The San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1931 Page: 4 of 8
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Pag* I
r<-*
y*'
"SAN ANTONIOBB0I8TEB"
FRIDAY AUGUST 7 - 1931
«"■** EDITORIAL PAGE *****
m AMUMU MUTER
A publication dedicated to right, justice and
progress.
Published Friday uF each week
THE REGISTER PUBLISHERS
Office 608V. E. Commerce St.
I'. 0. Box 372 — Nun Antonio, Texas
I'hone Crockett 1085
■ - - ■ ——.
"Entered as second-class matter May 5, I Hill, at the
post office at San Antonio, Texas, under the Act of
i March-3, 1879."
Advertising rales will be furnished on request.
SUBSCRIPTION HATES
I year
ti months
.Simile Copy
$2.00
1.25
05
Valmo C. Rellhtcjer, Pres. - Treas.
Jasper T. Duncan, Editor - Oeueral Manayer
| It. It. Davenport .
! .1 W Holland
I W I. Walker
J A. James
1' I'. !\ Mclntvre
Sports Editor
Contributing Editor
Contributing Editor
Advertising Manager
Circulation Manager
All news matter should be in our office by Wed
nesday noon tu appear in current issue. News matter
must H<- plainly written and on only one side of copy
sheet. The right to condense matter for convenience or
valley is reserved unless, paid for.
The Negro And The
Sex Urge
(By .1 Newton Callahan.)
WHAT DO YOU
WANT TO KNOW
(By J. W. AlTt'H)
Question. What in the cause of h
mirage of water in the desert f
Answer: The layer of air next to
the ground gets heated, usually lie
(•suae th * nun overheat* the ground
aud this lieut* the air next to it.
Thia hot laver of uir betida hark
l Mg |hough it a* different times, (ienerally in hia
Man ha<« two fundamental urges:'
to at ay alive and reproduce it*
kind. "Man lives to live, reproduce
:md live again" as one nuthot
states it. There is no uniformity aa
to which is the stronger inasmuch
as one varies in the same individual
the ravs of light ,ju:
were a mirror. So it reflects the
light of the sky just an a water sur
tare would.
(Question: Can there lie a mirage
on a city street f
Answer: Yes.'On a very hot day
the pavement may heat the air next
t« it just as the ground of the de-
sert does. Thia very often makes
a small mirage and causes the | av
! ement to ap|M ar as if it were wet.
I (Question What causes an eclipse
, of the sun .'
Answer: As the moon revolves
! around tin- earth it sometimes comes
directly between the earth ami sun
When it does so a shadow of the
, moon is east on the earth, this is
iin eclipae of the sun
I Question: What is water made off
Answer: Water i* composed of the
• gases, hydrogen ami o*vgen Hy-
1 drogen is an iuiflamable gas which
I is use.) to fill balloons ami oxygen
lis the gas found in t!ie air and is
I the gas needed iu breathiug. These
j gases are chemically united with
|each other
Question: Vftat causes an echo?
t Answer: The waves « f sound in
ELIMINATE THE AFTERMATH
BJnnc eighteenth the Tenth Cavalry band of the United
stab's Army, representing the foremost fighting aggrega-
tion in our group connected with the government, was pres-
to tin- San Antonio public, despite lavish and well
dnrtVtcd advertising, this fine group of welftrained cultured
artificial i-< played In a scant audience of less than I ."hi per-
son An admission fee of 50 cents was charged.
■ Hard limes, depression and the usual run of excuses
w*iv given by the regular squad of chronic-kickers-on-
Uiiugs elevating, and the price of admission was resorted
to, as er usual, as the reason for the complete "flop". About
fourteen days later n travelling orchestra was presented
tiitlic public at a local dance ball, al 75 cents per head and
tie place was jammed. No bard times nor depression discus-
■ns were forthcoming as in the former case.
* Monday night, a group of enterprising forward-look-
tjvoiuip men. shouldered the responsibility and brought
pKi' Sail Antonio public, the foremost Negro in the United
]es today. Oscar DePriest.
The men sponsoring the affair are members of a Greek
letter fraternity who have as a part of their program the
fostering 'i a scholarship fund io aid worthy students ■
I,,h",'he1' 1 „f«"rmaV.ion!" H^ inj'uT group who finish high school to go to college Announ-
t„.„ .In v I,e fruitful and mult. 'I""1'' 'he net proceeds from this affair
tlpuM In* used tor Unit fund.
WYII, llift DePriest* came and an audience probably a
youth man lives to reproduce, in
old age he lives to live again, how-
ever, this is not always true. The
Negro as a whole has a greater ten-
dency toward reproduction thai
other races or he has that sub-
sidiary but conspicuous urge soinei
times referred to as the herd urge,
the desire to reproduce in numbers.
The Creator made plain to the
ancestors of the human race, Ilia
reason t'« r creating them, and their
duties and obligations. He left it
them to supply their offspring*
plv; that they direct, coordinate
and displav the energy with whieht
POPS SAYS
BOOK REVIEWS
THF RFGISTER'S PLATFORM
i THE S\\ WTOMO REGISTER STANDS FOR:
li
1. San Anlonin first.
2. Increased patronajie <if extant racial business
institutions and encouraging the establishment
of others
.1. Opportunity for advancement in lines for which
the race qualifies.
i. Equitable representation In city and county gov-
ernmental departments.
I nbridled voting privileges. We are unalterably
opposed to the so-called "white man's primary".
Absolute equality for all before tribunals of jus-
lice.
Anil-Lynch laws both Federal and State.
Fqual accommodations on common carriers.
More and belter school facilities.
<>.
6.
10. A continuation oJLthe pleasant relations existing / 7f "wV'k.v'
J the air strike
i surface at *•
source of the
j the walls of
again.it a hard smooth
ne distance from the
sound. Suet things as
i large building or
eliff is a ver\ suitable surface for
such sound reflection that product*
an echo.
flow.
T«« mankind proereative capacity
• nj<" after about fourteen yean
• t existence To some it cornea lika
\\1
Each
Quest ion
of women
Answer
club knows wha
of the grou{i lea
out sit tli
th.
meeting?
lulis last so li
member of
happens when
it should lie common knowledge that the salary a man
draws in his, and is not to be used except as he sees lit.
_ DePriest's salary of $10,000 per year is no more to be spent
other* like a w r 'n railroad fares, hotel bills, doctor's bills for hoarseness,
nin.i >i. - .line it «iwii upon soas**nd the like iii coming lo Son Antonio or Youk.im or
pit dunk, than if his salary were only $00 per month, lie
hail and has a message thai Negroes should hear, u program
they should follow —but it is not for sale, it is for the up-
lift and development of the entire race and is pari and par-
cel of every community. Who then should "pay the
freight". DePriest, the sponsors (who have nothing, but a
proper spirit), or the public who receives the banefil? Isn't
it better to have a community of interests to function for a
common good than lo resort to the one-man or one-group
effort that these same people decry? Something for no-
things, has never gotten any race anywhere. That that's
mi
ther in
<aid abo
rder ti
t her.
WHY WORRY
M* W I. WAI.KKKi
Worry ha* nt'vr helped any one
ami with nil .t.ely hood will never
help anyone it is nothing more
tlian fear—fear for a certain task
I or ilutv that lies before us that we
Antonio and.
all kindrrd uctivifies, for the youth oi Ihis com-
munity
will
FORCING THE ISSUE
physical wreck, and very often men
tally unbalanced.
Since worry is a certain form of
fear you may say to your self—what
is fear? Fear is the lack of courage
and will power to do certain things
that seem to the ave
he Impossible the power to do
! things that requires a little bit more
rdjnary effort.
rk out
g. It steals upon
llike a till-: in the night; it pr*
•uts itself to others like a robber
hi full day To some it doea not
.no at all; to others it cornea hot
ib.es not stay. It comes more bin*
•.•ringly to the male than the fen-
•null In majority of women it is
subordinate to love.
The problem of sex-control con*
trouts every one, though it* <lamor
inr -"lutioii varies as to the aga,
i i and gait of the individual. It
- •.•••uerally construed that the prob*;
tn '-ontinence it less |>roiiiinea£
- Negro than in other 1*0
1' - )<* true since the Negro begii
; pease th - sexual instiuct
•it'ter puberty.
Nature intends that they shoo!
..ti l as a result they are worse ol
olleetively; but inasmuch as
ugality is, as nature deems it,
• ssarv, he is happier and healtliii
than most races. Things that ai
worth while are never iujuroua.
In the struggle for satiafa
the youth is confronted with t
use of, of the abatainance from,
rr>4*_
By J. W. ileinuiin^s.
H. P. (Horse power) Carter has
been reelected president of the
Texas State Association of I. B.P.
O.K. of W. His reelection took
pluce without a dissenting note.
Rlkdom in Texas owes much to bill
Carter, and his continuation in of
fice without the opposition of h
single individual is an udmission of
his worth to Texas Klks.
The indications are that 1931-32
is going to be n great year for the
Texas Association of Negro Elks.
A cabinet that is with the president
to n man has been elected, and a
program that cannot fail to put the
association in very close touch with
the National Council has been pre-
sented, and has been adopted.
Definite steps have been taken
to form a Daughter Elks' organiza-
tion in connection with every lodge
in the State; also a juvenile depart-
ment in connection with every
lodge. This job has fallen to Hill
J. C. Ford, 1st. vice-president, of
Port Arthur— the job of developing
these organizations. The future suc-
cess of Bill Ford is going to depend
largely on his success iu building up
these organizationa. There is such
a five spirit of harmony and co-
operation however, that there ia no
doubt that he will give excellent
account of himself. And then from
what we know of Bill Ford, he is
one of those fellows, who knows
how to do things.
•Tlirr SOt'LS OF BLACK FOLK'
By I>r. W. B. B. I.uBois,
(A. C\ McClurg and Co., Chicago,
Publishers.)
Bill J. T. Duncan, 3rd. vice-pres-
ident, of San Antouio, heads the all
important Educational Committees.
This committee has an opportunity
to make the most outstanding con-
tribution to the association. Through j A much greater appreciation of his
their oratorical contest, one of the work is realized ufter agaiu read
This book by Dr. DuBois, though
written nearly thirty years ago, and
now selling in its sixteenth edition,
is truly one of the classicn of Anier
ican literature.
XXX
A good many years have passed
since I first read an earlier edition
of this book; a great many experien
ces have I encountered; practically
every commuuity (in this country)
mentioned in the book have I visit
ed; a living knowledge of life with-
in the veil have 1 gleaned.
XXX
With the memories of my own ex
periences in mind I have been able
to agaiu read "The Souls of Black
Folk'' with an intereat, an apprecia
tion, not heretofore enjoyed.
XXX
The general theme of this book
is so universally known that an ad
ditional description is entirely un
necessary although one significant
fact stands out uppermost in my
mind and that is the description, so
truly portrayed, in the chapter, "Of
the Sons of Master and Man,"
wherein Dr. DuBois explained (thir-
ty years ago) the southern philos
ophy of convicting ten innocent Xe
groes rather than let one guilty one
escape.
XXX
At the present moment, thirty
years later, we find this same Dr.
DuBois and the organization he
created, fighting an actual example
of thia unfair nnd unjust procedure.
not-i
w ■
o-
fhe recent demonstration in Chicago <*casioned bv the evic
i of j 70 year-old woman renter for non-pavment, which resulted | than
i i r \r l r 1 Hours spent trvmg to work out
n -he death of 3 Negroes and serious injury of many others is not, ^ ^ ^ futupe oouH
10 be passed over lightly. Negro Newspapers the country over |10t be Pa||e,| hour?, of worry, mr it
• e for the most part been forceful in their expressions against of our worriet
violence, anarchv, and other things communistic. Thev have been 1 something
1 - . , though w
'.jiiallv as strong in :heir warnings to the American white man | fort9
rlut nobody can be responsible for a group of hungry, jobless, men W|iy not greet worn
•.(.use families are suffering, and who are already torn in mind and e\er>tning se.m
c • £ going wrong force a smiii
pint by the ravages ot color prejudice, all manner ot discrunina- upon vour 0f humor
nons. inadequate schools unequal justice in the courts, and barred let the world know you are
ng People will feel more in.'lined
basement is often" spolien~&f
ing offensive to God and man,I
in reality, it ia only injurious U\
self respect. The terrorizing d i
monitions of well-tteaninf bu' ill . . . . ...
advised and misinformed pareuti The simpler and more genuinely natural a man is, the
and teachers, and the ghastly iten igreater he i> Especially is this true when lie is just this
rage person to ture t,iJ|t worni8 its way int« the ,0 himself.
hands of boys and yonng ma, XXX
which alleges, by word and pi'tun, Even if a man fails in his efforts, it will be a satisfac-
that physical decay mental *kjo* tjon j^m enj0y jjie consciousness or having done his
most important features 011 the Na
tional convention's program. Texas
has an opportunity to attract nation
al attention upon herself. Bill Dun
can occupies one of the most cons
picuoos spots 011 the year's program.
jflrneil, IkiiikIiI nd paid for really counts. Clarence Dur-
|\v is eminently correct and every Negro in San Antonio
kould he made realize Ihat "until he becomes a lip giving
[stead on a lip taking individual" lie will always he be
lind and never gel anywhere.
