The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 30, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 4, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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THE BRADY STANDARD, BRADY TEXAS, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1933
The Brady Standard
H. F. Schwenker, Publisher.
Entered us second class matter
May 17, 1910, at postoffice at |
Brady, Texas, under Act of
March 3, 1879.____
ADVERTISING RATES
LOCAL READERS -10c per line,
per issue; four or more inser-
tions at 712c per line, per issue.
Minimi m po ■ sue 25c.
CLASSY-FI ADS 2c per word for
first 1 additional
insertion at ' per word, cash
with order. Minimum per is-
sue 25c. Ads charged only at
BRADY OPENS
SECOND HALF
WITH 5-1 WIN
Turks Comb Robbins for
11 Hits, With Vogel and
Prewit Leading: Eden is
Here Today
The Brady Turks opened the sec-
nd half Hill Country League chase
the line rate, 10c per line first 1 re Sunday afternoon by drub-
insertion; 5c per line each addi- b ng the San Saba Rangers, 5 to 1
Roy Brosig held the invaders well
in check, while th" locals collected
eleven hits off Robbins.
Atonal insertion.
Any erroneous reflection upon
the character of any person or
firm appearing in these columns
will be gladly and promptly cor-
rected upon calling the attention of
the management to the article in
question.
Notices of church entertainments
where a charge of admission is
made, obituaries, cards of thanks,
resolutions of respect, and a”, mat-
ter not news, will be charged for
at the regular rates
MEMGER
window, resting his tired and ach Life of Ocean Denizens
Two Dumbbells
Out of Dubuque
88
By FANNIE HU RST
■
(WNU Service)
TV/HEN the Kammerer chil-
W dren were asked their fa-
* * ther’s occupation, they re-
plied "Kammerer the Groc r." with
no sense of humble admission. In
Ing feet upon a pillow when this
I outburst came, and he turned upon
his wife the tired defeated eyes
he had been noticing in him for
; weeks.
“It’s terrible, mother. If I have whale is a mammal, warm-blooded
Not Without Excitement
Nui every creature that lives in
the ocean Is a fish. Many always
think of a whale as a fish, but a
Most Glorious
of Professions
8B
By FANNIE HIRST
to face ......ther art gallery or am and an air-breather. He is no
other cathedral and pretend to more a fish than the family dex is
those youngsters that 1 know what " " 1 Most whales are it.it
it's all about, yen'll about have to like fish and swim the seas, bu
ship home my ashes in an urn." this does not make them fish an
“And the degrading part of it is, more than the mouse that ha
Aesop, Amy and Robert love and wings is a bird—the bat is a main
understand those pictures and the mal. .... . .
'entity of the architecture. There's sitenithink Aad ConS dare m ’ or at least, he turned his. face, at
just no use my pretending, Aesop, I swimmers in river, pond, lakent .. - -
don't know a Del Sarto from a ocean as living a dull life. It is
■ 1 M Clure Newspaper Syndicate.)
( W NU Service)
UT of four brothers Myron
) Brown alone turned his face
- toward Intellectual pursuit.
the age of seventeen, toward his
**************++
♦ PERSONAL MENTION ♦
+ * + + + +---+ + + + + +
Phone the names of your -
and visitors to The P .and-
ard office.
Mrs. Frank Britton is here from
I Trier as a guest of her brothers,
Messrs. E. E. and Fred Spiller, and
relatives and friends.
Editor and Mrs. Frank Shearer
of Menard were numbered among
the visitors here Monday, staying
over for the dance last night.
Miss Kathryn Speaker has as her
guests this week. Miss Naomi
Shinn of Russellville, Ark., and
Miss Loraine Burton of Alice, ..
Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Tetens
little daughter are here from Gor-
man for a visit with home folks 1
and friends, while attending" the
Jubilee. - -
Miss Drusilla Davidson has as
her guests during the Jubilee Miss-
es Nancy Blackburn of San An-
tonio, Helen Smith of Rochelle and
Brownie am Blackie Motley of
Junction.
Miss Mildred Gifford of Brown-
wood, member of the high school
faculty here the past year and who
was re-elected for another term,
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. B.
Smith.
Mrs. J. T. King is enjor’
visit from her sister-
Dickey of Houet „ Vic-
toria Riley of -utonio, and
who will be h. guests the next
couple weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Sellers, son,
Wayne, and daughter, Merle, drove
down from Rising Star this morn-
ing to spend the Glorious
here as guests of friends and rela-
tives, and to take in the Jubi-
lee events.
O. S. Macy is here from Donna,
having come up to join Mrs. Macy,
who lias been a guest of their
daughter. Mrs. Wiley W. Walker
and family, the past several weeks.
Incidentally he is having a won-
derful time in greeting his hun-
dreds of old-time friends and ac-
guaintances, while attending the
their city, "Kammerer the Grocer” ....... .. .... .................
was the finest, most de luxe insti- Raphael, and the worst of It is, I hard to imagine social relations or
tution of its kind in town. Indeed, don't care. I’m tired, papa. My many "f the pleasures of the warm-
there were those who moved away neck aches from galleries as much blooded animals on land being
shared by the inhabitants of the
“The beauty Is there alright, cold, wet, and dark seas. And yet
mother. It’s just that we haven’t there is now scientific evidence
had the time to prepare ourselves that in the world of fish things are
! to admire it, the way the children not s2 very different as had been
^m? these PI the Ah world there are glut- he hna been, drifted, the two young-
the wonders of their art and beau- tons, fighters and loafers In
ty. It’s just that we Kammerers sharks stomachs have been found
the Grocers haven't had time to be- lobsters,
come anything else." feathers, wh at, corn, and cofee
“There’s something in that, fa- grounds, string beans, corncobs,
ther," said his wife, easing the the horn of « sheep, bones of a
back of her neck with a ministering cow. and even a wooden bucket
of witch-hazel. "I long, just as and tin cans. The shark is a vora-
much as you do, to be able to make cious eater, and he never has in- 1
1 the children fee) we're up to it, but digestion, because he can push his
I may as well confess, Aesop, I stomach out through his mouth
don't know what it's all about, and empty out anything which
Take that lecture today in the gal- might trouble him to digest,
lery on Siennese art of the Fif- ---------------------
teenth century. It wasn’t easy to j Liu
follow what he was saying, father. Good Story, but Hard to.
the way it was for the children be- Find the Moral in It
cause they’ve bad enough prepara- They tell it of James Gordon
to metropolises like New York and as your feet do."
Luke Vogel, slugging Brady left Chicago, who found it necessary to
fielder, had a perfect day at bad write back to Kammerer for certain
with two singles and a double. He delicacies such as exotic spices,
has collected six successive hits, fruits, that were obtainable no-
! having hit safely his last three where else.
times at bar against San Saba a "Kammerer the Grocer" was not
week akosu rewit Brady, got just the corner tradesman catering
two hits Sunday, to the green and-tinned-needs of a
Brosig was in trouble in only
one inn' ng, the fourth, when San
Saba scored its lone run. Three
’ singles after two were out, brought !
I across the tally. Some snappy
fielding cut off a rally in the
small neighborhood area. Kam-
merer’s baking, delicatessen, veg-
etable, fruit, tinned and staples de-
partments were so complicated and
highly organized as any big busi-
| fifth, ness.
turtle bones, chicken's
state's university, graduated there
at twenty -one, and without any
particular intent or purpose drifted
into teaching. At twenty-five he
was holding down the chair of Eng-
lish history in the university from
which he had graduated.
His three brothers, thrown on
their own resources at early age as
er ones, and the third his twin, into
business pursuits that were ulti-
mately to cast them all into the
destiny of big affairs.
Harold and Steve, the younger
| boys, struck it well in the radio in-
dustry while tiie vast industry was
still in its Infancy, Bartlett. My-
| ron's twin, was reputed at twenty-
five to be worth three-quarters of
a million dollars from fortunate
investments In copper.
The three brothers, successful all
at an early age, were none the less i
prideful of Myron. He represent- |
ed the intellectual status of the
family. He lent eelar and distine- [
tion. Had he permitted it, the
three brothers would willingly and |
generously have aided and abetted |
hit modest earnings as professor.
That, however, was not neces-
sary, Myron's scale of life fitted
and pleased him well. A pleasant
suite in a boys’ dormitory, where
he incidenally held the position of
dean. Varied if modest summer va- 1
cations, going tourist fashion to
Europe, or camping in the north of
Canada w' two or three of the
The stamp of Kammerer was the
insignia of a housewife's ability to
supply her family with the best.
Aesop Kammerer, while he did not
actually serve the trade, could be
found on the premises of the busi-
Brady scored in the first in-|
ning. After Jones went out,
Samuelson, batting for Peters, who
; took two swings and reinjured his j
arm, tripled to center, but was
1099 caught off the bag when Hunter
Brady, Texas, July 4. 1933 who was on first after dropping neg8 from early morning until late
----------------------------------a single back to third, went to sec- |
NOT THE STATE'S JOB ond on a delayed steal, a
„isingled to center to score Hunter.
( Brownw Bu etin) 1 The Turkeys iced the game with
Texas voter- be asked on four runs in the fifth. With two
August 26th to express their opin-down, Vogel singled, and was safe
ion, individually and collectively, of at second when Ashley dropped a
wongen to the State peg from the catcher. Smith dou-
a proposed amendment to the State bled, scoring Vogel. Prewit and noon hour, was a customer, asking
Constitution which would authorize Pet . singled, T mlinson walked for the head of the concern, likely
the issue and sale of twenty mil- and Watson's and Howard’s errors to be told that be was out, or un-
lion dollars in h nds for the pur-I on infield grounders pushed acr ss available. Kammerer, who had
pose of financing relief work the runs.
. through the remainder of the pe-SAN SABA
riod of depression. The bonds, Doran, lb
if authorized by the people, will Ashley, 2b
be matched in equivalent amount P. Smith, c
by the federal government; and it Estep, lb
has been ta c I with considerable Smith, cf
finality tha unless the bonds are W. Watson, 3b
authorized the re will be no further H. Harkey, rf
distribution of federal relief funds Howard, ss
PRESS
AB R
v. . at night. There were roomy if not
ove 1 particularly luxurious offices on the
rear of the second floor, and he
could either be found there, or in
close and careful scrutiny of the
needs of his various departments, i
At no time of the day, except ’he
tlon for travel, to know what
was all about."
t Bennett. He hated drinkers, and
"Exactly, mother! While we've
been at home, being grocers, our
the boys who worked with him
were all aware of it. One of the
pressmen returned from a bender
11 PO
0 16
built up this business almost single-
handed, never relaxed his hold when
1 success came. Nine and ten hours
a day, six days a week, he gave it
0 heart and body and soul, impor-
0 tunings of his wife and children to
the contrary notwithstanding.
"Aesop, just think, our children
children have been preparing them- with n beautiful black eye.
1 selves to enjoy the things we will As luck would have it, James
be onteasts from all our lives. If Gordon popped into the pressroom
we don’t hurry up and begin to lay that day. The fellow spotted him
the ground work or us to enjoy it, before Bennett saw him, and rath-
too."
er than explain the “shiner” and
"Now, what do you mean by that, run the risk ( 1 being tired chose to
Aesop?” asked his wife, rub printer’s ink all over his face.
in Texas. The bonds will have noE. Robbins, --
bearing upon Texas’ share of the Robbins, p
gigantic public works program of
President Roosevelt, from which
Texas expects to receive approxi-
mately a quarter of a billion dol-
lars. The pending proposal relates
solely to a continuation of chari-
table relief work in the state.
Totals
BRADY-
There are many reasons for ob-
jecting to the proposed bond issue,
among them being the fact that
Texas can not afford to burden it-
slf with a twenty million dollar
bond issue for any purpose. The
H. Jones, 3b
Peters, cf
Samuelson, cf
Hunter, 2b
Vogel, If
Smith, ss
Prewit, rf
Petty, 1b
Taylor
Pearson, lb
nlinson, c
34
AB
R
most potent objection, however, is 1
that it 1 not the function of the Brosig, p
state to feed and clothe its citizens,
no matter how pitiable may be the
need for charitable assistance to
the poor and unfortunate. The
have been to Europe six times now I was this.
i in all. Don't you think it high
What he meant by that was to On his tour oi inspection around
come as a great shock in the lives the pressroom Bennett came upon
of Robert and Amy when they the besmudeed pressman busily
heard It. and the way they heard it burying his nose in his work.
“Who’s the fellow?" he asked the
meml ers of the Lenity. Books. 1 "
Good music from Ilie second gill- f
leries of the concert hulls. Pleas-
ant leisure. Campus quiet. Mild
intellectual divertisement among
5 24 17 4
0 time we were entitled to just one
— holiday!"
“You're right, mother. That’s
H PO A E what I'm planning. Next summer
1 2 5 2 we'll join the young ones and see
0 0 0 0 the world."
1000 "Father, you’ve been saying that
1 2 2 2 for six years, now."
1 1 9 0 "I mean it this time, mother.
2 1 0 0 High time we were beginning to
i get something out of it. Next year
One evening in the bar of the Ex-
celsior hotel in Rome, over cock-
tails, Robert said to his sister:
"This trip is an awful frost, Amy.
Good Lord, if I had known the gov-
ernor and the governor's lady were
going to be a pair of sawdust babies
.! 0 0 0 0 0 this time the business can spare
0 0 0 3 0 0 me."
3 0 1 5 2 O The children, high-spirited twins
3 001 4 0 of eighteen, were also of a mind.
. - G — "Honestly, dad. It's up to you and
5 11 27 15 ’ mother to come over with us next
Totals
on our hands. Did you see the
poor old mater flop down for a cat
nap today in the house of Llvia,
right in front of the murals?'
"Yes, and it would have to be in
front of 'Io Guarded by Argus.’ I
wouldn't say it to the dears for
worlds, but can you imagine how
they would welcome taking an
earlier boat home? We could hop
foreman. Upon being told. Ben-
nett asked, "What do you pay
him?" The foreman quoted the
figure.
"Double It!" snapped Bennett.
"He's the only one in the place
who seems to be doing any work.”
—New York Morning Telegraph.
fact that the national government
and forty-seven tate governments Brady
have appropriated public funds for Summary of game—Runs batted
this purpose does not in any sense n. Vogel, Smith, Prewit, Brosig.
alter the principle involved, which J. Smith. Stolen bases. H. Jones,
is fundamental. The question is Prewit. Sacrifice hits, Tomlinson,
asked, naturally, funds for re- Robbins. Two base hits, Vogel,
rom s base }
the state and federal governments, elson. Double plays, Ashley
from what other source can they Doran. Struck out by Brosig, 4;
be obtained? E the question is Robbins 2. Base on balls, off
beside the poir . The distribution Robk ins 3. Hit batsmen by Bro-
of charity is a social, and not a po-
litical, activity. Society is obligat-
ed to care for the needy and to
alleviate suffering, but the state
can not properly be employed as
the agent of society in the perfor-
mance of that duty.
Classified Advertising Rates
in
I HE BRADY STANDARD
Brady, Texas
Published Semi-Weekly on
Tuesdays and Fridays.
Minimum 25c each insertion. 1st
insertion 2c each word. Each
consecutive insertion thereaf-
ter le each word.
All advertisements cash in ad-
vance unless customer has a
regular charge account at this
office.
Advertisements charged at the
line rate, only—10c per line
1st insertion; 5c per line each
additional insertion. Minimum
charge, 25c per insertion. (
Local Reader Advertising Rated
10c per line, per issue. Four
or more issues at The per
line, per issue. Minimum 25c
each issue. Local readers
run at hue rate only.
Obituaries and Cards of Thanks
at same rate as for local
j readers.
The publisher are not responsi-
ble for copy emissions, typo-
graphical errors, or any un-
intentional errors that may
occur further than to c rrect
same in the next issue after
it is brought to their atten-
tion. All advertising orders
are accepted on this basis
only.
PHONE 163.
the members of the teaching staff.
All in all, there as little, in My-
ron's opinion, that his brothers
could contribute to his well-being.
Then, too, there was tills differ-
ence. The business boys had all
married. There were three attrac-
tive and personable sisters-in-law, j
and five or six neices and nephews I
In whom Myron felt a sort of be- |
nign impersonal pride. But the do- I
mestic aspect of the lives of his
successful brothers helped to fur-
ther estrange him from the walks
they had chosen for themselves.
Christmas, New Years and birth- |
days, they met. And on one occa-
sion, more for the sake of quieting
their importunings than anything
else, Myron had accompanied, as
guest, two of his brothers and their |
families to Europe. There acting
as guide and interpreter to the
cultural pursuits of the wives and
children.
But in the main, Myron remained I
not necessarily aloof, for he was a '
gregariously inclined fellow, but 1
more or less secluded among his i
own kind and the books that as the |
S
Rain-Maker's Methods
Because rain is so essential to
the proper growth of their crops,
the natives of Africa are greatly
dependent upon it, and many are
the rain-making ceremonies they
hold, with whole communities par-
ticipating in some of them.
Native roots are powdered and
mixed together and then put in a
bowl of water. After this an eland
tail is dipped in the mixture and
waved around vigorously. It is
R
p
down to Antibes then for a couple
summer. You two darlings make : of months on the Riviera."
us look snide. Being so home “I’ll be the last to suggest it to
grown." them."
“Never you mind, children, your"Leave it to me darline I know
father and I are going to IFrance I the mother like a book she wi
and Italy with you next June. It’s | jump at the release!”
coming to us."
And, finally, although as mother
said, she didn't actually believe it
until they were on the boat, the
Kammerer family, four strong, did
set sail for the European trip, which
the older pair had been contemplat-
Batted for Petty in seventh.
Score by innings—
San Saba 000 100 000—1
100 040 00x-5
sig (J. Smith, E. Robbins). Time
of game, 1:55. Umpires, C. H.
Smith and Al Smith. Scorer, L. B.
Smith.
Ing, planning, dreaming, for nt.
least two-thirds of their married
lives.
The youngsters, pampered in
every form of travel and education.
Moreover, the authorization of
such a bond issue in Texas would
have a tremendous influence in dis-
couraging the removal of condi-
tions which have contributed large-
ly to the demand for relief funds.
Texas should rot yield to the co-
ercion of the federal authority
which demands that this state bur-
den itself with a twenty-million... . „ ...... ...., „ ......
dollar debt in order to secure an July 6, to join Mr. and Mrs. C.
equitable proportion of the fund. WJachendorfer and son, and from
it places each year in the federal Lampasas they will go to St. Louis
asury. We do not believe it will to attend the national convention
so; but, to. the contrary, that of Lions Clubs, thence to Chicago
the people will .....will
the bend is ue proposal in the Au- go to Detroit, Buffalo, Niagara
gust election y doing will ■ into Canada, return-
emphatically say to the federalling via the Dakotas,
government that they are prepared
to conduct their own governmen-
tal affairs according to their own
conceptions of democracy. And at
the same time they will yield not
one iota of their claim to an equi-
table apportionment of the federal
relief funds.
• Mrs. F. B. Sutherland of Gates- L , .
ville came last Friday to spend theand whom the voyage was an
remainder of the month of July |*
here with her daughter, Mrs. W. E.
Whitten, and her son, J. W. Suther- 1
land. Mr«. Sutherland will keep the hand.
house for her son while Mr. and Within twenty-four hours after
Mrs. Whitten attend the A Century landing Aesop Kammerer and his
of Progress Exposition at Chicago, wife were being swung through
They have mapped out a we nderful
old story, set out upon this one in
the high spirit of the adventure
of experience leading Innocence by
trip through northern and middle
western states. They will leave
go to Detroit, Buffalo, Niagara
Mrs. O. E. Traweek has been en-
loving a visit from her daughter,
Mrs. W. W. Lewis, and twin daugh-
ters, Misses Ulrea and Naurea. of
Austin, and who arrived here last
Saturday for a visit. They plan to
return to their home this after-
noon. They were accompanied
++*******..here by Misses Nealie Bob Hamp-
+ , ,AT **T ton and Gladys Pate, and also by
R ATES + John Ingram of Fredonia, and who
A A1 X DO • have been attending the summer
♦ THE BRADY STANDARD + ormal at State University.
9 ▼ F. R. Wulff, who has been at-
tending the summer school at A.
* & M. College, College Station, the
+ past month, returned Saturday,
Brady, Texas
Published Semi-Weskly
♦
shaken to the four quarters of the
, , , earth and then shaken over the
It was at this point that Aesop bowl. Then the tail is installed in
walked in on his progeny who were the medicine-man’s home,
tossing off the remains of their cock-
tails Following this the growing tip of
“Say, Rob, say Amy, what say? mochangoko, a species of randia.
Here in this envelope I’ve two trans- another plant. Is bound to the head years marched on he was accumu- :
portations back home." of the doctor with twine of the luting about himself in a modest |
"Oh, father—not quitting us, are musalia vine. He then goes to
you? i sleep, with his legs tucked up If |
"No. Your’re quitting us. Ma and little rain is desired, or with his '
i I have made up our minds to stay less spread out lf much rain
over in Europe tills year, and catch wanted.
on to this thing called the culture
game. I'm going to need you two
children back home, Rob, you're go-
ing to take charge of the fruit and
vegetable departments, A to Z and, 1
| Amy, I've wired back to our Miss
Punt to take you on in her depart-
ment and get you limbered up in
the fascinating study of imported
I spices.”
library.
is
Then, one New Year which he
was spending in New York where
the annual gathering of his clan
took place, Myron, stimulated by
all the Wall Street gossip which
he heard among his brothers, but
It is a hundred years since the | which never was even intended for
lawnmower was invented. It was his ears, took what he called a flyer
not invented In the first instance for in a stock which he selected for
shaving lawns. The first machine of | the euphonious quality of its name.
Me bought one thousand shares of
Lawnmower’s Centenary
Europe according to the dictates
of their two high-handed efferves-
cent youngsters, who were deter- w.Why father "
mined on showing them "how ft .... * . ,,
* . "Nope. Your mother and I aren’t
going to need you around for the
The results need not have been next little while. We’re going to
surprising, but they smote the pa- get ourselves ready, the way we did
rental Kammerers with something j you, to know what it’s all about.”
akin to humiliated dismay. The And so it was, that the house of
older pair who, according to allAesop Kammerer. Fancy Grocers,
precepts and precedents, should found itself presented with n now
have been having the time of their
the kind was produced by Edwin .
Budding, a textile engineer, to trim Green Agate® opper stock for seven
off the nap from newly woven cloth,
a task formerly done by hand with
the aid of shears. This machine
hundred and fifty dollars, took it
home without even revealing the
purchase to his brothers, who would
have joked him, locked it in a desk
was responsible for an outbreak of. .
riots in cloth-weaving districts. Bud- drawer, practically, forgot it until
ding saw that the cloth mower of
his time might well be applied to
lawns, anil he produced an extraor-
dinary contraption about as big as
a modern motor car which did the
the next annual visit with his broth-
| ers, when once more, Ids Interest
stimulated for the moment by their
lives, found themselves over-
whelmed with the most profound
sense of inferiority it had ever been
their ill fortune to even conceive.
Accustomed in their home city 1
each to position of authority and
social and business recognition, here
they were, being led around by the .
noses, to speak, by two youngsters
who were versed in aspects of life
of which they had never even
heard.
manager of the fruit and vegetable job fairly well. His later machines
department as well as an assistant were smaller.
to Miss Punt, in the fascinating de-
partment of rare and exotic spices.
Built Elaborate Homes
During the height of Grecian
The
Colonial Buildings
windows of the earliest
bear and bull talk, he remembered
his flyer In Green Agate.
Two days later, before his return
to college he sold his Green Agate,
one thousand shares for twenty
thousand dollars, creating among
his brothers a furore of hilarity at
cassy-FYADS.:
FOR RENT-
Say You Saw It In The Standard
FOR RENT — Seven-room
house, in South Brady, with
all modern conveniences. J.
H. BURTON at Higginbotham
Lhr. Office.
MISCELLANEOUS—
Say You Saw It In The Standard
EAT at Liberty Lunch Room.
They serve better food for
less money.
Of
houses built by the American Col-
prosperity, the Roman empire in the
West was rapidly becoming power-
onists were determined like the rest
of the structure by necessity. They
It was one thing to hear Amy and
Robert recite the expedition of
their summer travels, year after
year, when they returned from the
long and luxurious vacations af-
forded them by their stay-at-home
parents. It was another matter to
* Tuesday - Friday - poo. -*------, .ecuineu Jaturuay,
♦ To any postoffice within ♦ having been called back here be-
* RA ,— . Cause of the cotton acreage reduc-
50 miles of KO • tion plan. Altho he lacked five
♦ Brady, year... 9P.1.O U ♦ days of completing the summer
• SIX MONTHS 7R + course, Mr. Wulff will remain here ____ .___.. ...___
in order to give personal attention ders to which their children were
to his farm interests in the present innured, and stand there, al Moth-
crisis, er Kammerer finally admitted to
Lillard Holt, who has been in a her husband, like two dumbbells out
San Antonio hospital for nearly a of Dubuque .
month, returned home the fore part Their mutual admissions, kept
of the week, boarded from one another during
the first six weeks of the trip, burst
forth one night in their hotel room
that overlooked the Arno in Flor-
ence,
“Aesop, you may not know it, but
♦ SIX MONTHS ............75c ♦
♦ THREE MONTHS ....50c •
* Remittances on subscrip- ♦
* tions for less than three ♦
• months will be credited at ♦
come face to face with these won-
ful. The rise and fall of Rome ex-
tends approximately over the period
of from 750 B. C., to 450 A. D. The
Romans first constructed their pri-
vate gardens from ideas obtained in
Greece and Asia Minor. These to-
gether with their own tendencies
aided in developing the. ous Ital-
ian gardens of today. The first elab-
orate country homes were built dur-
ing the Roman rule and at this pe-
riod landscape architecture became
more advanced than at any previ-
ous time.
| were at first hardly more than peep-
holes, for the colonists were more
concerned about Indian attacks
than they were about air and light.
| Oiled paper and cloth were used,
since glass was rare and expensive.
The earliest of the windows were
of the small casement type, chang-
ins’ to €20 douslenung Sash." The
earliest doors were rude construc-
tions replaced by a simple paneled
form.
Master Seedless Secret
South African planters have mas.
♦ the rate of 25c per month. +
♦ To postoffice more than ♦
♦ 50 miles from @4 0 ♦
♦ Brady, year.. J L.00 +
♦ SIX MONTHS .....$1.25 ♦
♦ THREE MONTHS 175c +
♦ Subscriptions for a period ♦
• of less than three months, +
♦ Be TH1 COPT, * :
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Allen Shinn
and Mrs. J. H Burton of Washing-
ton, D. C., Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Burton of Alice, Mrs. E. N. Stroth-
er of Grapevine, and Mrs. Jimmie
Sanders of Menard are here for the
Jubilee as guests of relatives, Mr.
and Mrs. Hugo Lehmann and Mrs.
Jesse Renfro.
we’re a pair of what the children
would call ‘dumbbells not of
ne had been sitting beside the
fared the secret of growing seed-
less grapefruit and bulk supplies
are now beginning to be exported,
residence, was named after Sir A careless plowman discovered the
George Downing, “a sider with all secret originally. His blade came
times and changes, skilled in the in contact with a grapefruit root
common cant, and a preacher occa. and * small tree, growing from the
sionally,” Downing was sent by incision, produced sterile (seed-
Cromwell to Holland as “resident” less) grapefruit South African
there. After the Restoration he growers experimented and found
espoused the king’s cause, and was that similar fruit could be pro-
knighted and elected M. P. in 1981. duced only under special eondi-
Moon.
Origin of a Name
Downing street, in which the Brit-
ish prime minister has his London
his acumen. The shrewdness, they
called It, of a babe in the wood.
It turned out to be more than
that With that twenty thousand
dollars as his cornerstone, Myron
was destined for a career in high
finance that was far more spectac-
ular than the career of any one of
bls brothers, even of his twin, who
already was reputed to be twice a
millionaire.
By the time Myron was thirty-
Ere, his teaching career lay behind
him as dim as a dream, and the
library which he had accumulated
in bls home in Briarcliff-on-Hudson
was estimated by Itself to be worth
as much as his brother Steve’s or
his brother Harold’s entire hold-
ings.
It was one of those spectacular,
everything-he - touched - turning - to-
gold successes. Myron simply
made money hand over fist. In cop-
per. In steamship stock. In Gen-
eral Motors, in hotel stock. In cof-
fee. In real estate. Even in books,
frequently achieving a first edition
at high price, and turning it over
at fabulous profit.
Strange, too, apparently tempera-
mentally unfitted for the unclols-
tered, competitive race of the bust-
FOR SALE-
Say You Saw It In The Standard
FOR SALE—Several good
used ice boxes at bargain
prices. GARTMAN MUSIC
HOUSE, Brady, Texas.
FOR SALE OR TRADE-
Have a few good milch cows
to sell or trade. Wm. Broad.
Brady, Texas.
FOR SALE OR TRADE—A
few good Jersey heifer yearl-
ings. Wm. Broad. Brady,
Texas.
Have small stock 60 to 75
lb. REFRIGERATORS. Clos we
ing out below factory cost. A
BROAD MERCANTILE CO.
FOR SALE—160 acres well
watered and fenced, hog
proof at $10.00 per acre. See
H. M. GRAHAM.
N
PRICES CUT
Cowboy Boots and Shoes
half soled, 65c; rubber heels,
35e; leather taps, 25c. Beat
leather and work, guaranteed
cheapest price in Brady. E. E.
SCARBOROUGH, Boot,
Shoe, Harness, Saddle Shop.
A
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The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 30, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 4, 1933, newspaper, July 4, 1933; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1667855/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.