Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 46, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 6, 1921 Page: 3 of 7
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FREDERICKSBURG STANDARD FREDERICKSBURG. TEXAS
8
Our Proposed Highway.
The Constant Plague.
ft
Clarence Martin.
L A X C A R I N
nce
dusk
to
I
keep the house thoroughly
1
For sale at all Drug Stores.
type of minnows placed in the
EM
28M8Me%6e WWV82VNM8 zvtavaavMa-W8
wheel and tore it from the car. concerning Mrs. Kathrin Ischar,
Otto Schneider
Peter Schneider
rresh Groceries
Mr. Ischar preceded her
1885.
death, having died April 20,
4tf
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FREDERICKSBURG, TEXAS.
R. M Lewis.
4>
3
0. Maier.
10s
OFFICE HOURS:
Open at 8:30 a. m
Salt, at
r
f
46
OEHLER BROS
1
A Tonic
For Women
The News has recently been
furnished with the following data
mous
$ and
nableil
49tt
ills
prices.
46tf
nes a
Lily
pro-
Rol-
R and
feed
dy to
■ back
I gua-
talk
3
8 30.000.on
5,000. X)
I50.ooo.no
Strict attention paid to all matters entrusted
to our’care
Capita) Stock Paid in....
Surplus...............
Individual Rasponsibility
Kodak Finishing
for rush orders and good
service, address
Mrs. S. A. Moore
MP* We have in stock a row
binder which we sell practically
at cost.
Y,
R.
R R. Treadwell,
Fredericksburg, Texan.
। rounds of the mill at about the
9
3-
Brady Compress Burns Early
This Morning, Entailing
$100,000 Loss
*
Members
Tozas Bankers’ Association.
-------00---
Mrs. Kathrin Ischar.
Members
American Bankers’ Associatlov.
-----00--------
Car Struck by Train.
5tf
R. 8. KLETT.
41-----
PROMPT DELIVERY
Telephone No 66
CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
"I decided to try it,” con-
tinues Mrs. Ray ... ”! took
eight bottles in all ... I re.
gained my strength and have
had no more trouble with wo-
manly weakness. I have ten
children and am able to do all
my housework and a lot out-
doors ... I can sure recom-
mend Cardul."
Take Cardul today. It may
be just what yod need.
At all druggists.
---0--
Dw For Sale in any quantity,
Flour Bran, Shorts and Stock
darkness and it is necessary
We keep at all times a first class line of Fresh,
Fancy and Staple Groceries, and sell them at a
reasonable price.
RICHARD HENKE
SCHNEIDER PRODUCE CO.
PHONE No. 152
GENUINE
BULDURHAM
- TOBACCO
S)w
3
3
"I was hardly able to drag, 1
was so weakened,” writes Mrs.
W. F. Ray, of Easley, S. C.
"The doctor treated me for about
two months, Still I didn’t get
any better. I had a large fam-
ily and felt I surely must do
something to enable me to take
care of my little ones. I had
heard of
$
fering from nervous shock, but in
Safe Deposit Boxes for Use of the Public at
Moderate Rates.
du
Hotel Spahn
Centrally located.
The comfortable Resort of
Families and Traveling Men.
230 E. Gommerco
San Antonio, Texas.
most of its biting at
track. She tried to turn to one
side, and thus avoid striking the water will eat the mosguito eggs.
it requires a very powerful mi-
eroscope to see it.
Do you know
you can roll
lOcts from
one ba8 of
tire. On the following night all
the remaining tires were taken
and eventually the car was strip-
ped clean.—Comfort News.
-------00-------
AUTO OWNERS!
Special prices on Storage Bat-
teries for Buick, Dodge, Che-
vrolet, and Ford, at 46
Blanchard Auto Supply.
--U-—
a LET ME make a bid on
Helen Reichenau, one sister, Mrs.
passerby, stole the spare rim and J. A. Landwermeyer, of Terrell
presumably a
she could not stop her car in time
to prevent a collision.
Fortunately the train beat her
to the crossing, and the locomo-
tive and tender had passed when
Mrs. Apelt’s car reached the
prising person,
BUTCHER.
Frese Beef, Mutton
Pork, Sausage
and Veal.
1905. She is survived by seven
children: Misses Olga, Hattie and
Kate .Mrs. M. Eidelbach, of Hous-
ton, Texas; Mrs. Alfred Reiche-
nau, of Mason, and Emil and
Benno Ischar. One grandchild,
We are paying a Cash Top Price for
Turkeys, Chickens, Eggs, Butter,
Cream, Wax, Tallow, etc.
We also sell all kinds of Feed, and Chicken feed.
o Cotton Oil mill, one block to the
twilight, less frequently during, south. Mr. Wooten made the
For Sale.
1100 sheep at a bargain or will
trade for cattle. Will sell any
number in hunches of 100 and up.
Responsible parties can obtain
from 6 to 12 month’s time.
The radiator also was practically
destroyed but the force of the se-
veral shocks was not great
enough to overturn the car.
though Mrs. Apelt was severely
bruised by the jolts of the steer-
ing wheel every time the steps
of the passing coaches struck her
car.
She was taken to her home suf-
A Great Bargain.
I Need The Money.
You Want Cheap Property.
I have for sale a fine Gillespie County ranch consist-
ing of more than ONE THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED
A< REH. Fine Grass, divided into three pastures, two
fenced goat proof, good dwelling house, fine water, new
windmill and tank, new pens and sheds, forty acres in cul.
ti vat ion, good location.
Five hundred high grade Goats, registered Bucks,
twenty head of cattle, registered male, thirty head range
Hogs in fine hog range, registered Sire.
All for $18,750.00. One third cash, balance on easy terms.
I his is a bargain, it is cheap and I am selling be-
cause, I irst, I need that amount of money, and Second, be-
cause I can not look after that, and also other property on
hand, either one is a good reason for selling.
No agents, no commissions to be paid. Write or
phone me, either phone, Stonewall, Texas. 47
whose death occurred at her
home a few miles south of Ma-
son on Wednesday, July 20th.
Mrs. Kathrin Ischar, whose
maiden name was Miss Kathrin
Kruse, was born in Fredericks-
burg, April 14, 1857, coming to
Mason and being married to Mr.
Bernhardt Ischar, January 1,
The gentle purgative is usea in this
treatment of Constipation, also a Tonic
and Stimulant to Intestinal Tract. LAX
CARIN is recommended by most eminent
physicians as a Laxative and Blood
Purifier for all Liver and Stomach dis-
orders.
Used for Colds, Grippe, Cola in the
Chest, Dizziness, Headache and Bilious-
ness.
otherwise she is none the worse
as a result of what might so
easily have been a fatal accident.
The damaged ear was left
standing beside the road, and
during the first night some enter-
Up-Town Meat Markel
HENKE BROS., Prop.
Fresh Beef, Pork,
Mutton, Sausage,
Veal, Etc.
Phone NO' 42.
Kain Str. Fredericksburg, Tex.
The malaria mosquito
I
roborated
does watchman
train, but her car went down in
to the ditch beside the track,
with its front end so close to the
rails that the steps of the passing
coaches struck the left front
I
I 4
Emrmenanimanmmnea iin% M M M Mz x m x
screen- same time as Mr. White did at
(
)
k y
On Friday, July 22, as Mrs.
('has. Apelt was driving from her
ed. As these mosquitos breed
by depositing eggs in standing
water, all such pools should be
drained if possible, or, if, not,
a small amount of kerosene oil
should be poured on the surface
to destroy the larvae. A certain
---U--
2 Banish Blood Sucking In-
sects simply by feeding “Martins
Insectimune"’ to your chickens.
Your money back if not absolu-
tely satisfied, guaranteed by H.
j home to Comfort in a Dodge tour-
ing car, she failed to notice the
; northbound passenger train, as
she approached the railroad
crossing at Max Pankratz’ place
about a mile west of town. When
Mrs. Apelt discovered the train
3%
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25
Fredericksburg, Texas
Phone No. 76J
Money must accompany all orders.
$
A great many of our citizens
art wondering what has become
Citizens Bank
(unincorporated)
OSCAR KRAUSKOPF, Pres MRS. A, VANDER STUCKEN, Vice-Pres
WM. BIERSCHWALE, Cashier
your cotton when you are ready
to sell, Phone No. 57 for market
Brady Standard, July 29. -
Brady early this morning suffer-
ed a disastrous loss in the com-
plete destruction of the Brady
Compress, together with between
$15,000 and $20,000 worth of sup-
plies and also about 750 bales of
cotton belonging to local buyers
or firms represented by them,
the total loss will run well over
$100,000. The origin of the fire
is a mystery, Nightwatchman
George W. White having made
his rounds only fifteen minutes
before the flames suddenly burst
out, and leaped across the plat-
form with such rapidity that the
plant was doomed almost before
the alarm could be sounded.
The clock at the coinpress
shows to have been punched at
from 12:20 to 12:30 by Mr.
White while making his rounds
of the compress as watchman.
With another man, Mr. White
was sitting in the office, when at
12:45 a noise caused him to look
out. He says he saw the flames
breaking out on the platform
close up to the compress, and as
they caught the cotton bales,
they seemed fairly to leap across
the platform. In a few minutes
the compress was a seething fur-
nace, and beyond any hopes of
saving.
Mr. White’s statement is cor-
by Pars Wooten,
at the McCulloch Co.
y n
I
ii
Great excitement and aetivity
is caused ever so often by the
announeement of an outbreak of
bubonic plague, cholera or typhus
fever in one of our seaports. A
few lives are lost and the ex-
citement ouiets down but the au-
thorities are constantly on the
alert.
Another disease that does hun-
dreds of times as much damage
and havoc in the low areas of
the Southwestern States and in
the Southern hall of the United
States is Malaria.
It may be termed the “con-
stant plague’’ for it is always
present. It does not cause di-
rectly a great many deaths but
indirectly it contributes annual-
ly to many thousands of fatali-
ties, and each case of illness caus-
es a great loss of labor and effi-
ciency, besides being an expense
to the patient. It is likewise the
greatest cause of industrial inef-
ficiency.
If you don’t want malaria
don’t let a mosquito bite you. Ma-
laria is contracted only through
the bite of a mosquit», the “Ano-
pheles.”
Man infects the mosquito and
in turn the mosquito infects man.
Malaria is due to a germ which
lies in the blood cells of the hu-
man body. It is so small that
and three brothers, W. M. Kruse,
of Katemey, Jacob Kruse, of Fre-
dericksburg, and Frank Kruse, of
Ira, also survive. Mrs. Ischar’s
death was caused by heart trou-
ble, with which she had been ill
or some time.
Funeral services were held
Thursday afternoon at three
o’clock at the Catholic Church
in Mason and the services were
conducted by Rev. Father Hut-
ton, whose diocese includes Ma-
son, Menard. Llano and McCul-
loch counties, interment follow-
ed in the Crosby Cemetery. The
pall bearers were Messrs. Wm.
Hofmann, Chas. Kettner, Louis
Schmidt, Eugene Zesch, August
Metzger and C. L. Martin.
Out-of-town parties here to at-
tend the funeral were Mrs M
Eidelbach, of Houston, Mrs C.
Schultz, of Eden. Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Kruse, Mr. and Mrs. Will
Engelhardt. Mrs. John Keller.
Mrs. Eugen Fischer, Mrs Hei-
mann and Mrs. Moritz. all of Fre-
dericksburg — Mason Co. News
---o0o-----
a Big line of Brown and
Black Oxfords just received, at
46 SCHROEDER BROS.
the compress. He was in the mill
office, when some sheep in the
yard suddenly stampeded, caus-
ing Mr. Wooten to step out to
ascertain the cause of their alarm.
He then noticed the compress
bursting into flame.
The fire department responded,
but the lire plug at the compress
was in the midst of the flames,
and the intense heat prevented
a near approach The chemical
was used in saving the office. So
rapidly did the compress burn
that the fire never reached the
office building, although it was
partly in the path of the flames.
The intervening platform was
torn up, and the timely efforts
of the fireboys saved the build-
ing. As a consequence the books
and records of the company are
intact.
The compress was built in 1907
at a cost of $65,(MM), and was own-
ed by the National Compress Co.
The press was closed down about
the middle of June, and had not
been fired up since.
According to the records of the
company, there were 750 bales of
cotton upon the platform at the
time of the fire, all of which was
completely destroyed, and which
results in a loss to cotton buyers
and their firms of between $35,-
(MU) and $40,000.
Among the losses are A. H.
Richardson & Co., 255 bales;
Huey & Roe, 140 bales; Bellamy
& Walker, 95 bales. Other loss-
es could not be ascertained.
One freight car at the loading
platform, was burned, nothing
but a mass of twisted steel re-
maining .
The property destroyed was all
insured, although the cotton will
represent considerable loss, as be-
tween the 13c and 14e market
upon which much of it was pur-
chased and the present market
value of 9e to 10c.
The intense heat of the blaz-
ing cotton caused great whirl-
winds to form and which carried
fire brands for blocks. The cot-
ton yard, one block north was in
constant danger, and numbers of
bales were caught afire. Only
the constant vigilance of hun-
dreds of volunteers, prevented a
great loss in cotton here.
-------00-------
p Ladies Dresses and Coat
Suits just arrived at
46 SCHROEDER BROS
of our highway, and it has been
said by some that the highway
proposition was ‘‘dead’ for good
this time. So many disappoint-
ments have occurred that it is
1 not at all surprising that a great
1 many of our people have lost in-
terest in the project. But most
of the difficulties have been met
• and overcome. Work on the
plans and specifications is being
' pushed as rapidly as possible,
and those working to keep things
going are leaving no stone nil-
turned to carry out the will of
the people.
We have every reason to be-
lieve that the plans for the high-
way will be passed upon in the
near future, and it is hoped that
after this is done the work wil
progress mure rapidly. There
j is a great deal of “red tape’’
connected with the project, and it
is necessary to move slowly in
getting the work started. Things
look brighter now fur our road
and we are confident that mate-
rial progress will be made from
this date until actual construction
work is started.- Blanco Co. Re-
'eord.
o— Close at 4. p. m.
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Dietel, William. Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 46, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 6, 1921, newspaper, August 6, 1921; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418403/m1/3/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .