Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1916 Page: 1 of 4
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Guaranty Fund Bank
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Palacios state bank
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PALACIOS, TEXAS
Capital and '-ii plus, $65,000.00
Ife
Statement of Condition
At the Close of Business Sept. 12th, 1916.
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts...._..........................$17^,710.18
Real Estate and Banking Hou e
Furniture and Fixtures ...
Interest in Guaranty Fund
CASH AND EXCHANGEv
18,427.41
. 4,857.38
. 2,097.90
. 60,086.67
$258,079.54
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock
Surplus Fund......
Undivided Profits
......................... $50,000.00
..... *.............. 15,000.0®
.................,...... 5,833.33
DEPOSITS...........t......................... 187,246.21
$258,079.54
The above Statement is true and correct.
J. F. BARNETT, Cashier.
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Election Echoes
• As tha final and complete returns
hum tha recent election are announced
' and become known, the more wonder-
hd does the great victory won by Presi-
'dint Wilson appear, though in the
elaetorial college he has won by a vers
close margin.
In tha first place Mr. Wilson Bs
Joined well toward two millions of the
__ovar that received by him
yaan ago, allowing that the people
of the Country ate with him and er.-
' done hia policies. Four years ago
ij President ’ Wilson received nearly all
‘ of the electoral vote, yet was elected by
• a popular vote that lacked about a mil-
lion and a half of being a majority
fhis election he ftferived a half million
plurality over H goes, and yet has a
bar* majority in the electoral college.
In 1912 Wilson carried all but eight
Of the states—and they were small urt.
all told having but 96 electoral votes
of .which Roosevelt received 83 W-
Taft 8.
lo the election this year Wilson car
jild 82 states and Hughes 16. ! lnr.
Wilson carried twice a? many stati-s n-
Hughes, and still missed defeat t.y a
small margin. These incident- art
worth remembering as deronnslnt. .
that the existing system of elect
m president is unfair; that is if it i ..-•>
-intent and desire that public off isL
be elected by the will of the mu r- -
of the people.
Hughes carried but four states
of the Mississippi river—maybe n >t ■■
many when the final count is compli -
ed. They are Iowa, Minnesota, South
Dakota and Orc^hn. George BaiLy in
tha Houston Post aptly illustrates the
result by saying that a person can !>uard
a train at Washington and go over any
OM of three different railroads, and
make the trip to California without
passing through a single state carried
* by Hughes.
Again Naw York has always been
counted the pivofkl state, and that the
vdU of thkt state decided the presidency.
In the event of the low of New York,
thon the opposition looked to Ohio,
Indiana and I|)inois for a vote to offset
Naw York The idea that a president
could be elected without the vote of
New York, Pennsylvania, Indiana and
Illinois, if suggested before t he election
would have been considered absurd in
the extreme, still Mr. Wilson was elect-
ed without ths vote of either one of
tho big four.
All of these things bring forcefully
to mind the really wonderful victory
*
mine who shall be the head of the na
tion will by no means be among the
least of the things accomplished by
President Wilson in his remarkable
victory.
As Jo Prohibition
Maybe its strange and maybe it isn’t,
how little the newspapers have report-
ed the result of the prohibition vote in
|l» f
state wide prohibition it the general
election. It is concluded that four
states mentioned last week voted dry,
making a total of 23 dry .gates or
within one of half of the states in the
Union. The territory of Alaska also
voted liquor out by a big majority.
The state of Missouri voted dry out-
side the city of St. Louis; but the home
of the breweries kept the state in the
wet column, the city alone giving a ma-
jority of 127,000 against prohibition
i nr state outsMe St. Louis voted dn
ny 123,000—even the great market
center, Kansas City giving a majority
for a dry state. The.only report wi
uve sun gave but 6000 dry votes in
the city of ;:t. Louis, and if .‘this-is the
vet', then fraud has unquestionably
L-n perpetrated. That Mere could
-:My be ,.n more than 6000 prohi
..mil votes in a city like St. Louis is
fo ausurd for Uny one to for a mom
.lit helitve.
Or- run Imd a sort of a provisional
atewide prohibition law, but at the
‘ • (.lectio■> the state voted absolutely
>iy hy adopting a law prohibiting ship
mo fit, ji liquor into the state.
Liquor intrests tried to induce Ar
• unsas to- substitute local option Joi
the statewide prohibition law, but the
local option was buried out of si^ht.
ana statewide prohibition still remains.
So in fact n can be said that six states
instead nl four voted for statewide pro-
hibition.
In Michigan the voters hid the
chyice of adopting local option or
statewide prohibition. 'Local option
was badly defeated, and statewide pro-
hibition won. The victory for the
temperance cause was the greatest ever
achieved in the country at any election.
Our New County Court
At tha regular monthly meeting of
our County Court Monday, the newly
elected members assumed their dutier.
Mr. Henry Sanders from this precinct
was the only old member of the court
re-elected. 1 he new members of the
court are;
In the Bay City precinct Louis Hueb-
Cotmcil Proceedings.
At a regular meeting of the city
council held on this the 6th day of
November A. D. 1916, there were pres-
ent, J. J. Harrison, mayor, presiding,
and aldermen Walter, Wilkcrson, Mil-
ler, Blair and Ralston. The city at-
torney, marshal and water supt, were al-
so present when the following business
was transacted, to-wit:
The minutes of last regular and
special meetings were read in open
council and appaoved.
Upon motion duly seconded, it is
ordered that Traylor Hardware Co. be
and he is granted permissiou to put in
an under ground gasoline tank in front
of its place of business strictly in com-
pliance with the ordinance regulating
the same.
Upon motion duly seconded, it is
ordered that the mayor and city secre-
tary execute releases to all parties who
have paid in full the amount due by
each of them for putting down side
walks.
R. J. Hill presented his monthly re-
port for the month of September 1916,
as waterworks superintendent, as fol-
lows:
Amt. water rent recieved $337.55
By am’t paid city treasurer 337.55
Delinquent, 17
Whereupon said report was approved
and gidered recorded.
Geo. H. Heck, presented his report
of taxes collected during the month of
October 1916,-as fellows;
Gen’l fd Ad val. tax $49.50
Am't poll tax, 4.00
Am't Ad val.-tax deli'n 14.44
Am't Int., Pen'lty 5.14
Am't cost delinquent, 3.00
Am't poll tax, 2.00
Occupation R.T. Phillips 5.00
General fund $8008
STREET & BRIDGE FUND
Am’t Ad val. $27.90
Ad val. delinquent,__8,70^
36.60
WATER WORKS FUNDS
Am't Ad valoren $46 50
Ad val. delinquent 14 44
60.94
Total . $177.62
► d-wri
Palacios State Bank, inti
Joseph Pybus, Sr. interi
hris Johnson, labor, w
F. Elliott, telegraphin||
An Appeal to Community
Loyalty.
It v. ill not he long na]
holiday shopping will be
and before it opens we
few words with our fellow'
the question of how am
holiday money is to be »|
Are you going to patrol
order houses this year as
did last year? Or are yoi
necessary, even make a si
and stick to home people'
Whence came the mon
are intending to send to tl
der concern? Did it coj
city in which that concer
Not by a long shot. If yi
cr it is the product of the
soil? Why, the soil of yi
ity. Now you, as a prai
know full well the results
ous practice of taking eve;
your land and returning
You know that this practh
er or later impoverish yoi
income.
Can’t you realize that jin
your money away from hi
doing to the community jl
would not think of doing
robbing it of its produi
You certainly are. Evi
away from your communi
just that much of its powi
But perhaps you are m
but a mechanic, or trader,
responsibility rests even
upon you to keep your
hpme channels of trade,
it came from the hard eart
neighbors and friends, ai
no right to deprive the
the good it cah do if circi
Yes, we say no right,
any right to be disloyal to
itk. Deprive any man ew
munity support and he
ish—worse than a Robii
for he is among his kind
until the
full swing,
to have a
itizens on
where this
t.
e the mail
irhaps you
|oing to, if
| sacrifice
that you
mail or-
e from the
is located?
ire a farm-
il. What
commun-
al farmer,
the ruin-
hing from
hing to it.
must soon-
Bource of
sending
e you arc
what you
your farm,
ive pbwer?
dollar sent
robs it of
good,
a farmer,
Then the
heavily
in the
ise all oi
gs of youi
you have
unity of
therein,
man has
commute
sly of com-
a par-
Crusoe,
PHONE 38
Forward
Tho beaten bade in many a fray,
V nutver strength wo borrow,
And where tho vanguard rests today
The rear shall eamp tomorrow.
