Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 28, 1931 Page: 1 of 4
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com
i 1899.
rpwned
are sarllv recalled, a* on the eve. of
.imahei Maifest, • »h>« lovely form—
«/3i/I’T^Wkord’>till in tfi«40r.4BK
brace «*f the angel of death On Mai-
m»<SMl.of-
tivities jljat alwaysDirought tweet-re-
ajau^
tornado w
rase-
Two Leading
Spokesmen
for Farmers
West Texas—Cloudy, thundershow
Cotton seed. >18.00.
Cotton seed hulls, >0.80. «
Cottos seed nseai, retell, >1.M
A Water Sprite
a.
a.
a
MAIFEST
PROGRAM
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
October. 10U
BRENHAM, TEXAS,THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931
VOL. 48
NO. 52
IN WASHINGTON
F :
(United Press Reuort*
of
pened politically when hi* an Her was
& M. vs.
1>-
8:00
in.
WILLIAMSON FREE
John
ni xiottr and state auditor
GUESTS FOR MAIFEST
will
MR. ANDREAS IMPROVES
least
IF IT RAINS
COMMITTEE VOTES
AT THE MAIFEST
BUILDING NEW BRIDGE
2
(United Pre— xepoctj
(United Pre— Report)
Troop* 1
«JV
.
FOR IMPEACHMENT
GOV. OF TENNESSEE
write
our
9:00
10:00
10:00
Corona-
. Carrol I,
By PAUL COMLY FRENCH
United Pre— Staff Correspondent
then < ere <li-chat ge<| quickly,
were said tc be hurt critical-
Paviiion
Rodeo.
Baseball
public is
the Scout
Funeral arrangements are in charge
if Clark-Siniaiik, lunerat directors.
POWERFUL LIGHTS
ARE TO ILLUMINATE
Sanderson. Texas, May 28 —Deter-
mined to continue her hunger strike,
Mrs. Bessie Sharp, aged 22. ignored
the food placed before her today, and
renewed her demand to be released on
an alleged husband slaying charge.
Willie Burleson, for whose love the
woman is claimed to have killed her
husband, was released under >5,000
bond, pending action by the grand
jury on chargee of being an accom-
plice in a poison plot. He immediate-
ly left for the ranch where he resides.
Established
January, 1866
Island Reds and
M to 2 3-4 lbs.,
All students who are interested are
advised to report to the high school
Wiese states that if it
certainly hopes it
9.00
10:00
Light.
10:30
Special Dance for the
'at Pavilion^
Rodeo.
UNDER $5,000 ROND
IN WIFE SHOOTING
MEMBER OF STATE
HIGHWAY BOARD TO
MAKE TALK HERE
111.
m.
<ni.
30. the two afternoons of the Maifest.
Should it rain on Friday both game*
will be pllycd Saturday.
Bureau Federation, now ou
Edward A. O'Neal.
HISTORY SHOWS
ELYSEE PALACE.
UNHAPPY ABODE
FREAKY TORNADO
WRECKS A TRAIN
AND KILLS TWO
American Farm
is greeting hi* successor.
MEDICAL MEN TO
MEET ON JUNE 8
IN QUAKER CITY
Judge Sam D. W. Low announces
that D. K. Martin of San Antonio,
member qj the state highway coinniis-,
sion. will visit Brenham and make a
rams,
doesn’t.
vour
LldJ
know-
little
Band Concert.
Forming of Parade.
Toyland on Parade.
Good middling, 8.50.
Strict middling, 8.40.
Middling, 8.00.
Strict low middling, 7.50.
Low middling, 6.75.
(United Pre— Jieoortl
Moorhead, Minn., May 28.—Death,
.differing and property damage mark-
ed today the zigtzag. trail of a.freak
swooped down upon a
\\ J. Sloan.
pallbearer, will be D. C.
D. Milroy, J. E. Routt,
L Wilkins, Wdl
Sr , W. J. Ro-
ell, E P. Andes-1
Registration for 1931 jumped to 315
from 107 towns.
a. nt. Band Concert.
a. . Forming of Parade
and five, senate bills of the re-
session of the legislature were
by Governor Ross Sterling today
his approval. He worked until’
his office.
order that
another in
the
FRIDAY, MAY 29th
Baylor Day
Brenham "schools
education at St.
at Buffalo, New
' The sessions of the association will
open the new five million dollar Mun-
icipal auditorium and convention hall
on the west bank of the Schuylkill
river.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. De Ware
have as their guests for the Maifest:
Mrs. Jesse De Ware, Jesse Jr. land
Ethel Rush De Ware, W. S. Terry,
Jr., of Jefferson, Mr. and Mrs. R. G.