Thf persons who did not hear Oscar DePriest, only
>«|ro in (he Greatest legislative body in the entire woi-ld-
id gave as their excuses the lack of 50c for a ticket, (after
lowing of his coming for more than three weeks) very
tely would not have heard him speak free, giving as their
buses Ihat they didn't have carfare.
When folks of the DePriest calibre, or affairs of the
las$'of Ihe Tenth Cavalry Hand, come lo us, it is far heller
Ihat we serve less chicken at our club meetings, have fewer
lies, guzzle less gin, and wild parly much les^t for the
~ •.P aiuUn«. MJCh /UlL^veul,. save^soifte Bwinrn md exeru
Sonev'and^ lessen the hazardT.f missing" somethinglKiirrs [ir ti*In'Srt oh KivinK or<\tn
eally worth while.
ing, "THE SOI'I.S
POLK."
OF BLACK
"THE RZION OF REASON"
and
THE LION AND THE LAMB 1
Bill Carter has placed Klkdoi'
among Negroes in Texas in the fore-
front. lie has the confidence and
the respect of every Elk in the
State, and if that spirit which per-
meated the Texas Annual Session in
San Antonio continues to live in
the heart of the members. Our State
Both of these booklets are writ-
ten by I. P. Bradley, lawyer and
publisher of the Wyandotte Echo,
in Kansas City, Kansas. They deal
exclusively on political ecouomy, go
vernment and taxation as the sub-
jects affect the Negro.
Apparently these booklets have
is going to be heard from in the 'H>en in print for some time but their
next National Convention.
executives
wr
never see fit to accept suggestions
from employees will not get very far
in the business world.
context, opinions, conclusions, etc.,
are as applicable today us when
written or first published. In fact,
probably more so, what with our mil-
n f am piny nun I inj.ii
eral discontent among certain
■st-
CLIFFORD C. MITCHELL.
put f« rt
Hiierally
,t help,
our be
jhout
even
t ef
with
to be
draw
flow from such practices, ar. fir
mere injurious to mind and bodr j J® * x X X
r'JMj * M. kmum*
arc the measures to use to preven lifeto reality.
ami rure the habit; "hile thr*«%| || XXX ......
i unishments, etc., are often used u It is not how much a man knows, Ihat is of importance,
„o avail. but the end and purpose for which he knows it.
Repression of sex desires modifw
• m |obs on accounr of the color of their skins.
Oscar De Priest once said in speaking of political leadership:
f t'r place a hungry dog tu guard your meal-house, and we
i. hi well sav chat hungry dogs easily go mad and revert to the
ions uncontrollable element from whence thev came The same
true of individuals, \lake 3 man go hungrv, because he is I) lack
nd nobodv can vouch-safe what will happen.
\favor Cermak of Chicago, resting in Wisconsin, was plain-
, character, dwarfs and biases ena
11 f tions and predisposes to nervous aid
rr> mental disorder, hence, these desirai
should be recognized, discussed ak
to help you when you are hapj ^ and ,jiRperge(i 0ue9 to sublimsto
cheerful.
The next time you seem to he op
pressed or worried summon all the
courage you may possess, pretend
that you are happy even though you
are not happy and you are more
likely to forget your troubles.
-O
FOR YOUR SCRAP BOOK
these sex repressions are the pari-nti
and it should be taught in the hou
The Negro child however, is weak
(.1. W Ailch)
FLASHLIGHT OF THE SUNDAY
SCHOOL LESSON
By Rev. W. 0. Merriwether
They stoned Stephen, calling up- ing in good earnest in his prayers
on Ood, v. .">9. Though he called up- for himself, and therefore there he
on God, and by that shewed him- | needed not to use such outward ex-
self to be a true born Israelite, yet j pressions of it; but iu his prayer
thev proceeded to stone him, not tor his enemieji, because that is so
considering how dangerous it is to : much against the grain of corrupt
BUSINESS HINTS
By W L. WALKEK
Conscious study plus
urage will
i* leads to
l\ disturbed and immediately issued a "Moratorium on rent evic-.
noii He sees breakers ahead. Other communities that are alive J
r , rhe situation will profit by this latest out-break in Chicago, and!