—Gerald Massey.
THANKSGIVING MENU
Oyster soup
Criso oyster crackers
Celery Pepper manges
Roast Turkey
Bread stuffing ‘ Giblet sauce
Cranberry Jelly
Mashed potatoes
Sweet corn
Spiced pears
Pudding
Pumpkin pie
Baked squash
Creamed onions
Hot slaw
Sauce
Cheese
ROYAL
BAKING POWDER
No Alum—No Phosphate
Fruit—nuts—Raisens—dates
Biscuits Coffee
Amen!
Hurrah, ditto, double ditto—for
Wilson. Three cheers for American
Women and their decisive votes, and
one high hozanna for the first - woman
Congresswoman, Jeannett Rankin, of
Montana. Forward indeed!
Forty-five very foreigners were made
"voting citizens’’ of these United States
the other day. Here's where they came
from: England, Ireland, Scotland,
Russia, France, Italy, Germany, Aus-
tria, Turkey, Greece, and more or leu
elsewhere. This is what they are, or
profess to be: Merchants, mechanics,
book, hotel and bar keepers, cattle-
men, chemists, cooks, draughtsmen,
drivers, deck-hands, peddlers, plumbers,
butchers, grocers, waiters, architects,
and more or less other things. What
a wonderful help their votes will be to
us who happen to be in the house-
won by President Wilson. And furth- i "er su'cted“ W>,M’ B*^er’ J’ * ”*w
er tboy indicate that the politic, of the k'n*‘ *h# P1,c‘ * £ LMcN#b1'
country is adjusting and adapting itself^ ^.tlgard. ■«* C- V. Caban.*. ol
to now lines, which points to the dissolu-
tion ol partisan, party and sectional
issues, which we are rare augurs well for
the future welfare of our nation as a
really free end popular government.
The dispelling of the power of any one
state nr until group of states to deter-
Maikham .succeeds J. W. Bowers of
Blessing.
The old court was convened Monday
with Judge Conger presiding and the
canvass of the recent election was gone
into.
i P.vraui,:---
The Betcou only $1.50 a year.
And said report having been examined
and checked up was approved.
J. F. Barnett, city treasurer, present-
<41 his monthly report, and the same
was examined and approved as follows:
GENERAL FUND
On hand Oct. 1st, $50.40
faxes rec’d during mo. 92.91 *
Fines rec’d during mo. 22,00
$165.3J
Warrants paid, 66.06
On hand. $99.25
STREET & BRIDGE FURD
On hand Oct. 1st, $754.93
Taxes rec’d during mo. 16.25
$771.18
Warrants paid, 43.75
On hand. $727.43
WATERWORKS FUND
On Itand Oct. 1st, $702.95
Water rent, rec’d 837.55
$1040.50
Warrants paid, __83 30
On hand, $957.20
STREET & BRIDGE SINKING FUND
In hand Oct. 1st, $1130.45
faxes rec’d during mo. 32.50
1162.95
On hand,
WATERWORKS SINKING FUND
On hand Oct. 1st, $961.91 g
Taxes rec’d during mo.__61.15
On hand, 1023.06
Total amount on hand, $11969.89
Upon motion dulv seconded it is
ordered that the mayor be and he is
hereby authorized to pay the semi-an-
nual interest due Nov. 15th on the 23
outstanding waterworks bonds.
It appearing to the council that
furrant No.—issued on Chas. Axberg
Tor the suirl.of $1.00 was an error, and
should have issued for 50 cents, it is
ordered that the mayor and city secre-
tary make the coitgctien.
The bids for excavating and building
the additional reservoir were opened,
and read, and upon motion were re-
jected, and further action thereon was
postponed until next regular meeting.
