Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 15, 1922 Page: 2 of 10
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PREDERICKSBURG STANDARD, JULY 15, 1922
The Boom
By Graham David
4 lif
Lloyd
a
r’N
husband. ”
presently
children.
all
, table.
slow he
D
Buy tuis Citartlle andSuve Tuicney
the i practically profitable.
Have not
rangements
men
<
national fields, at home, chiefly
accordi
You think I am jealous.
“Of
finally said:
i
President, that sort of—solemn themselves.
(To be continued.)
Q
aid was fresh in my mind, he
Burbank.
6
J
He
a President.
average height, of the average
tt
led his pla
Texas
dost of thesemadmen.
• One lot of Men’s Dress
Ai
only
the lips
has
must
R2 $22
■
Bu
I understood it, and l
205
lieutenants.
easily
Th>
"w--am-*
- ?
ami
thought which the
new
■
the philosophers: but
6594
1 .1,
id ; but one t hat does. ami
The
myself; the
0
and Carlotta,
1. , A
P
I distinctly re-
)
d
E
“The other
Ta
Ezttm2
Tpzm"Ew.w
I
Louis Kott & Co
O
uiwni
ti4
of Woodrut i s
beaten for the
own
me
the mad-
and the
and, in spite
Al first it was
Where You
Can Buy
U. S. Tires:
San Antol
■ l and ft
i esponsive,
it was the
HEN "USCO" announced
its new low price of
$10.90 last Fall, the
a
si
No
War
Tax
rea-
with
The
ant,
ting
our !
v. hen
3
iade to polie
l if ford for s
ashed a .32
Ir. and Mrs
in
the
in-
gravated
Finally
(‘ongress
state.
i we
gains
rival <
ity at
through his wife
fared better.
The first of it
I an-
doer
its
was
“lake care
mit them
view .
his
sa w
the
average shades
dent. ”
I thought not.
their
hapha
some
t hem.
ce in
A
a
A
A
s
A
A
J
4
J
7
assembly
for the
30 x
3%)
drop
others;
them.
A
"d
3mz
was forcing throughthe Senate in
pretend to
knowledge
lities
On Sale everywhere from Now on
TheewUSCOTire .
r~with many improvements /
The uric remains /
iing to boil over into action, Car-iyou aduure her!
big contributors, which the party you.
R
c
------00-------
All news phoned to our office!
no i
t han
of
(Continued )
Some one in the crowd
A
A
a
A
s
J
A
s
4
A
A
Z ,
4.
$
certainly did look and talk like
She looked fixedly at me
of me, it held me.
so stilted ami tiresome, al- ing blindness of one’s opponents
: he’s
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
2
A
A
‘ it w as at myself.”
“No, you were laughing at me.
K
nt
EXPERT
SHOE REPAIRING
gK\
V y g
g(y
-pa
Nr’ •
V ' tp
walking to the ca-
went on together,
among a savage tribe
partment in
pound them,
fastened at
■ ■
iy persistence in
» Unit'd States Tires
2 United States @ Rubber Company
228067 makers were already
" — " busy developing a still
greater "Usco" value.
The new and better “Usco” as
you see it today—with no change
in price —and tax absorbed by
the manufacturer.
You’ll note in the new and
better “Usco” these features—
Thicker tread, giving greater
non-skid protection. Stouter side-
walls.
Altogether a handsomer tire
that will take longer wear both
inside and out.
The greatest money’s worth of
fabric tire in the history of pneu-
matics.
1 "■■■
i, which iu
common •
established
only ?
It was in my second term as
Senator. toward the middle of it.
ion, any
unwise i
politicos
overtook me
was in i
More
him; he turned this to be his ad-
uncommonly vantage by making them feel.
frontal attacks are as
children,’’ said she. ‘
Burbank came herself.
and black, with a bald spot just ;
where most men have it.
party loaders in the nation
and at myself.
the eastern-most district of
campaign for the conquest of the the preachers been preaching the i
of” them, would ad-
to the cos ted inclo-
smiling to myself.
It was through Carlotta that I
came to know Burbank well.
He was in the House, represen-
And very
cleve
a ma i
pro ft
is t
into,
to
of action do
to center upon
But.
