The La Coste Ledger (La Coste, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, December 11, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
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movement, which are deaf to the
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SUBSCRIPTION RATE
York-’City, Dean dart w, Acker-
the
dangers in restricting freedom of
and his bride arrived home Thurs-
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publisher.
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' THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
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achieving their objective, we may
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A COMFORTING PACT
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Rio Medina, January 5 from
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MERIGA
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POULTRY RAISERS!
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Dr. Salsbury’s
Poultry Remedies
in Texase,..
Other States
• Biry, January 8 from 9 a.m. to
11 a.m. ■■ .,.omc
Coal Mine, January 8 from 1 p.m.
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$1.00 a year
150 a year
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221 Xj
• (.Continued from page 1y
Mrs. Jos, L. Tondre of Castro-
Mrs.1 Ella Richter of San An-
tonio spent the past week with
her niece, Mrs. Ed. Wells.
Mrs. Hazel Landrum of Devine
has been employed as a teacher in
the Lytle School.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Haymaker,
Miss Alice Been, Leuts. Been and
Butler of San Antonio were, week-
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L.
Been.
i
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Castroville, January fl and
from fl a.m. to 4 p.m.
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process of fighting the
must not lose private
and administering the school pro-
gram; principles of instruction in
fire rafety; and on materials and
activities for the elementary and
high schools. . ,r‘ I
Part Two opens with a discus-
sion of the importance ofconserv-
mg life and material , resources.
Then iollow chapters on organ-,
izing community fire.' prevention
national capital and the interfer-
: ence with the war effort due to
Delladona H. D. Club Has
Christmas Party
a debt of gratitude, because it will
have helped avert official restrie-
tions of individual action and
all war effort. It knows that a.
problem that is not solved volun-served.
The scores for the day out of a' I
possible 226 pbints on the first .
round, and 375. points on the
second rpund, ieluding the-" six
month score with a. possible 1360,
Coste, Texas, under the act of
Congress of March 1879.
Lytle News
Mrs. L. C. Gray, Correspondent
i 8 w
222
R. J. Mangold
Grain Dealer
F
war we
—For Vietory: Buy.Bondsm
’ Notice To Taxpayers!
‘ . - -n :
Notice is hereby, given that I
will be at the following naihed
places on. dates given below for
the purpose of collecting 1942
taxes; and assessing for the year .
1943.,
Medina Lake, January 4 from
9 a.m, to 11 a.m.*
Cliff, January 4, from 1 p.m. to
Mrs. A. N. Steinle of Jourdanton,
recently received his orders tore-
port on December 4th for duty’With
. 1 a
various eommittees. ( »
It was decided f hold an all
day meeting on January 26, 1943
starting at 16. A.M. with a demon-
stration on Meat Canning by Miss
Strangle scheduled, for the day.
Other business matters were
agencies beyond censorship con-
--2 '<r’ . J"—’
.The Delladona Home. Demon-
stration Club enjoyed a Christmas
party at the club, house on fues-
Any erroneous reflection upon
the character, standing or repu-
tation of any .person, firm'or cor-
pqration, which may appear in the
columns of this newspaper will
" be gladly corrected upon being
brought to the attention of the
Press and 1,276 daily newspapers.
r ‘.‘If those who are- determined to
freeze the press, succeed in
ville received word from her son,
-Clement Tondre, Petty Officer
talities —-7 r—-
frozen for the duration and. only
those governmental officials and
i •3..____■,--
2
Lytle, Pleasanton, and Jourdan-
ton Eastern Star Chapters were
hostess chapters on last Thursday
when A School of Instruction was
held. 7
American citizen. We should co
operate to the limit.
H
a" .2*54.
"2 ■.
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,-e ,
will be particularly aeute amidst
the vast distances’ of the Western
United States. Thousands of? war
workersi and farmers live many
miles from production ,centers.
Plan* are under consideration for
sharing of rides. Compulsion
should be, avoided' wherever • pos-
sible.,’. America citizens, by
securing public interest and co-.
_ _
Commercial
accepted as a war necessity, must
end when the war ends. They
must be regarded as purely tem-
porary—as an unpleasant but un-
avoidable medicine we must take
in a period of world sickness. If
we begin, to accept those controls
as the' nation’s normal way of be-
taken cure of after which the
meeting adjourned and the mem-’
brs and the children present went
to a "fish pond" and fished Christ-
mas presents,
A most delightful lunch was
served by the hostesses, Mrs. R.
J; Mangold, Mrs. O P. Jungman
snd Mrs., Joe1 Jacket.2 , ‛ 7 2.
, —For . Victory: Buy Bonds-
Macdona Shooting Club -
Has Regular Meet v
"" T • .M ' ....... • . ■- ; . 2 •
In this, as In all issues, the
answer must finally be made by
the people. If they remember that
the government belongs to them,
instead ofchem belonging to their
Dittlinger’s
Hog Minerals
Poultry and Dairy Feed
or some time but his doctors gave him
permission to make the trip to
Texas, and he did just that. He
PAGE TWO a
that has come ito beingto/waste____ __________._____
their money and; order them M.c Vogt 1254, Mrs. Laura Jackel
; 1 around. They have noted the con-
;. [.fusion and, blundering at the
rendered an important public ser-
vi e. it is making it available at
less than the cost of" printing a-
lone, 85 cents with reduced quant~
A MILITARY NECESSITY
. A textbook on "Fire Prevention
Education," has been published by
the National Board of Fire Under-
writers, 86 John Street, New York
City. It is for use by educators
in the -schools, and by civic leaders
as a guide in organizing com-
munity fire prevention and pro-
tection. y .2 ■
FRE
1 ; FULL SizE, GLASS
first class, United Stats Navy,
that he was married to Miss Amy
Nermo of Seattle, Washington,
Saturday, December 6th. Clemmy
has been in the Naval Hospital in
Oakland, California, for ' quite
this bureaucracy and red tape.
They don’t want to be sovietized
or socialized or bossed around
after the war by a lot of politi-
cians."
The greatest achievements in
this war are being made by free
enterprise. Free enterprise builds
the ships, planes and guns. Free
enterprise provides the vast bulk
of the electric power war industry
needs. Fref enterprise produces
the coal and the oil and the copper
and the other essential materials.
Free enterprise hauls the freight.
Free enterprise is swiftly turning
this country into the greatest war
machine the world has ever
known. . i " ' • '
As Herbert- Hoover has said, a
president, Louise--Lessing; presid-
l . ing. Fourteen members and one
visitor attended. Final reports
for the year were given by the
transportation problem op a voln,7, p -M
untary basis, all of us will owe it •uI D0YS • « •
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Gray and
children spent Tuesday in Sen An-
tonio visiting their daughters,
Mrs. Howard Howell and ' Miss
Marinell Gray.
____ . ,'.4 ■ " ,
Printing
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• OMM, AMMtt •
haleeiEenernapglrantbetoptmsesyout).
There Is No Job Too Difficult
of Justice against the Associated 1,0. „ _ -* * i,
Glenn N. Steinle, son of Mr. and.
the press as. is now being attempt-
ed in suit filed by the Department day;
wildcred because it is impossible
tonsee ou way in thelight of pre-'
. eedent. Noso fong agora . $3,
000,0p0,00. Fqderal. deficit , was
staggering Today the banks of
this country are helping the gov-
ernment to underwrite deficits,
running into scores of,/ billions.
Buc while ' they, banks and the
government ‘talkingchundreds of
billions of dolla>$ in a way that.
Part One contains an intro-
. duction . op fire prevention ‛educa-
_ tion and chapters on organizing
y
r e
L " A:
2,2
2," /.* .
—
pmogeomnm
and fire protection work; selected have freedom of speech, but be
commurity/ and organizational deprived of freedom' to speak, be-
activities; prevention and control
I of farm, fires;, forest fire pre-
vention and protection; public re-
lations and community fire safety;
—For Victory: Buy Bond*—
FREEDOM DEPENDS ON FREE
k PRESS c.d
\ In ‘a recent address in New
ervap"-VAYR- .cAzkN
Beni. Shadrook 216-360,Richard
Biediger’ 214-659, Arthur J. Vogt
214-359, L. Manade 217-358, John
Nentwieh 213-356, Mrs. Laura
Jackel 209-351, Mrs. Theresa Nen-
twich 209-348, Joe Lessing 207- ,
341, Mrs. Erma Manade 203-337,
Mrs..M.C. Vogt 207-336./.yg. ;
Six month score: Lawrence Man-
ade 1 294, • Richard Biediger 41291,
John Nentwieh 1280, Ben I. Shad-
rock 1278,' Arthur J. Vogt 1271,
Mrs. Theresa Nentwieh 1256, Mrs.
...
t:3 ... ;.....1
230
- I
TBB LACOSTE L
Newspaper advertising
that covers a wide and pros-
perous area. Let us take a
special message from you
into the homes of this Com-
munity.
banking. It is One^ of the strong-
from Macdona were visiting ih
______ LaCoste Tuesday afternoon.
"Testbulwarks of economic freedom.
problemithatis not solved volun-1 served, “realize ithatwarneces-
tartly, must be solved by govern- sities justify priorities and ration-
ment authority.’ If the oil in- ing and other government re-
dustry can help solve' the autstrictions . needed to promote the
war effort. They are not kicking
at that. But they are disgusted
at the great bloated bureaucracy
day that their aged father had
passed away at Mexia. .<
Mrs. OhahSGarrisan has return-
ed from a two months stay in
Crystal City with her sister, Mrs,
Garnat Juvinal. , "
—-For Victory: Buy Bonds—
Automotive! Progress: 1940—
No running boards. 1941—no
gear-shifts. 194 g-—no car.
A3 *, < , ‘a t‛." 2 1′1
man of Columbia School
Journalism, pointed but
chills the ‘marrow. We can- take;
comfort in/one fat.;The banking 41
industry is1 ^till owned' aid operas* 11
ed by private citizens. Along
as it remains so, fihancial credit
will likewise remainin the hands
of.the priyate citizen, ; "
’ The 1armier can still go to. His
community bank for' crop loads
or loans to purchase hew machin:.
■.<’ry, or/li-- -
1! certain amount of fascism at home ,
; i is necessery toy wage total war on
]! our fascist enemies. But the vast. ,
‘; economic controls that government
<; has imposed, and the people have •
trol will be able to se them,
"Uder the cloak of waremer- ,
geney, the American way of life
is-being profoundly, changed by
lawy by directives, by executive „ _____... ,
orders, by judicial decisions, by day, December 8th.
consentdecrees , and by Accomplish, ’ ’ ---
ed facts which the people are told
about after* the events.”
Dean Aekermann pointed ; out
that insofar as censorship of war,
activity was necessary to the
suckess of War plans, no one has
aright to object and no jqurna-
list Would purposely give, aid or
comfort to an cnemyj but he said
the preseit attack: on the press
The Macdona4 Shooting Club
0-‛
7,41 '
c./t ;
members met Sunday ami I
some very good flwyea were: made.
L. Manade wongSa six month
fknreg:GgipYtsar-AKE298
Fhmphu -wte*seemmye
winning over Richard Biediger by
three points. Ben Shadrock made
a'perfect score of 75 points, and
also won the monthy special prize.
e 1‛,
2 ; ,i '
■ ■ , ■'
Mr. and Mrs Howard Harris
and son, Billy, of San Antonio ,-e.
spent Friday evening with Mr. and .
Mrs, L. C. Gray.
—
Mr. John Hoots and sister, Mrs. , N ;
Phiffs, received a messege, Tues-
J rates - It, is up to the educa: )
tors and civic leader to take the t. .
fullest advantage of that service: "has. ho justification
—For Victory: Buy Bonds
$
1, ' 4 •
INSURANCE
HAIL - FIRE - TORNADO - AUTO
_ BONDS, ETC.
Representing the Hartford Fite Insurance Co. The
Seal of Certainty on a Policy. —
Hondo, Medina County, Texas, Since 1907
0. H. MILLER
; HONDO, TEXAS
jn0.
WSHARETHE-RIDE ; : ’
: No one really knows how far-
--- --z —-..... reaching will be the effects of
//ery, or livestock; services that in stringent nation-wide’ gasoline
the present agricultural crisis' are, ration,ng. Its resulting problems
■ as vital asthelaunchingof a'new.
,, battleship, l Everk foodhas to be
• financed. And Workers, soldiers?
depenglen tsi business men/ all of
; ; ing, freedom—every kind of free-
■ ' dom—will be finished.
niepe
to 3 p.m.
LaCoste, January 11 and 12 from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Natalia, January. 13 from 9 a.m-.
to 4 p.m. EPe™2 ; ' o
Devine, January 15 and ill from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.. .'
D’Hanis. January, 18 from 9 a.m.
tb 4 pm.N 3 - e 1.2
Respectfully, a ;
JAMES R. DUNCAN
: / .0- Aasessor and Collector
.1 of Taxes, Medina Co.
—For Victory: Buy Bonds—
Struck by a car as he rode his
bicycle down the 1300 block of E.
Carson St, San Antonio, Elmer
Bowmann, Jr., age 10, was pro-
nounced dead on arrival at the
R,gA1,g ronoml amt+asi agday
mv-ke uenerai --sPou /
M2 n
' Mrs. Betty Peel, pf San Antonio,
whose husband was one of the
thousand who went from Canada
as an R.A.F. Captain and was
killed, was the Week-end guest of
Mrs. Frank Riley. .Ror ;
3/1-,-—- asa,.
v*,
14 M
, -ad
■
Etam7‛*"*22b
■’ immv a-mm "
I
Publishers, Printers and
Designers. We specialize in
Commercial Printing, and
Book Printing and do it right.
No job too large or too small
to receive our most careful
attention. Get our estimates,
see our samples. We guar-
antee to please you.
P E te‛t
. ' whatsoever
by the necesities of war. The ob-
ject of that suit is not to preserve
the freedom of the press but to'
"freeze the. press into a new mold,
not, daring the' war but in per-
petuity." ' og, ' ' , .
; And in that last. sentence Dean
Ackeryian. points out a growing
danger to freedom in the.United.
States-fi eedom of the individual,
freedom of industry and, freedom"
of economic progress. The loyal-
ty of our people and their willing-
ness to give their sons, .their
daughters and their worldly pos-
sessions to once and for" all stamp
> nature and traditions, simply don’t out the threat of foreign dictator.
like it. i M.11 , in Amerisam, must not be
1 B. Kempf of Castroville and Mrs./ Dora Neuman, Tony Marin,
a RekimRnafG-R---^3 aa SgGaerejn l win HU wfflwf
TThetandard.om Company agencies can freeze the:
California recently ran arge - nation into a new mold of restrict-
vertisements it the papers,, which, ed’rignts after the war.
promise to help immeasurably.i —For Victory: Buy Bonds-
this transportation problem. They
. urge workers to go to the nearest THE FINAL VICTORY
Standard Station and put their “There can be no real freedom
names on share-the-ride registers without free enterprise,” said the
where every effort is being made Mon mouth “ American, - Long a00.0.. o... «...
to make it.possible for car owners Branch, New Jersey, in a recent were as follows:
and workers to coordinate routes 1editorial., The American people
and times of departure. 8 must keep that thought ever in
; Indrstry, in every field of en- mind during the war if we are to
deavec is striving to aid the over-1 have freedom after the war-
The . people, thq American ob-
“ win the wat hat Is. hudauarotlanuaaionndghanabibitmnaning
cnse "f.bewildlermem .We ar be- education for fir prevention and
protction." . 12222 s,i /a
At a time when we need every
last ounce of strehgth, fire pre-
„vettion If. far more than a mere
Civic duty. It is in the nature of
a military necessity. The Nation,
al Board, in publishing the present
boOk, the first bf its kind, has
1 no
me 5
--------------
R. A. BIEDIGER
BARBER, LaCoste, Texas
Open 9:45 A.M. to 4:45 P.M.
Open Every N ight
----
• "12. • ' ke
lca . ■
8224 ' '
' 1 t
04
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us, can stilF find in the banker a
. private citizen deeply interested
0.2 , . in the problemis of other'private
%
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■ —-------- ■ - I. ’ - ■
■ .. ■
“Judge, there’s been quite abit of talk going ’ a bill of goods. Wouldn't aurprise me a bit
around about prohibiting liquor in various if what they're really aiming for is to take
spots around the country... around the in the whole country again. We all know it
Amy camps for one thing. What do you didn't work the last time. All we got was v
make of it? ? ' bdolltf liquor instead of fetal liquor,.. plus
Well* Henry, I size it up about like this, racketeers, gangsters and the worst crime
it looks to me like the folks who are doing wave the country ever saw. ,
the talking are shooting a little bit higher “Seems to me we’va all got nnr hands fan
ithan most people seem to realize. Sort of towin this war without starting up an argu-
like the salesman who gets his foot in the ment we just got through settling a few N
door and before you know it he’s sold you years back.” ’
1 -hda/31 ' ; ' - 1. . , ' 3 '
E9*xayahuiwaaIE-------==
cpsrika, IfM. • Alcohelie Beerap imduaries, lneN.r.c
-8'207
*2Manf
V''"’ 92a
3
LaCoste Telephone
: Company
Rudolph D. Bippert, Prop. :;
: > .Local and Long Distance 3
; [ Service. Report all troubles ;;
3 > or discourtesy: to Mgr. ‛
There - is- one thing that every-':
one has ih, common during hthese
days—besides a do-or-die desire
***********************************************
Do you experience ,
trouble in getting '
Automobile Repair Work
nc‛ . . the kind that J >
Satisfies? "—5 "
ehu
01
{ ROLLINS PIN
; With purchane of pound
k sAisavaT
$ AV/-7A8
... packed is colling pi"
ma MmI tonie ana pouliry nock
oditloner. Umh el iuuit.
‘ MHrtlud la vour tavqrite farm
: et-rft- droda, Suppli
omVG• •99 M WW"V*
, the Candidates Class for Commis-
sion in the United States Marine
Corps. He reported at Quantico,
••w "my;* *• " "34 -AvMaVJ" . ,' , ■ t <1 /
of communication will he Virginia.
—For Victory: Buy Bonds
7F '4.
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Ehe Lacoste Lebger
►- Established August i, 1915
’ PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Ledger Building, acoste, Texas
JOHN C. BIEDIGER
Editor and Publisher .
DORIS M. RUIN, Ass’t.-Editor
Entered as second-class mail
mutter at the postoffice in La-
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Biediger, John C. The La Coste Ledger (La Coste, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, December 11, 1942, newspaper, December 11, 1942; La Coste, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1584899/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Castroville Public Library.