The following claims, having been
examined by the finance committee,
and found to be correct, were approv-
ed and it is ordered that warrants issue
on the city treasurer for the amounts
due each person, respectively, vis:
Mayor and aldermen salary, $20.00
Dr. J. R. Elliott, health officer, 5.00
J. C. Perry, city attorney,
W. B. Willis, city secretary,
C. L. Haynes, fire marshal
J. F. Barnett citv treasurer,
J. E. Grant, hauling fertilizer
Palacios Beacon, printing,
Groceries for Mahaney,
Palacios Garage supplies
C. H. Trego, wiring w. w. office
C. H. Trego lights,
J. J. Harrison, postage etc.
Palacios Hardware Co. supplies,
If, then, are thus dependent on
your neighbors and friends, do you not
owe them an equal allegiance? Arc
they t6 consult your interests while you
ignore theirs? This were ingratitude
of the basest sort. *
Just suppose, you patron of the mail
house, that for a period of twelve
months every citizen of your country
followed your example and did all his
trading away from home? What con-
dition would your country be it? Would
there be a solvent merchant in it? Not
one What of vour schools, youi
churches, and all the civilizing institu
tions of our laud? They might still
survive if you bear all the expense—not
otherwise.
Think seriously of these things, you
patron of the mail order house. Real
ize that if you have the right to deprive
your community of your money, ali
your neighbors have equal right—then
imagine the consequences.
Don’t be an ingrate! If you have u
dollar to spend, spend it at home.
Thus it stoys and works in the only-
spot on God’s earth in which vou arc
interested. Send it away and it is
■gone forever. • '
‘iv -LE2MI
Country Editors Have Hard
Jobs ^
"dome one has said that the differ-
ence between a city and country news-
paper is that the city paper prints wha
you don’t know, while the country
paper prints what you do know," says
the San Diego (Cal ) Sun.
"While this is true to a certain ex-
tent, the country paper is just as im-
portant in its field as the city paper.
And we venture to assert that the
country papers in this county are about
the best of their kind you will find any-
where.
“The country editor's job is no sine-
cure. If you think it is, try a dav at
collecting bashful subscriptiuni, speed-
ing up the job department to turn out
a belated catalogue, wrestling with a
stubborn local merchant who refuses
to advert!**} preaching the eternal gos-
pel oF'trade at home with home mer-
chants,' cussing the city boys who speed
through the town in their red facers,
running down personals as the 5:15
train pulls in, writing up an editorial
on the political situation, etc.
“And tile chances are that in the end
_____the editorial will be just about as pow-
5.001 *rful and just about as grammatical as
3.751 the effort of the city editorial writer,
4.50 who does nothing else.
4,20 “Anyway, our hats are off to the
5,60 country editors hereabouts. We grab
1Q.30 f°r the country exchanges before we
16.00 look at the city papers, here in this of-
1.50 fice, when the mail uoibas in,”
L65 j
12.50
10.00
7.20
Merchyit & Planters L'br Co. 6.87 F8rttl LOflflS
Traylor H'dw Co. 2.15 On Improved end productive farms
R. J. Hill, salary, 75.00 In Mutagorda County. Long time at
Palacios State Bank Int, 576.50 reasonable Interest. A. W. Estes,
Gulf Refining Co., gasoline, oil 2996 .MMiu/er* Amarloan Mortgage Co.
J. W. Clinton, straet work, 2.25. Hear room Palacios State Baulg.
eleven noughts.) So dew is not so
fairy like as it looks. It is quite*a
business like proposition, so after this,
don't leave your toys and tools and pets
uncovered over night, for the dew might
fall (as heavy dews do) and crush them.
How would you like to be this stray
dog? His name is Sam. He is a let-
ter carrier's assistant, and he lives in
Mt. Carmel, Pennsylvania (meaning
Wm Penn's woods). Sam now wears
an elegant brass-studded collar engrav-
ed like this: “U. S. Mail. Presented
Uncle Sam's laithful friend (Sam) by
Albert S. Burleson, Post master
General, October, 26. 1916." This
collar with its inscription was presented
to Sam for his faithfulness in his self-
appointed business of guarding the U.
S. mail bags. He felt called upon by the
government to undertake to do some-
thing worth while for the good of all
races and people and creatures, so he
did what he could—the best tHht he
could and it was “worth It” as such ef-
forts always are. So his Uncle Sim
sat up and took notice of a one time
stray. _
A Eew Facts About “Bevo"
The most stupendous joke ever per-
petrated on prohibitionisti is now in
full blast. '
The jolnr is Anheuser-Busch, that
home establishing profession. What a
wonderful help to the child life and
woman life laws under the stars and
the stripes in Texas.
*
The city council of Little Rock,
Arkansas, doss not want saloons again
so it has adopted resolutions urging the
defeat of an act to repeal the prohibi-
tion law.
The Shetland and Paisley shawls of
another day have appeared. However,
not in shawls, but as trimmings, bands,
over drapes, hats and muffs—and every-
thing. That's the “mode." and its all
very well antl^ood—as a jpode, but
we happen to know of one such shawls
(hat will never be asked to go to the
-.crap heap along the road of the latest
mode. This sliawl and the little brown
eyed, brown curled lass it sheltered, set
sail from the old Perth-town together
along tqward the last of the 60's.
Twelve weeks of sea and storm, and
then America—and home—for the.
lass. But the shawl had a roving spirit,
so, leaving the lass, it returned—not
snee, nor twice, but thrice, across the
seas to the motherland—each time re-
turning with a treasurer beneath its
wings. Later on, though, the old shawl
settled down domestically speaking, and
became chief snuggles for a raft of
American bairns.
CHILDREN.
Sesqui-cen-ten-niil—get used to the
word, so you can use it grandly when
the time comes.
In Houston—our Chicago—there are
many fine hotels. Two of them are
named, not “Foed" and “Clothing,"
but “The Rice" and “The Cotton."
There'shield be two or more, named,
say, “The Sugar” and "The Flour."
“The Cotton" is quite high, “The Rice"
still higher' “The Sugv,” (should they
build it) should be higher still while
“The Flour" (to say nothing of "The
Meat" and "TheShoes") should wave
it's topmost guests around among the
angels.
When is silk not cilk? Every day
in the year! A manufacturer makes a
fine, ehiny mercerised cotton goods and
names it “cilk." Uncle Sim aeys he
must interfere, and so Uncle Sam does,
so cilk is not even cilk anymore. How-
ever, you'd better tell your home's pur-
chasing agent, your mother, to watch
her step for there's a chance that ihe
might slip on that slick word yet.
The dew-fall for one year in the
United Kingdom amounts to "5,500,-
000,000,000 gallons, (two fivaa and
of morals and religion throughout the
civilized world.
. Anheuser-Busch saved Texas from
humiliation in 1867. It saved her
from the wild fanaticism of Statewide
prohibition by spending many thous
ands of dollars to change public sent!
ment.
Anheuser-Busch again saved Texas
from a like humiliation in 1911.* Money
Bowed like water in the Mississippi
river from their coffers to save the
sacred privilege of selling beer in Texas.
But unfortunately, and despite the
efforts of this great philanthropic insti-
tution to save Texas from slavery and
despotism three-fourths of the counties
in Texas have cynically rejected their
good office* and have plunged by far
the greater part of the great state into
the deadly maelstrom of prohibition by
local option elections.
But Anheuser-Busch is wise. Its
patriotism knows no bounds. Like all
wise institution it plays both ends
against the middle.
While it agitates limited prohibition
a prohibition which shall exclude
selling whisky while it permits the sell-
ing of beer, it has also followed the
policy of cultivating thirst for beer
throughout its existence. To cultivate
this thirst—for you know,, under the
inherent depravity which affects the
human race, babies and children utter,
ly reject the taste of the life-giving bcv.
erage—it resorts to all kinds of schemes.
The oldest one is to keep salted- pret.
xela in the beer-joints for free diatribu.
SAVES DAUGHTER
Advict of Mother bo Dooht Pro
vents Daughter's Untimely Eads
Rendv, Ky.—" I was not able to do
anything for nearly six months," writes
Mrs. Laura Bratcher, of this place, “and
was down in bed for three months.
I cannot tell you how 1 suffered with
my head, and with nervousness and
womanly troubles.
Our family doctor told my husband he
could not do me any good, and he had
to give it up. We irild another doctor,
but ne did not help me.
At last, my mother advleed me to take
Cardui, the weman’s tonic. I thought
it was no use lor I was nearly dead and
nothing seemed to do me any good. But
I took eleven bottles, and now I am able
to do all of my work and my own
washing.
I think Cardui is the best medicine In
the world. My weight has increased,
and I look the picture ol health. ”
it you autfer from any ol the ailments
peculiar to women, get a bottle ot Cardui
today. Delay Is dangerous. We know
it will help you, for It has helped so
many thousand!1 ol other weak women
In the past 50 yean.
At all druggists.
tion.
The latest scheme, and one thev hope
will overcome that depravity of human .
nature which wickedly rebels at the
taste of godlike beer, is to lure boys and
girls as well as weak-kneed prohibition-
ists into the beer habit by introducing
a “soft drink” into local option com-
munities.
This “soft drink” is for soft people.
It is called “Bevo.” It is not beer—oh,
no. But the meshes of the law are
too large to strain it out, and it slips
through like fine flour slips through a
bolter. It contains only 1 '4 per cent,
alcohol, and the usual amount of malt
and hops.
-As a matter of fact “Bevo” is nothing
more or less than a mild beer. The
purpose of its introduction is to make
money for Anheuser-Busch in two
ways. First, they cultivate the taste
for beer in those boys and girls who
get the “soft drink” habit
Without boys and girls the occupa-
tion of Anheuser-Busch has gone to—
well, it’s gone.
Second, they are making those boys
and girls pay for cultivating the thirst
for beer while preparing them for a
life of beer-guzzling when “Bevo” be-
comes too weak to satisfy the thirst.
And there are lots of prohibitionists
who are falling for this joke.
Here is what Bob Gresham in the
Temple Mirror says about it:
“In fact you can get everything out
of “Bevo” but what vou are looking for.
“Somebody has said that all you have '
to do is to use a hypodermic needle on
a “Bevo,” or, in ether words, to carry
oof fniitiin irtti loidid xitk ikokol
Let us treat the matter seriously.
Good people of Comanche, are you will-
ing to be duped by this vile stuff? Are
you willing that your sons and daugh-
ters shall be lured by this concoction
into the beer-guzzling habit? If so, to-’
courage them to drink it But tke Van-
guard is not going to be kesponsible for
remaining silent iu the face of this ne-
farious scheme to corrupt the appetite
of the rising generation of young peo-
ple. It would not give the first page
to advertising it only for the fact that
the introduction of “Bevo" to a prohi-
bition community is rtic of the most
sinister devices to create a thirst, for
beer ever invented, and all the power*
of Satan with his host of imps stand
behind the scheme chuckling to think
what fools these “soft drink" people be.
—Comanche Vanguard.
I ittLA9El-»—4
Boy's Essay on Editors
A country school boy wag told to
write an essay on editors, says the Fall-
brook (Cal.) Enterprise, and this is the
result:
“Don't know how newspapers came
to be in the world. I don't think the
good Lord does, for he ain't got nothing
to say about an editor in the BiMe. I
think the editor is one of the missing
links you read of and stayed in the
bushes until after the flood and then
came out and wrote the thing up and
has been here ever since. I don't think
he ever died. I never seen a dead one
and never heard of one getting licked.
“If a doctor makes a mistake he
buries it, and people dassent say
nothin'.
“When the editor makes a mistake
there is big swearing and a big fuss, but
if a doctor makes a mistake there ii a
funeral, cut flowers and perfect silence
“A doctor can use a word a -yard
long without anybody knowing what it
is, but if an editor use* one he has to
spell it
“If a doctor goes to see another man’e
wife he charges for it, but if the editor
goes he gets a charge of bucluhot
“Any old college can make a doctor,
but an editor has to be born."
1 F/fljnm—
Dr. J. Y. Joyner's remark, ‘The
most priceless things are the things
without price,” is recalled by an article
by Thomas Kana in the American
Magazine. Mr. Kane i* in hi* eight-
ieth year but says he does not feel any
older than he did thirty or evap forty
years ago.. And he sums up the es-
sentials for good health and long life
by laying
"Just three things are absolute nec-
essities for the imooth-running and
longevity of them human machines of
ours. They are pure air, pure water,
and food. Food alone hat a price.
Both air and water God's free gifts.
And vet not on* penon in ten thous-
and breathes enough pur* air not one
in a thousand drinks enough pure wo- .
ter, and nearly all of us oat too much."
'
J
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Stump, D. L. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1916, newspaper, November 17, 1916; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth726040/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Palacios Library.