* is the
upidity,
people
helping
build, and of a
of the ।
3
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
pretend
point of
disregard
“Yet you are always telling me I
am cold.”
She laughed shortly. “So is a
stick of dynamite,” said she.
She staved on at Washington.
national po-
“and it seemed to me
He was
ped short in my speech. I
of brown, gray.
not how he shone, but how they
shone. They went away liking
' ompromise among
gent men
clearly as
adjourned, chiefly
with their
“but Mrs.
She was
preliminary to
tie commendation.
women sent nurses
can that the people go
about. He—he- -looks I
Gd cigarettes
E * H.a ri
al-t-- “Mt 7
•)"
v lit
a ml the eyes of Elizabeth Crosby,
an expre ssion of pain, and of
is that such men
\ ilized man who
no - sense - of - humor, Sunday
look.—you know what I mean.
Anyhow, he’s going to be Presi-
of life with the
counters of caste
bad, as is so often shallow
l neet
for a
what? Of whom?
will be highly appreciated.
A few days ---------------------------
thoughts and associations,
e3
uIi
tree. The
any kind
Intelli-
see as
sorbed in her children and her t< my new point of view upon
Address Ironized Yeast Co., Dept. 94,
Atlanta, Ga. Ironized Yeast is recom- i SLir+e ,+ g9, at
mended and guaranteed by all good ; "n rM’ ai WC’ ai
druggists. | Schroeder Bros.
shorter, I played the game more1 face of fire from the whole
and more furiously. What J won. • country. Personally, I did not
once it was mine, seemed worth- approve the measure. It was a
less in itself, and worth while; frontal attack upon public opin-
nor even approving.
pitol. As we
watcher, he who stands, like an
idler at the rail of a bridge, care-
lessly, even indifferently, observ-
ing the tide of my thought and
action that flows beneath, who
is he? I do not know But I do
know that I have no control over
him. over his cynical smile, or
his lip curling in good-natured
contempt of me, or his shrug at
self-excuse, or his moods when he
stares down at the fretting
stream with a look of weariness
so profound that it is tragic. It
was he who was more interested’
in the thoughts, the passion, the
protest, the defiance, and the
dread,—which the sight of that
face set to boiling within me.
Sometimes he smiled cynically at
the turmoil, and at other times
he watched it with what seemed
to me bitter disgust and disap-
pointment and regret.
While this tempest was strugg-
useful lieutenant
and ordered him
I drank from the glass of water
on my desk, and \ ent on. When
ventured to look up there again.
state polities,- strengthening my they not been insisting that to
- - - - - •
5•irar
>♦♦♦♦♦♦
I
to live
To keep
call was after a children’s party
al our house. Carlotta singled
out Mrs. Burbank for enthusias-
to accept the savage!
met him again in Washington, he
seemed to me to have all his
faults of fifteen years before ag-
weeks, themonths and the years,
rushed by, as the interval be-
tween breakfast and bedtime,
between Sunday and Sunday, be-
tween election day and election
day again, grew shorter and
“Why?” said I.
“I don’t know,” she answered.
“And the second confession ?”
“That I never trust you.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know.”
hold upon the two political ma-do right means treasure in Heaven
chines. As the days and the
thods, must
I had disliked him
were boys in the state
together, and. when I
just a pair of eyes, in the shadow
of the brim of a woman’s hat, the
rest of the face, the rest of the
woman, hid by those in front and
on either side. There was a
movement among them, ami the
whole face appeared and I stop-
-O-D: 10
and intelligent
play the game
crudefi clumsy
ami custom
renomination. He He had selected it early in life;
and :
Except the time given to the
only the face, really
mouth and the eyes.
gard as fit and proper.
sure round the plum
plum tree! Is there
Then, after a pause, him. I soon found that he had
and as unnecessary
as in war. But
11 J -
A man said, ‘ Well, I do declare,
2mB .
35 ,
BNS .A
J
45 H
335 J
ebbeg
ANNOUNCEMENT
This is to inform the public
in general that the 1922 Fair
Catalog is now out of the press.
Copies may be obtained by
the Secretary, Henry Hirsch, at
L. E. Hirsch’s store, free of
charge. You may’ call for same
or upon request we will mail
them to your address. 41
Respectfully,
Hy. Hirsch, Sea
so sweet in apologizing for com-
ing. She said she hadn’t any
nurse, and that she wag so timid
about her children that she ne-
ver could bring herself to trust
them to nurses. And really,
Harvey, you know how nice she
was all th? afternoon. She’s
the kind of mother I approve
of. the kind I try to he. Don’t
creed and
savages re-
need of
i I could
were already
alive. to have influence, he must pity.
as a
other that watches,
seems lo me to be
serve me, scores of th brightest,
most ambitious young me of the
slate eager to do my bidding,
whatever it might be, in the
hope that in return I would]
despoil the other fellow and willjsaid sht
You will be able to tackle all kinds of FreHep;eL cL.„c
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fortunately , polotiet
of play ing upon '
art of fooling the
thinking they are
now politics at Washington,
from December until Congress
all junti
name fi
soon bi
l was speaking, one afternoon,
in defense of a measure for the
saddest, because I had moments
in which I was conscious of my
own derangement.
I have often thought on the
cause of this dissatisfaction
which has never ceased to gird
me, and which I have learned
girds all men of intelligence who
lead an active life I think it
take care
striving to I
be would wear it, even in his
nightshirt, until death. He said
nothing brilliant, but neither
did he say anything that would
ne about tl
bed sheet w a
I “We hate
• re broke,' <
Urs. Cliffor
heir arrival,
in identific
oeket of M
een out of
i short whil
e port ed to
ire both sol
uiet and
A f^r him
lif A I, the
nan who 'll
nd asked
sept the mo
.. eured $ 1
ister. and
U r ’ lifford
W h> n fri ■
tel phen
. 1121 -eV
' cers
there were
life, in
well, “Oh, I don’t know. He’s
th? sort of high-average Ameri-
reverse all these years: have
implieity of Fredonia. Bu’
•| got to thinking about it.”
His pose I saw that Carlotta
was shrewdly right. He was
acutely self-conscious, and was
acting his pose every instant.
I was
they have to pretend to adapt
their mental vision to that of
the mass of their fellow men or.
like the philosophers, they could
lead lives of profitless inaction,
enunciating truths which are of
i o value to mankind until it re-
discovers them for itself. No
man of trained reasoning power
could fail to see that the Golden
Rule is not a piece of visionary
altruism, but a sound principle
of practictal self-interest Or.
could anything be clearer, to one
who takes the trouble really to
think about it. than that he who
adeanees himself at the expense
of his fellow men does not ad-
vance. but sinks down into the
of murderers for gain, thieves,
and all those who seek to ad-
vance themselves by injustice?
Yet, so feeble is man’s reason,
so near to the brute is he, so
under the rule of brute appe
tites, that he can not think be-
yond the immediate apparent
good, beyond to-day’s meal.
I once said to Scarborough:
“Politics is the scienee and art
of fooling the people.”
“That is true, as far as it
goes," he said. ”li that were
dent some dav.” gifts of nature,—which are all
and i , , .
. . . |. “Why?” said I. It is amus-. dangerous. Burbanks merit lay
. . 1, . ing to watch a woman fumble5 in his discreet use of it. it
two things about myself ami you. . ‘ ,
,.1.1 e a : about for reason for her intui- compelled men
The first is that I am afraid of " v •
i crazy him because they had new
like a sons for being in love
are like a ci-
tions.
Carlotta did
made a bitter fight against deca- l
piation, ami. as he was popular
with the people of his district,
we hail some difficulty in defeat-
ing him. But when he was beat-
en. he was of course helpless and
hopelessly discredited.- —the peo-
pie soon forget a fallen politi-
cian. He “took off his coat”
and worked hard and well for
the election of the man who had
euchred him out of the nomina-
tion. When he returned to
Washington to finish his term,
he began a double, desperate
assault upon my friendship. The
direct assault was unsuccessful.
only if I could gain the next
point; and, when that was gain-
ed, the same story was repeated.
Whenever I paused to reflect, it
was to throttle reflection half-
born, and hasten on again.
