighting another battle. Thl*1
It Isn’t against buffeting wnveaj
against the effects of a frno
Two years ago she slipped on a 1
in the home of a friend and
fered a broken pelvis,
months In n plaster cast folio
Then came dally massages
many visits of doctors. Event1
she was able to walk, but even ]
her legs give way after a short j
to nee.
• • •
The spirit of Gertrude
hasn't given way, however,
only does she go through a
scribed course of exercises,
she hopes will make It possibli
her to swim again, but to
away the time she make* all'
own clothes. She holds 29 re
of different kinds, and when
returned from Europe, after
her channel record, she wa
ceived with the blare of bands ]
showers of ticker tnpe.
• --0
Subway scene: A fine Iookln.
priest, finding a seat, settling h
self comfortably and opening'
reading a Jewish dally ne
per. A curious passenger en
him In casual conversation
learns that the priest has a
Ish In the thick of the ghetto
tlon and has been there so
that lie has not only learne
read but nlso to speak Yiddish.
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Servlet J
Morgan’s Raid Costly
Gen. John Morgan’s raid
southern Ohio during the Civil j
cost the. citizens individually
the state government more
$100,000,000. This included the 1
age done to property and.the]
borne by the state, of
maintaining troops in the
was one of the most costly mill
raids in history. \ “
-——m
Women Police Guard
Traffic in We
Warsaw.—The city of Wa
has organized a women
force to guard women and
dren against the
traffic.
The girl cops wear
forms with shining 1
tons and broad
around the sleeves,
for police service mus
school graduates. Uni
ty of losing
clulrag for old age
Kiris have to swear
»»•* »»t to m
>‘“to ‘iltpr Joint,
ID CREA1
DESERT
J and Ev il Spi
forth, Arab# |
, york.—Deserts
pastes, writes
■t„ Asia MogMM
111 empty rpaee^.r
familiar anl
Kniiid others arc
■puentla) but ln|
I Arab there are
Irits in the deh
n?,l evil, to com!
[to rescue or annif
^ iM his travels, A
„v moods, gay, pf
Lai, silent. Tlintl
Bays, recites poel
jtploits or makel
fh a vast maze oi
j hushed apprehenl
ting 1- more rear
[impressive, morel
nfort. than praf
And nothing Is
[in prayer than
j of the opening
bran, always on
T, the heurt of el
[us in the right pi
L those who go «|
|Do damnation Is
L |n notion than tt
\ In the desert.
All Have Chirac
U- desert has n nal
[an imliience of its[
[vlting. some are
j are forbidding;
ber to charm, sou^
Biers tu destroy.
[hem bv name, nol
uffly. in soothinf
hg accents. lie is|
[eir familiar and
,ostro(ihizes them
Inel or Ills horse.
J great desert* erf
lahiia. with Its l|
; the Mu-fond*, wit|
the various
bs; the arid, volcal
hr and that vast, li
of sands in the s|
ed .Hub’ ul-Kliall,
Quarter.”
bne in Arabia coil
llie name "Dahna’T
originated. Even
[are In confusion n|
J Dnlnm meanders
Ih the heart of
loases that are herd
J view of each otha
Pains nnd green pal
1 in places from s{
bal cities of Nejd.
lug course it is
I long, connecting
fr in ;ho south witil
ih thd ftorthwest
|th.-in 100 miles nerl
j places, and It narl
|ers to a few miles. |
Fear the Dahna
lArab fears I he Dali
is hardly a spot i|
■Down to him. Ini
it is to him the hn[
Some of the jinn
pneficent kind, inn!
I Nevertheless, hla. fl
they are not nlvJ
1 at first sight. In "
J the trails of the
|mes concealed, cod
A gust of the si|
Ihe trail in a few
the wind nnd tt
jin their treachery. I
reason for the aJ
IIth the trail hiddel
utliwise through
fever come to its end
[water will give out|
liis stock,-If he l|
flock of sheep or[
|or a herd of camelsl
prish of thirst. TM
fesert is seldom cro|
Igtilde.
tiie Dahna the
I is plural of nafdj
j are Sand deserts,
ore of them than
feas ever seen. I, md
Vd Hi rough seven]
hg the smallest in t|
[e biggest in one
: known by their naj
| of central Arabia, I
is feared. Yet th^
lount of the dunes,
1 1 a height of
easy as it Is In till
»H Exp<
3t Cleoj
hon.—Effoi
lopatra's t
Inn queen
gih of her
British ex;
[for Luxor
er Myers,
Mond
Expioral
J to get I
[an hidden
[which, it I
I with tha
[utli Sahni
ctoo.
' r 4
■
king Fo
France
Dives 1
i of his
it Is the
fommittee
P>ow poop
Irt from s
l states t
Bks for 1
r
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The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1936, newspaper, January 24, 1936; Teague, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1141028/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.