Higginbothom, Mr. and Mrs. Madison
Bell, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. ' FTohnes,
James Sullivan, Mr. Pifinbefffiy. •Cap-
tain and Mrs. Lyons, Frank Anderson
all of A. & M. College; Mr. and Sirs.
Lloyd Gregory, James Crovens, Mr.
wnd Mrs. Milton Ivey ofa Houston.
The fighting governor has added
| virtually the entire state senate to his
a. list of enemies who'-need expect no
Honor*.
Perhaps Madam' Paul Doumer
break the spell and bring gaiety to the
house where little gaiety has been be-
fore,
JJaxtb]
into a'
the bed and revealed an. automatic
As the two scram
Mrs. Williamson pleaded w
husband to stop before ai- accident or-'
OF FIRE FIGHTING
AIM OF SCHOOL
m.
in.
8:00 p. ni.
9:00 p. m.
Park Pavilion..
9:00 p. tn.
Armory at Park.
The Boy Scouts of Troths J. and
have prepared an elaborate Scout
exhibit of Scout handicraft. This work
represents many hours of tiresome la-
bor of the Scouts and the
invited to see this exhibit in
hut both days of the Maifest.
Special notice is given to
and 2 to meet at Scout hot tonight for
drill jiad to prepare l«M. th* parade
it to the marines. You don't
it, but public service takes a
guts".
Tenrt., May 28—Im-
peachment of Governor Henry H.
Horton was recommended to the Ten-
nessee house of representatives by •
Old Folks Dance in
College Station, Texas. May 28.—
Standardization of drill evolutions and
fire fighting ope rat ions “by all fire de-
partments of the state will be the aim
of the new firemen’s training school’
to be established at the Texas A & M
College as a result of recent legisla-
tive appropriation. Practically all
money appropriated will be used to
purchase equipment tp put the school
on a permanent basi»)to.
Plans for the new' school call for
short courses' to Le held from two to
four times a year. One man from
each fire department in the state will
be eligible to attend, and this man will |
be given training to enable him to in-
struct other men in his. home depart-"
ment.
today under
11:00 at. «m. Coronation of Queen
Pageaiit and
Mary Edna
Light", in the baseball
2:15 p.
4:00
Ixrnnie
which he
-there w'ill be a double header baseball
game' on
Baylor teams arc scheduled t<> play
Honorary
Williams, A
Wm Rrinsfein, C.
Grebe, B Eldridge.
liamson's head. She died a few min-
utes later.
ed. Hartley added the senate to his
list of enemies.
Rodeo.
Coronation > Ball in
Madatn Sadie-Carnot, whose hus-
band was assassinated at Lyoif, never
recalled the Elysee without a shud-
der. ’’It was the house of sadness
where our great happiness was ■ ruin-
ed’’, she said.
Madam Poincare made no secret
that she left the Elysee with pleasure,
after the termination of her distin-
guished husband’s war-time adminis-
tration.
The early days of the Republic,
troubled times when the structure of
I the new Third Republic was endan-
gered from many quarters, brought no
I happiness to the wife of ‘Marshal
MacMahon. Madam la Mareahall, a
soldier’s wife, found the Eliysee too
ornate and glpomy for her
tastes.
But perhaps the Doumer family will Dallas county was vaJMated and the
find the great palace more congenial. compulsory school age for L‘;!L-
than their predecessors, I* - —J • - ,r
modified and brightened for their use
i and according to their tastes as it is jutant general will appoint the state
Tfor every new occupant.-------------------]..scnica^iffi£crjQjsMM world war vet-
Ierans, .primary election contests may
be appealed to the court of civil ap-
peals and court and industrial accident
board procedure clarified- Numerous
I local game bills were approved.
Mt 1 1
members “Admitted and incotoro-
consisting
land com-
to consider
1-ptifting a lawn around the Capitol
i First, Hartley wanted to change the
grading.
"Anyone with the gumption of a
goose knows this thing is a labyrinth
of monkey business”, he told his enc-
jniies. "It s a child’s patchwork, a
The school will confintie for 10 jumpblcd heap".
weeks and a student may-make 1 1-2; The taxpayers would protest spend
credits in that time. I ing money for the project. Land Com-
missioner Savidge said, adding that he
va* sorry they could not agree
"I can just see the tears in
Hatledal saw the twister coming, ran
to his storm cellar and was crushed to aroUsfl|
death when a block of concrete
upon him. • _
The passenger train ’was en
from the west coast to Chicago
the tornado hit it broadsides ami flip-
ped it over as though it were a straw
Passengers who suffered only minor
injuries crawler! from the wreckage
and aided others out
One relief train hrougth 102 unin-
jured persons here Thirty-seven were
taken to hospitals here and ar Fargo.
Most of
Several
ly
NkIioIsoii and many—other members
of her family are resting
Active pallbearers will be Hugh
Lusk. J R. Williamson of Houston,
W I Cox, Dr W. \, Knolle, E. O.
Routt. Jack Routt Jack Green, Reese
Lockett and
By DAN BOWERMAN
United Press Staff Correspondent
Olympia, Washington. May 28.—
Voters sat back to watch a political
free-for-all when a spokesman an-
t nonneed that Governor Roland 11
trow”.
Tire Iflttt firemen’s short coure was
held at A & M in May, 1930, with 190,
Saturday A and M and
ble in the vast nil<- yt^jacle Lur,
residence of b ra rice’s presidents.
Madam Loubet never hesitated to
say that she preferred the life of. h
senator’s ‘wife. The Elysee depressed
her ahd she was wont to say, “We
were so much happier at. the Luxem-
bourg1*. ‘ ' r'
SATURDAY. MAY 30th
A. & M Day
wbaTher
East Texas—Cloudy. scattered
thundershowers west portion tonight.
Friday cloudy, scattered thundershow-
ers west and north portion* Cooler
northwest portion.
Last President Unmarried
M-. Iboumergue, the retired presi-
dent, is a bachelor. .There has never
been an official hostess at the Elysee
during hisj administration. The vague
and scarcely expressed sorrow that
clings to the’ great chambers of the
palace was not felt by wtonien during
his tenancy. Of all the women who
have been hostesses in the palace since Ruby and Playlet, Park Pavilion,
the,establishment of-the -Third Repub-
lic, hut two. Madam Deschanel and
Madame Millerand. found the afmos-'
phere congenial and both of them
are known to have expressed to their
friends the feeling that tthe palace was
too' vast and gloomy for comfort.—
| Madam Faure, wife, of President
'Felix Faure, was not happy amid lh» :
mansion. She and her husband had
been used to simple bourgeoise "sur-
roundings arid were never comforta-
APPROVED TODAY
BY GOV. STERLING
V . vsv . w a aaauau<>•?
‘ ’cSfsTfjjcR a -L,;-
Also Gave Church
Despite his large practice and the
-training he gave many youths of the
Quaker city in medicine he stiff foutrti
, time to leave as a permanent monu-
ment the church in which Washing-
ton worshipped whetr Philadelphia
was the capital of the infant republic.
It was hgre that a..majority of the
eminent meditat ffleft of cordtrtar"ah8
revolutionary days lived. A directory
of 1783 lists forty-two physicians for
the city, and most of them were later
’ regarded as real men of science.
. Among other great names in medi-
cine that the early city gave to ghe
world are those ^of -Benjamin ,Rush,
physiciart statesman .social worker,
philosopher and vytter; Drs. William
Shippjen, senior and* junior;- Thomas
Lloyd; Thomas Wynne; John . Mor-
gan; Phineas Bond; Lloyd Zachary;
Cad w a lade r Evans; John Redman;
Thom, a Graeme; Samuel Jackson, an3
George McClellan.
SUMMER SCHOOL
AT HIGH SCHOOL
TO OPEN MONDAY ...........
i plish no good”.
A regulation summer school willj The Capitol committee,
begin Monday, Jutve | ; at the High : <,f the hostile auditor, and
School, C "M Selman.-principal High niissioner and himself, met
School, will be director of the achool l
Courses "In sCtence. . history and1
mathematic will J>«- offered to student.-,
who desire to do additional work to
even their credits, or who want to
make additional upits for acceleration
"The wav to cut taxes is to spend
less money”, he declared in vetoing ap-
pr priations and demanding chatfges
in administration. —
b'or six years, open animosity has
rn-fed between-the governor and’ the
& a pilfi^ron. 1'1
The Texhs Power and Light Com-
pany. through the district manager,
Paul H. Darr, has acquired the use
df. twelve large lights which are being
mounted in the press box of the Park
Grandstand. These lights are loaned
by the (Crous-Hinds Co., manufac-
turers of electrical equipment who sent
the lights down last Sunday in their
truck from Dallas. H. B. Sudekum,
-lighting specialist for the Crouse-
Hinds people, is in charge of the lights.
Four of the lights to be used Fri-
day night ,are the same as used on
Houston and Dallas baseball Parks
and have a beam candle power of
210,000 each. Six of the twelve lights
will be equipped with red. amber,
green and gold jenses to produce mar-
velous color affects. Another light of
1,000,000 candle power will be used as
a spotlight projector to. follow the
Queen and her Court. Silvery moon-
light will be produced by another and
control equipment to produce light-
ning flashes is included. Altogether !
the lights will produce 3.200,000 can-1
die. power. This is as much light as
is used to illuminate thirty-two'"iiief-
age homes.
WOMAN HELD FOR
SLAYING HUSBAND
REFUSES ALL FOOD
r school age for Dallas
It will be J county made 7 to 15 years.
Under other approved bills the ad-
Philadelphia. May 28.—-In the old
Quaker city<». tJtortrrtion
.was founded more than four score
years ago. 800 members of the Ameri-
can Medical Association will hold
their annual convention from June 8
to 12. - '
in the walls of the massive buildingj 8:00 p. m.
fronting the Rue du Fraubourg Saint tion of Queen
I “The Realm of
will' P»rlf
phraseology have characterized. his
' service as governor Once decided
route |t^a| a proj,ratn js right, or that an
, enemy is wrong, he goes into action
with., every weapon available.
Tradition Againat Him
hr seeking a third term, he defied a
host of gubernatorial jinxes. , No
governor in the history of Washington
has served. three terms. No republican,
except Jumself. was elected twice. H
Hartley -rohusT7“ an<f -healthy— lives-
until the end of his second term he will
be the only governor in state history
to d<? so.
In his campaigns. Hartley challeng-
es the world, ■
In 1928 he slumped the slate. With
a little black bag and a huge liras*
cuspidor. The bag contained papers
bearing on charges.of inal-admiri.iffra-!
tion againat other elective officials
Both he and his foes were re-elected.
The euspitjor he put, forward as
that money had been wasted in fur-
• rristmig' The' nc;w '*-ai»iF »L "It Tfqd cost
the fatal alsaxithtg E ” .
“Fire department equipment recent-
ly has been standardized all over the (
state”, H. R. Braytqn, professor of (
inorganic chemistry at A & M who ,
has had charge of past firemen’s short
“itourseT ST riie -nj»ege; - said, “amk -it-^
now'is our purpose to standardize the
training and drills also in
one department may aid
time of emergency with
amount of ednfusion.
“It will be necessary for
our own textbooks and develop
own instructional methods at first be-
cause there is nothing in this line
available in the United States right
2:15 p. m, Rodeo.
4:(JUp^<n| Ba»qf).<ll —Baylot vs.
A. & M.
7:30 p. m.
Lit>lc ->Folks
8:00 |>. m.
-----9 -Off p. hi. tiraird " B a1T m Pavi I •
ion.
- .'>00 p. m. OEf "Folks Dance tn
Arttfory.
Free entrance to grounds, free park-
ing space, free ice water.
and hurled eleven passenger coacfies
frqth the rails. 5
One itilaii was killed and more than
30 persons injured whep the twister
flipped the train from the tracks. A
few minutes later, another man was
crushed’ to death when the torhadr*
“descended again at a point 18' miles
away.
The tornado skirted all centers of (
population and killed only one a- it. Hartley will seek a third term,
swept across farm lands of North Da - I
kota and Minnesota.
Rescue, work was hampered by-
cloudburst which accompanied the tor- quarter,
nado. Seven inches of rain fell with- >
in a few hours in some placcsi
The man killed in tile wreck was
“identified as Janies Anderson of Mont-
esano, Washington. He was thrown
through a window as the coaches roll--traln4>(| but a tattler
ed over and was crushed when
train settled down upon its side.
Dalhart, Texas.—Commissioners of/ Nashville,
Hartley county have authorized cotH
struction of a 600-foot bridge on the
Romero-Channing highway at once.
It will span the Puffla De Agua rreete co«nwri*Me composed of five of
and give * direct route frntn west members .——- -----
Hartley county to Channing, the covt|- vertiblc facts warrant ^*4, iugwgch-
speecfr'oF
state on Davis Day, June 3: wheiUthe
Minnie B. Williams Chapter, United
laughters of the Confederacy, will
place a marker at a point near Bren-
ham on the Jefferson Davis Highway,
in recognition of the fact, that High-*
way No 20 has been designated as the
Jeff Davis Highway.
This handsome slab of Texas gran-
ite will be erected, with appropriate
ceremonies,-at a point on the highway
about a mile east of Brenham, at 4:30
on.ahe afternoon of Wednesday,
June 3. Judge Sam D.-W. Low, May-
or T. A. Low, and Mrs. B. Eldridge,
president of the Minjiie B. William*
Chapter, will have prominent places
on the program.
Six years ag(> Hartley was h large-
scale lumber operator. He came to
the executive mansion as fond of po-
litical scraps as his lumberjacks were
of violent physical encounters. Un-
:ai
heart, he has byen continually in the
(Unltad Pres* Rrix’-r-i
Big Spring. Texas May 28 -
“WnTiamsou 'was
$5,000 bond in
his wife, Mr- Jlcssic Williamsonr the
climax to a night of-revelry.
I. R. Harris, Miss Nita Allen, and
the Williamsons had "partied'’ in a
neighboring tow n and returned —1->
'Die t wo men gof
true Christian fortitude. Since child-
hood she was a faithful and devout
member of the Methodist church, and
worshiped at the historical old church
named in memory of her grandfather.
She Wjas married to l)“r. Nicholson No-
vember 24f | 9()4 .
• .
Besides her heart-brriken widower,
Dr R E’» Nicholson, who always lav-
ished the tenderesf, care and devotion
upon his invalid wife, Mr* Nicholson
is survived by a sister. Mis* Louise
Stone, atid three brother*: Major Gid-
dings Stone, now a patient at the
American Legion Hospital at Muako-
gec, Oklahoma, and unable to come
home to attend his sister's funeral;
Heber Stone, and Albert Stone, all of
Brenham. Her only child, a little-
son, Richard ■ F. Nicholson, Jr„ who
was born in July. 1913. died in infancy.
She also leaves numerous rtUier rela-
proof tives an<7 a host of warm friends, who
will deeply mourn her uritimely death
arid offer heartfelt’ sympathy to the
bereaved family.
Memories of . the beautiful corona-
tion program of the Maifest
when Miss M ary Stone was
Queen of the May by
are sadly recalled, a* on the
-ftf mt her
mentbrances t<>, her of her own reign
n queen, she will be sleeping the eter-
in 1*;*.' ,wLf graVir.' ” * .
a
Funeral services * will be helfi from"
the family residence at two o’clock.
Friday afternoon, with Rev. J. E.
Green of Houston, a life-long friend
of the Nicholson and Stone families,
cfficiating Rev Mr Green was the
minister who performed the beautiful
ceremony that united Miss Mary Stone
and Dr R E. Nicholson in marriage*
and now twenty-six years later, he i*
called- upon to perform the la’t sad
rite* for Mrs Nicholson '
' l '>
Absorbed
(United Pros® Report)
Austin, May' 28.—Thirty-two house
bills
cent
filed
With
midnight on the bills in
None was vetoed.
Included in the approved bill is one
to authorize municipalities to condemn
land for airports; one to keep polls
open in counties of 150,000 population
or more at 7 a. m. instead of eight; one
to -regulate citrus shipments; one to
limit to 15 per cent the amount that
may be'pkid for collection of delin-
quent taxes under contracts and two
ordering accounting systems in the
comptroller’s and treasurer's office as
sjjnple recommended by the state auditor.
Preston road water supply district of
jackass.. It would be unfair to the
jackass”, he wrote in a veto message,
fully realizing it would be read to the
1933 senate
A senate investigating committee
asked his cooperation.
"Yeur letter brands you as a plain
hypocrite", he wrote in answer to the
author of the letter. “Political fak-
ery such a* you propose can accom-
Mrs. R. E. Nicholson Passes
Aioay After Lingering Illness
Funeral To Be Held Friday
Mr and Mrs. W. M Andreas will
return to their home in Bellville Sat
urday after an extended “ uxen-
ham, Mr. Andreas having been a
patient in thg Brenham Hospital He
declares he is wonderfully improved,
on the road to complete restoration to
health ___
, will be gathered in, a city where medi-
cal traditions are older than the na-
tion. Seven medical' men "were
among the first purchasers of land in
the new province which the King
presented to William Penn to repay a
debt due his father. Admiral Penn.'
Philadelphia har many things in
her past to which she points with
pride, and not the least among these
is per contribution to medical science.
Looking backward in its opulejit
past, historians record that Philadel-
• phia bears title to:
First in Many Things
The first colonial hosptal which was
established by Drs. Thomas Cadwal-
der and Thomas Bond: the first medi-
. hich was„a^parl
PennsylvxTrisr-fwmwirbT
Benjamin Franklin in 1749; the first
medical society organized in 1765; the
first medical library. founded in 1763;
the first university laboratory of clin-
ical research; the first university de-
partment of research medicine; the
first compdehensive graduate school
of medicine; first Americarr universi-
ty to have a department of surgical
research; the (first dispensary for
“medical relief for the poor” in 1786;
and the first college of pharmacy
founded m 182k
In addition, Dr. Cadwalader made
■here his, first n?crospy for purely
scientific} purposes and he also wrote
in Philadelphia the first medical book
published in America.
As part of the visit to this shrine of
American medicine, many of the phy-
sician* will go to old Christ Church to
view the national shrine which was
designed by a physician, Dr.
Kersley. »
a. m. Symbolic Review.
hat—™ ... _____________ . -
son, V\. R. Ew ing, Ernest HiAIf."
Kenney Krug. T. -A. Low. Howard B.
Wood. Cha* -Laas of Burton, Gus
Fink, VV. I. WiesCj and the fqllow-
ing Houston physician* Dr. John H.
Foster, Dr Wallace Ralston, Dr. Al-
vis E Greer. Dr Janie- Hill, and Dr.
Gavin Hamilton. *.
FflVCDNAD DIIRIQ "r* -',ar> Slone Nnholsou; belov-
UVvUuvvllL IlUlvV led wife of Doctor R. E. Nich-
FAn RPIITniY TFnM oUon, passed away at her home on
- r(lK- TmKM ; Sycamore? ^reet at 3 ’45 Thursday
morning-, after a lingering illnes^f hat-
ing been in failing heaVh for several
years. She would have - reached the
age of forty-nine years June 2.
Decedent Was born in Brenham, and
was a descendant of twp of the yiost
prominent old pioneer families of
Texas. She was the daughter of the
late^.Mr and Mrs. Heber Stone, and
a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.^j. D.
.Giddings and Mr. and .Mrs *D. C.
Stone, all of whom were distinguished
figures in the development' of this
After attending
she continued her
Margaret’s school
York, and Randolph-Macon College at
Lynchburg, Virginia. In her youth
sh<yenjoyed every advantage, of cu]-.
tore and travel, and developed' into a
beautiful, charming, lovable woman.
... - „
"dHtrgaTS. lUp-1 "nii'nv graces of mind and heart. Dur-
ing her long, illness she was sweet and
and liberal use of. uniqtiWj,apent, and bore her suffering* with
Markets
Eggs, 11c.
Hens, 10c to >2«. ?
Bakers, 15c.
Fryers, Rhode
Plymouth Rocks, 1
23c. '
F«y»-rr
. itocks, 1 3-4 to 2 3-4 pounds, 15e.
Broilers, 1 1-4 to 1-12 pounds, 15c
—Bacon, TWT
Country- lard, 12c.
Butter, 12c to 25c.
Butterfat, second grade, 9c.
Butterfat, first grade, 12c.
COTTON .
Pajjs, May 28.—The great Elysee!
Palace in which the Presidents of the ;
French Republic reside, has not
brought happiness to the women’ who j
havc_occupicd it as ihc-Jirst- ladies of.t___
■ffii”iatf?t. —S5m?Jlimg of the mourn- Clubs in Park
ful qualities bf the great palace of
Versailles, where there was never hap-
piness, only grandeur, are embedded Baylor.,
in the walls of the massive buildfhg'
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Blake, T. C. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 28, 1931, newspaper, May 28, 1931; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1174719/m1/1/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.