“A silly business, this living,
isn't it?” said Woodruff to me.
“Yes, — but — ” replied I.
“You remember the hare ami
the hatter in Alice in Wonder-
land. ‘Why?’ said the hare.
‘Why not.” said th,' hatter. A
sensible man does not interro-
gate life; he lives it.”
“H’m.” retorted Woodruff
And we went on with the
game, shuffling, dealing stak-
ing But more and more fre-
quently there came hours, when,
against my will, I would pause.
ones Avenue
> baek, and
id with bet
resse d ill ei
oss ssion of
customer u
led the mol
rom the cash
hortly befor
H nmthen lei
ac® fol
ord could fl
later, while what Carlotta had Hot Weather
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get a share of the swag ” a bad idea for a man to be to pH- .
Xml h was tight it is by rated so long from his wifi and she added: “Well, she’s wel-lone quality the reverse of com-
. , . ...... i ehildren and home influences ” come to him. I can't see what monplace. He had magnetism
nUihIp HIHN To Tilt* 30UlI it ’‘i I ,, •••• 4
. , ii. . 115, „ „„ That last phrase wasaccompan-/she finds to care tor. Whenever a new eandidate,
shamefaced, but cont rolling. ap 1 ’ , ...... , , nr .. '
. .1 । nd bv one of her queer shrewd 1 said I. was proposed for Mazarn S ser-
petites of nu n that the clever • 1 • .,111 . . 1 c., .
, „ . looks 1 “Oh. he a distinguished-look-ivice, hi' used to ask, first of
manipulat them. I" get man . .. . ..... , । i ... m c .* 1
. 11 , ' N mil idea is not without me ing, and polite, offensively po- all, Has he luck? My first
to vote lor the personally pron .... . .... .... .... 1
it ' replied I judicially. lite to women- he doesn t un- question has been, Has he mag-
... . . . • ■ i. i “What are you smiling at ?” derstand them at all - thinks netism?‛‛ and I think mine is
the long and elaborate ar-.beleive that what is i" can " she a manded sharply. thes lile deference and flattery, the better measure. Such of’
"If it was a smile,” said I. He has a very nice smile. But one’s luck as is not the blunder- "
my cards, watch the
anil I would wonder at
the r lotta appeared She had never
oald stayed long nt Washington after
un the first whiter; she preferred,
art for the ehildren and perhaps for
th' herself the quiet and the greater
the face was gone. Had I seen
or imagined? Was it she or was
it only memory suddenly awaken-
ing ami silouett ing hr upon that
background of massed humanity '
I tried to convince myself that I
had only imagined but I knew
that I had seen.
Within me -and. I suppose,
within every one else—there is a
dual personality : not a good and
ways serious,—and such a pose! us usually the result of one’s
It's what I call the presidential magnetism. However, it is about
pose. No doubt he’ll be Presi- the most dangerous of the free
three, my
of fruit which gladdens the eyes
of ambitious man, that does not
glisten upon some one of its
many boughs, heavyladen with
corporate aad public honors and
wealth ?
Burbank’s indirect attack.
sisted. and. as the move would
weaken their hold upon the party
mid so improve my own chances.
I was not deeply aggrieved that
my advice had been rejected.
Toward the end of my speech
aroused by applause from the
visitors’ gallery. I forgot myself
and began to look up there as I
talked, instead of addressing my-
self to my fellow Senators. The
eyes of a speaker always wander
over his audience in search of
eyes that respond. My glance
wandered, unconsciously , until it
found an answering glance that
fixed it
This answering glance was not
“I don’t know her said I not hav I en generally regard n
| l.. on 1 'm. | nil ' het h • ■ I 'I । * ble Hine
struck me as being well, rathe r impr snive manner of delivering
silent." his words made our overvalue I
“That’s it,” she exclaimed the freight they carried But I
triumphantly "‘She doesn't soon found, for I studied him
care a rap for men. She’s ah- with increasing interest, thanks
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Schumacher, Oscar R. Fredericksburg Standard (Fredericksburg, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 15, 1922, newspaper, July 15, 1922; Fredericksburg, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1418447/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .