Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 10, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 26, 1921 Page: 6 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gillespie County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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FRELERICKSBURG STANDARD FREDERICKSBURG, TEXA8.
oral law we all should live
CONTRIBUTED
5tf
Hides at
this moral law ?
R S. KLETT.
Juenke & Schoenewolf.
t
Announcement.
)
SUBSCRIPTION'S!.60 PER YEAR
Song: Santa Lucia.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ •bevvv
EDITORIAL NOTES
$
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
PHONE NO. 121
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fact.
Reporter
team.
in town, at very reasonable prices.
9
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Kolmeier & Klier Co.
tit
S A. A. S Reporter
ers.
gavexsusaVEVEVE uavauaxzevavaztzszauavavavav 8 ZLUBVEUEEUUUNLEE
A BARGAIN WEEK
judge, lime will tell.
AT
15
Guaranteed by
Juenke & Schoenewolf
t
FROM DECEMBER 3. to 10
pear today.
D.
WE WILL GIVE A DISCOUNT OF 10 TO 20 PERCENT OFF
I
DOLLARS Saved On
WIRE
I '
If You Buy From
H. KUENEMANN
JUENKE & SCHOENEWOLF
““The Home Builders
almcm7imammm/mqmmmizmmmmmuunimi=
$
v
Prepare For The
Butchering Time
On all Yard Goods, Furnishings. Ladies’
and Misses’ Coats and Coat Suits, Men’s
Suits, Gloves, Shoes, and Hats, on all
Hardware, a liberal reduction on Groce-
ries, in fact, on everything in our store
Highest market price paid
for your Poultry, Eggs, Wax, and
Gilbert Bode
Emma Maier
for i
ages,
rect
I
E
An opportunity for real Bargains.
Remember the Date December 3. to 10.
and watch for our advertisement next
week.
It is the
communi-
Entered at the Postoflice as second
class matter at Fredericksburg,
Texas.
W
P
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Hl
IN
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n
We carry one of the greatest selection of
Cooking and Heating Stoves, for wood or oil,
As I am specializing in repairing shoes and
boots, I am assuring you first class service and
all work guaranteed, at satisfactory prices.
I hrlumat ion
Piano Sol"
THE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
Kurt Wahrmund, Prop.
to.
make
I have equipped my shop with all the latest
Machinery, which enables me to turn out repair
work the same day received.
Frederieksburg Standard
By Fredericksburg Publishing Co
Issued every Saturday.
WM DIF.TEL
Managing Editor.
WM. HABENICHT
Business Manager.
I hereby wish to inform my friends and the
public in general that I have opened a Shoe Shop
in the former Hy. Ochs Saddle Shop, (opposite
Chas. Schwarz Bldg.)
H. Kuenemann.
----0----
2 Ladies’ Coats and Coat
Suits at reductions at
Schroeder Bros., Inc.
--o—
HOGS WANTED.
I want about 200 head of Feed-
er Hogs. 60 pounds and up.
10 H. C. MAIER.
Keidel & Kallenberg.
----0---
aFurs are high, but trapr
-
I’
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
ECKERT LOCALS.
ages, and will be true for
Whether Col. House is cor-
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says a great deal in a few words,
no matter in which way you may
construe them. History is never
written at the time it is enacted,
that is, it is not written at that
time in textbooks or histories as
books. In 25 or 50 years, per- are cheap, at
in the person
On last Sunday the bsket hall
players of the St. Anthony Bu-,
siness College went to Boerne to
play a game. The score was 14
to 11 in favor of our team. This
was the second game our team
played this season, each one re-
sulting in a victory for our play-
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We are not all saints, we prob-
ably were not intended to be
•
I
11
• Special Bargain—3 $1.00
packages of Reefers More Eggs
Tonic” for $1.00 at
The Public is requested to send
all communication to the Frede-
ricksburg Publishing Co. If the
matter pertains purely to busi-
ness, mark it Bookkeeper’s Dept.,
all other matter, Editor’s Dept.
I
Class Prophecy .. Mamie Bright
Piano Duel Erna Kolmeier and
Loreen Moursund.