. hilt- thev will not declare .t rent Moratorium <yet they will
!.ik<- steps to eliminate this damnable color bar against Negroes
working on certain jobs, for which they are thorotighlv prepared.! power ami job .-iperien
They will also- demand that their courts give justice to the black "dvaureuient and 'ueeess.
_ ..up they will provide better schools, better sanitation, better Employees should give the very
treet and better living conditions for this woiip and thus in a ! >""• u* jwrvl.-.-. Companies eannot
,, . |f. , LIU afford to ru the risk of loosing
irasure allay the anarchistic urge that comes to them, when this CU9tlllI1(iril tLr(„1(,|, yuur ,uih.msi,.-^
;rge is accentuated by hunger. Truly, we declare again to the world, „r incompetency.
!■,,! un able bodied man, a citizen with family ties, who can wck,
ants to work will work, but ts prohibited from earning a Iwinr
it.j.iit of the color of his skin, i< a dangerous man.
u w "The Builders hy Henry Wndsworth Longfellow, is
I to this effect, as a majority' undoubtedly tt good pieee of Hdvice. All of us ure builders
of the parents are of a working claa in this life flTld lo build Well is to live Well.
ami they do not take the time; ut |
do they feel it to be morally f , * ^ All lire architects nf Fate,
Working in these w.ills of Time;
Some with iniissive deeds and great
Some with ornaments of rhvme.
A company or individual are very
often judged by the quality of goods
they turn out.
EPIGRAMS
(Its R. II. MOORE)
Honesty in demanded when access
fu store rooms give opportunity to
steal. You may see articles that
I you take away without their loss
ever being discovered. Never the less
5 vou should live above suspicion?
Be very careful and accurate in
keeping r cords connected with your
work in order to protect yourself
against unjust complaint regarding
vour work.
Men often conquer difficulties because they believe
they can. Their confidence in themselves inspires con-
fidence in others.
XXX
There are many who could become wonderfully self-
educatted merely hy an intelligent use of their own eyes.
XXX Honest workmen are always glad
There are those who see the bigness of life, though to have their work checked by high
they themselves, may he very commonplace and unknown, i er authority.
Start things yourself, and then things will start for 11vV.T'L TL™"*'
you—and everybody- are hllt t|iejr cf,nnot. play a
In the game of life it is so much finer to excel nobly
than to beat the other fellow.
xxx
Sorrow and suffering, privation and discouragement,
pave the road that happiness later treads.
false part all the time. Sooner or
later they will be found out.
Many people have secured posi
tiona under false pretense, only 'o
lose them later under circumstances little use to you if you do not thii|
of greater humiliation. right aa you go about vour wferk.
rect, to enlighten the child aioifi
these lines. This disillusionment «'
the part of the parents •greatlyi
hampers the welfare of the chilli
because he will invariably obtii§|
his information from latrines, gut-
ters, vicious school fellows and p#r
nicioua pamphlets.
Since the child is endowed witfc
that determining antecedent of all
knowledge, curiosity,—then when fct
begins to ask question! he shnalt
be taught about sex and how ti
manage the race-preservative urp,
Why should we tell the chill
about tuberculosis and leave hia
ignorant of syphilis from which th*
bulk of organic nervous disease*
flow? Physicians know that the
majority of diseases 1' peculiar u
women" have their origin in a isi
croscopic organism which husbandi
harbor without knowing it, the r*
lie of 4111 infection that has perhapi
even been forgotten. Yet it is coa
xidered immodest for a young wo
man to know of this disease. Both
of these diseases are preventable
and curable, but every year they
claim their victims by the thousand
and all because the parents ; ut*
not the moral courage to enlightei
their off-spring, when their oalj
reason for not doing so is that it
might be construed as a license u
"immorality." The modern Negn
must awaken to the fact there ia j
choice between immorality and gf
eral paresis.
o-
Be yourself at all times and if
your general bearing is not what ii
should be or ought to be, resolve t
improve it.
All you see, hear or do will be 4
Nothing unseiess is, or low;
Each thing in its nlace is best;
And what seems but itlle show
Strengthens and supports the rest.
For the structure that, we raise,
Time is with materials filled;
Our todays and yesterdays
Are ihe blocks with which we build.
Truly shape and fashion these;
Leave no yawning gaps between;
Think not, because no man sees,
Such things will remain unseen.
In the elder days of Art,
Builders wrought with greatest care
Kach minute and unseen part;
For the gods see everywhere.
Let us do our work as well,
Both the unseen and Ihe seen;
Make the house where gods may dwell
Beautiful entire, and clean.
i •■>'4
Else our lives are incomplete,
Standing in those walls of Time,
Broken stairways, where the feet
Stumble, as they seek to climb-
Build toilay, then, strong and sure,
With a firm and ample base:
And ascending and secure
Shall tomorrow find its place.
Thus alone can we attain
To those turrets, where the eye
Sees the world as one vast plain,
And one boundless reach of sky.
MSM«!vW • - .
fight against Ood; nay, therefore
he called upon Him. Note, it is the
comfort of those who are unjustly
hated and persecuted by men, that
they have a Ood to go to, a Ood
all sufficient to call upon. Men stop
their ears, as they did here, (v. 57)
but Clod does not. Stephen was now
cast out of the city but he was not
east out from Ood. He was now tak
ing his leave of the world, and there-
fore calls upon Ood; Tor we must
do that as long as we live. Note,
It is good to die praying; then we
need help-strength we never had,
to do a work we never did; and
how much we fetch in that help
and strength but by prayer. Two
short prayers Stephen offered up
to Ood in his dying moments, und
in them as it was breathed out His
soul.
Here is a prayer for himself;
Lord Jesus receive my Spirit.
Thus Christ had Himself resign-
ed his Spirit immediately into the
hand of the Father. We are taught
to resign ours into the hands of
Christ as Mediator, by him to be
recommended to the Father. Stephen
saw Jesus standing at the Father's
right hand, and he thus calls him,
"Blessed Jesus, do that for me now,
which thou staudst there to do for
all thine, receive my departing
spirit into thy hand."
(2) Here is a prayer for his per
secutors, (v. 60.)
The circumstances of this prayer
are observable, for it seems to have
been offered up with something
more solemn than the former.
First he kneeled down, which was
an expression of his humility iu
prayer. Secondly, He cried with a
loud voice; which was an expres-
sion of his importunity. But why
should he thus shew more humility
and importunity in this request
than in the former? The answer is
this, None could doubt of his be-
nature, it was requisite he should
give proofs of his being in earnest.
What was the effect of thia per-
secution ?
They were all scattered abroad;
not all the believers, but all the
preachers; who were principally
struck at, and against whom war
rants were isued out to take them
up. They, remembering our Master's
rule, (When they persecute you iu
one city flee to another) if they
made a public appeurance there,
as they determined to do, their per
secutors' power would soou reach
them there, but because they look
ed upon this as an intimation of
the providence to them to scatter;
their work was pretty well done in
Jerusalem, and now it was time to
think of the necessities of ofltcr
places; for their Master had told
them that they must be his wit-
nesses in Jerusalem first, and then
in all Judea and in Samaria, and
then to the uttermost parts of the
earth, Act 1, 8. Though persecution
n.av not drive us off from our work,
yet it uiay send us, as a hint of
Providence, to work elsewhere.
(3) The preachers were all so t
tared except the Apostles, who, pro-
bably, were directed by the Spir t
to continue ot Jerusalem yet for
some time they being by special
providence of God, screened from
the storm, aud by special grace of
Ood enable to face the storm. They
tarried at Jerusalem, that they
might be ready to go where lusiat-
ance was most needed by the other
preachers that were sent to break
the ice: as Christ ordered this di-
sciples to go to those places where
He Himself designed to come, Luke
10; 1. The Apostles continued longer
together ut Jerusalem than one
would have thought considering the
command and commission given
them, to go in all the world, aud
disciple all nations.
Some take no thought of Ihe value of money until they
have come lo end for it. and many do Ihe same with their
<imc.
xxx
A man may be a bootlack, a ditch digger or garbage
v.collect^ and there will be no discredit in doing so unless
J he allows his mind lo have no higher aim.
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Duncan, Jasper T. The San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1931, newspaper, August 7, 1931; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth389538/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.