Journal ... Gertrude Petermann
Vocal Solo ...... Noora Cameron
Original Poems .. .Iulia Ruegner
Imitations of Pupils Anita Riley.
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Last Friday November 18th the
junior class entertained the High
School with the following pro-
gram :
Song: Thanksgiving Song.
I can not
The title
A certain moral law
• • • • /
•
On Friday afternoon, Novem-
ber 18th the sixth and seventh
grade Literary Society gave tin V-
following program: "
Song: Boy Scout March—Society
Trio — Ruby Schwiening, Carl
Kott. and Rudolph Borchers.
Dialogue—Eugene Hirsch, Kermit
Striegler, Frank Feller, Edw in j
Haun. Puerra Franz, J. Rouse,
Bessie Schmidt, and Bernice I
Newberry.
How I felt when I had my first 1
Date—Miss Harper.
Comical Readings — S. Sehoene-
wolf. ,
Song: Row, Row, Row. You Boat
Society.
Our basket ball team played;
the Mason basket ball team last '
Saturday, November 19th the
score was 51 to 8 in favor of our.
haps a history of the treaty re-
ferred to may be written, Wood-
row Wilson will not write that
bistory, and you may rest as-
sured that history will read dif-
ferently from what it would ap-
because “billy hart” says a cold wave is
knocking at the door.
See us for the best selection in BUTCHER
supplies, such as Meat Choppers, Lard Presses,
Butcher Knives, Steels, large Stone Jars for
pikling meat.
ty, in the state. Even wild ani-
mals seem to establish among
themselves certain i tries which
they obey, this fact seems to have
----0--
A heading in the San Antonio
Express of Thursday deserves to
be handed down from generation
to generation as a statement of
fact, summing up a world of wis-
dom in a few lines. The head-
lines are used for an article by
Col. Edward M. House. “Bolfour
only treaty signer at parley which
shows that man who is fair lasts
longest.” The last phrasing:
“Man who is fair, lasts longest”
certainly is true, has been true
--00----------
D Martip’s Egg Producer
makes Mens lay and keeps them
healthy. Feed it and get more
eggs or your money back gun-
ranteed. “Martin’s Roup Reme-
dy” cures and prevents Roup.
The next program will be given
by the Senior Class.
Last Saturday two basket ball
games were played on the school '
court. The Mason Senior girls'
against the Fredericksburg Sen-
ior girls. The score was 37 to
30 in favor of Mason. The other
game was played between the in-
termediate girls of the samel
schools.
people who live in the
some years ago and published his
findings in the National Geogra-
phical Magazine.
Among human beings these
laws are developed to a great
degree because man has lived tor
centuries in clans handed to-
gether where the acts of one do
more or less influence the acts
and wellbeing of his fellowmen.
Because of this certain mode of
living together, certain moral
codes have been adopted by hu-
man beings ami these, although
often not clearly defined, although
not often put into written docu-
ments, have been generally ae-
cepted by the human family the
world over.
Although the above statement
will hold as a general principle,
each community establishes or
rather modifies this moral code to
suit its own needs. It is this mo-
dification of the generally accept-
<■<1 moral code that I am thinking
of, and it is just this variation
that the community will have to
guard against. It is the sanction
by the general public which will
permit certain modifications of
the moral code to be accepted and
even adopted. In certain com-
munities there has been permitted
to grow up a loose conception of
the relation of young men and
young women. Are we guarding
ral hours of dancing, delirious
freshments of sandwiches, cake,
• I lemonade were served.
-----00--------
School Notes.
should say so. The examination
to the average child is a dread,
and justly so, with no accurate
test of knowledge. It seems that
schoolmen should have recogniz-
ed this fact long ago, but it is
highly commendable that some of
them should the fact today. Most
teachers do not distinguish be-
tween adults and children, where
the examination may be a fairly
safe test for adults, it is not ne-
cessarily so for children. For
small children the examination is
no test whatsoever. The fede-
ral civil service examinations for
postmastership should be adopted
in most of our schools and I
have often wondered if it is not
adopted by many teachers today,
by some of them undoubtedly
without their knowledge of the
against a misconception of this
relation? A right conception of
this relation betwenn sexes is es-
sential for pure motherhood and
pure fatherhood? If parents
would but instill into the minds
of their boys and girls a right
conception along this line. And
young men and young women,
if you are not feebleminded, if
you care to build up the attribute
of character for yourself, guard
against misconstruing this con-
ception. A noble man and a
noble woman you can lie worthy
of. but you must carewully avoid
all boisterous, ignoble society,
even to the extent that the
world might term you a hermit.
D
h
Miss Dorthy Lewis is Miss
Laura Bierschwale's house-guest
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Riley and
Mrs. E. H. Riley motored to
Kerrville on Monday.
Miss Margaret Wahrmund o’
San Antonio spent Thanksgiving
with Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Kott.
Mr. Charles Nimitz, Jr. and
Jules Blake of San Antonio were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Nimitz on one day of last week.
Mrs. Cornelia Vander Stucken
and family of San Antonio spent
Thanksgiving Day with Mrs.
('has. Nimitz.
Mrs. Vida Newberry has been
visiting with relatites in West
Columbia, during the past week.
One of the most delightful
social events of last week was
a “Bubble Dance" given the The
Merryall Club on last Thursday
evening, at Klaerner’s Opera
House. Balloons in the rainbow
colors were strung across the hall
and attached to the whirling elec-
tric fans. Colored organdies were
worn by the girls to further
carry out the rainbow color
scheme. The piano stood in the
center of the hall and the All
American Five’furnished the mu-
sic. Favors of balloons were giv-
en to about one hundred guests.
On Tuesday evening of this
week, the Louis Jordan Post of
the Amerian Legion jointly with
the Legion Auxiliary entertained
with a “Bam Dance,” at the
Legion club-rooms. The hall was
decorated to represent a loft and
baled hay was strewn about for
seats. Aprons and overalls were
worn by all present: The AH
American Five dressed as “The
Hicksville Band” furnished the
I music and aiso a nmier of gund
laughs for everyone. After se
The County Superintendent of
• Bexar county has ordered that
hereafter there shall be but two
examinations held in the schools
of the county . Heretofore there
was an examination every month.
Are those children glad? I
yet llu re is a certain |
been proven by a scientist who
studied the wild animals of Afri- '
ea. particularly the ape family, :
Mi and Mrs. A. (’. Lehne spent
he week end in town. * .
Kevs: Millican and Billings
. re in our community Thursday
nd Friday.
E .
where you always get “the best for the price,
no matter what the price may be.”
»I
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T), '■
Bro. Williams preached at the
school house Thursday night.
Thomas's were in town on bu-
siness Friday.
Mr Walton Smith’s B. Y. P. U.
group, with a few others, went to
Sandy ami rendered a well pre-
pared program Sunday night. The
personnel of the party follows:
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Thomas, Mr.
ami Mrs. O. W. Hohman. Mr. and
Mrs. G. B. Thomas, Misses Bettie
Thomas, Edna Icke, Ethel and
Alice Stovall, Messrs. Walton
Smith, Henry Kirk, Logan
Young, Harry Hohman, and Clar-
ence Horlen. They report a glor-
ious time, the most refreshing
eats, and most hospitable people,
ever.
Mr. Marshall Self brought the
man who will take charge of the
plans and construction of J. W.
Thomas rock house.
Mr. ami Mrs. I. W. Lee were
visiting at Mr. and Mrs.
Schlaudt's Sunday afternoon.
We are very glad to know that
Mr Marion Lee, who was quite
sick Monday is recovering.
We are also glad to hear that
Mrs. .1 F. Scott is better of her
pleurisy pain.
Tuesday afternoon Mr. Lehne
was called to town by a message
stating that his wife was quite
ill. We hear she is better but he
has not been able to resume his
school work yet. We wish Mrs
Lehne a speedy recovery.
Mr. Ed. Lorenz was a business
visitor in town Wednesday.
Mr. Harry Hohmann, who has
been at Cherry Springs several
weeks, is home again.
Miss Edna Icke Left Monday
for San Antonio whe she: has
accepted a position.
Reporter.
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SOCIAL NOTES.
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Dietel, William. Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 10, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 26, 1921, newspaper, November 26, 1921; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418417/m1/6/?q=%22~1%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .