The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, November 1, 1935 Page: 7 of 8
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THE BRADY STANDARD, BRADY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1835
58 Are On Central
Ward Honor Roll
Fifty-eight pupils of Central
Ward School were on either the
“A" or "B” scholastic honor roll
according to their six weeks’ report
cards. In order to qualify for the
"A" honor roll a pupil must have
an average of 90 or better and no
grade below 70. The qualification
for the “B” honor roll is that no
grade below 70 and the average
must be 80 or better. When it is
considered the large number of
subjects that a ward school pupil is
require! to take, it will be seen
• making the honor roll is no
copy task.
Seventh Grade—“A” Honor Roll,
Boyd "’Commander, Jesse Dale Eu-
bank, Lela Fay Kirklin, and Doro-
thy Urban. “B” Honor Roll, Elsie
Thornton, Rose Mary Bratton, Les-
ter Burke, Frank Horn, Josephine
Jacobson, Evalyn St. Clair, Vir-
ginia Oldham, Eva Ruth Skelton,
Elizabeth Anderson, James Skel-
ton, Howard Underwood, Leona
Lundgren, Douglas Calley, Gladys
Brown, Homer Lee, Elvarie Knight,
Mildred Morrow, Thomas Lee Mc-
LOHN EAGLE SCREAMS
Editor-in-Chief .....Jack Harris
Senior Class Reporter
G. R. Browning
Junior Class Reporter
Lottie Fowler
Sophomore Class Reporter
Mickie Huie
Freshman Class Reporter
.......- ............Mildred Steward
Girls’ Sport Reporter
--------- Grover Beakley
Boys’ Sport Reporter Tom Bradley
Chapel Reporter Fay Gault
Faculty Advisor Mrs. Mitchell
Good Citizenship In School
—By Dorothy Adkins
Citizenship makes a man. It
matters not where he is or what
position he has obtained. The men
and women who have been reared
by understanding parents who de-
mand obedience always make good
citizens—they learn allegiance at
home.
Let us take the man who is a
bad citizen. He is not interested
in the community welfare, believes
not in his fellowmen, and refuses
to pay his poll taxes if he can get
by at all. The non-citizen does
Anally, and Don Lee.
Sixth Grade — “A” Honor Roll,
Shirley Brown. “B” Honor Roll,
Ray Anderson, Herbert Bradley,
Victor Doyle, Ardie Wynell Jacob-
son, Bessie Jeanne Kinman, Mar- ______... r__________________
jorie Moore, Alberta Morris, Joyce who are in office, and the actions
Dean Neal, Howard Sparks, and of the government.
Louise Suggs. L.
Fifth Grade—"A" Honor Roll, that he is a part of the govern-
none. Fifth Grade “B” Honor nient. On the other hand, the good
Roll, Betty Jean Bradley, Irene citizen is willing to do his part on
Bullard, James Calley, Florice Da- anything for the good of the com-
cus, Doris Doyle, J. 0. Floyd, Cole- munity. He is going to learn all he
man Hillman, Burton Lohn, Imo-
gene Mitchell, Oveta Robinson, and
Cleta Wallace.
not take advantage of the oppor-
tunity to vote for men he believes
will do the best for all the people,
then he growls about all the men
He seems to
be too unlearned to understand
on
can about the candidates and vote
for the one he thinks is best fit-
ted for the position, not for the
Fourth Grade “A” Honor Roll, Democrat or the Republican just
Gloria Seaton, Martha Spiller, and because he is of that party.
Carolyn Wigginton. Fourth Grade -
"B" Honor Roll, Adalene Coots,
Wanda Davis, John E. Hanks, June
Holliday, Prentice Johnson, Betty
Maye Kimbrough, Loney McAnally,
Wayne McWilliams, Ruth Shep-
pard, and Hazel Underwood.
First, the children learn to obey
their parents, then their teachers,
and last, they must obey the laws
of their Country.
The students who do not love and
Nothing to Worry About
Ysable—What is Mrs. Yapper
fretting about now?
Mitzi—About the paper she has
to read at the meeting of the Don’t
Worry Club tonight.
Just Gobs of ’Em
“I'm a Daughter of the Revo-
lution,” proudly stated a handsome-
ly dressed and important looking
woman at a meeting in Washing-
ton.
"I'm a daughter of 23 of them,”
returned a woman who had just
escaped from Mexico.
respect their schoolmates, teachers
and school system, usually turn
out to be bad citizens. They are
ugly sports, always saying ill
things of their teachers, because
the assignments are entirely too
long; the rules are too strict, or
something else similar. Thus,
they strive to bring down the
standard of the school, because
they are not asked how the school
should be run. We are sorry to
admit there are some such stu-
dents, even though they are scarce.
The good unselfish student, who
" FALL BARGAINS
, Until November 1st
Special on INNER-SPRING
MATTRESS
$12.50
All Other Re-made Mattresses
$3.50 Up
We Furnish the Tick.
CANTWELL MATTRESS
FACTORY
is jolly and pleasant loves and is
loved by all of the school children
as well as the teachers. He or
she takes his or her part in sports,
bring up the assignments, and
take all slurs with a sportsman-
like smile. Even though he is in
school, the citizenship is just as
important as the one who goes to
the poll to vote. After all the good
citizen is always rewarded.
Then when this student enters
*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ PROFESSIONAL CARDS +
•+***+-+*****
1. J. BURNS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
GENERAL PRACTICE
Office Upstairs
Gibbons Bldz. BRADY, TEXAS
DR. WM. C. JONES
DENTIST
X-RAY EXAMINATION AND
DENTAL DIAGNOSIS
Office Phone - - - - 79
Residence Phone - - - M1
Office Front Suite Rooms 2nd Floor
Brady National Bank Building
**************
* , BUSINESS CARDS, . J
W. H. BALLOU & CO.
GENERAL
INSURANCE
Office Over
Commercial National Bann
BRADY. TEXAS
J. E. Stevens - Gober
* Co.
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
Day Phone 4, Night Phone 195
MARK EVERY GRAVE
A spot which to so sacred
should have a Monument
1 Brady Monument
Works a
L. Brady, Texas .07
is sure that no difficulty will arise
to keep the surrounding fees of
tuition from coming in.
Mr. Boynton will make the classi-
fication check in the spring. In
the next visit he will observe the
class and written work. It is up
to the students and teachers of
Lohn to keep the standard high
and even to raise it higher.
—LHS—
First Period Examinations
All of the Lohn High School
classes took six week examinations
Friday, October 18.
There were different attitudes
taken by the pupils as they work-
ed.
Some of the students tried very
hard in order to be on the honor
roll for this period, while others
took the “I don’t care” attitude
and acted as if they didn’t care to
get out of high school.
There will be several on the Hon-
or Roll this six weeks period, but
not as many as there should be.
Why doesn't each pupil work
hard this period in order to attain
more knowledge and have his or
her name posted on the Honor
Roll?
—LHS—
Chapel
It has always been an aim in
Lohn High School to have the stu-
dents participate in all activities
about school. One of the activi-
ties in which the students take a
large part is Chapel. A student
gets up the program and puts oth-
er students on it. Last Chapel
morning the master of ceremonies
failed to appoint someone to take
Chapel the following time so Mr.
Petty gave a very interesting talk.
Mr. Petty praised the students’
conduct and their citizenship in
the school.
Grover Beakley will have charge
of the Chapel program October 22.
Visitors are always welcome at
Lohn.
—LHS—
The Senior Rings
There was a yell—a bang, and
what do you think, the seniors’
rings came in!
Only a few of the seniors receiv-
ed their rings. The girls were the
only ones to get their rings as
they sent their money in last year.
The boys will receive their rings
in a few weeks.
Of course the seniors think their
rings are the prettiest that have
ever been in Lohn, but they will
wait for your opinion.
—LHS—
A Successful Box Supper
P.-T. A. met Friday night. A
short play sponsored by Mr. Neal.
The name of the play was “Quack,
Quack.” The leading characters
were: Mr. Neal and Norris Camp-
bell the two Quack doctors, Joe
Smith the office boy, and Cora
Belie Miller the office girl. Doro-
thy Akins, Grover Beakley, Alvarie
Shaver, G. R. Browning, Robert
Latimer, and J. V. Browning were
patients. The office boy and girl
manhood, he is just as concerned
about his community as he was a- . _ „
bout his school, and makes impor- fell in love. The office was left
tant steps to advertise the school to the office boy, when the two
he graduated from. - — . ..
since good citizenship is so highly
honored, we should love the idea of
practicing good citizenship at tioned the boxes and pies. The
school, co-operationrof other communities
Therefore Quack doctors ran off.
The P.-T. A. sponsored a box
supper. Mr. P. M. Lembke auc-
—LHS—
was shown by their people bring-
ing boxes and pies. The amount
received from the boxes and pies
was $43.21. The money will be
The Inspector’s Visit
| The District Supervisor, Mr.
Boynton, was a visitor to the Lohn . , .
I High School Wednesday, October spent in buying supplies for the
16. He came in order to look over c-brel * — "
the condition of building, furni-
ture and equipment. He observed
the cleanliness in which the build- Biology Field Trip
ing was used. He gave the build- ” * .
ing, furniture and fixtures his ap- class went on a field trip,
proval.
One of Mr. Boynton’s questions
was that of the school budget. The
budget was fixed out and drawn
up by Mr. Petty early in the year.
It was sent to Mr. Boynton's of-
fice in San Angelo. The budget
was OKed by Mr. Boynton tem-
porarily. Then on his visit here,, . ______________
Mr. Boynton took a blank and fig- that the class spent on the trip was
ured the total school income of greatly enjoyed by each member.
Lohn. He also figured the school
expenditures. The expenditures
were $2,900 more than the income.
The maximum state aid allowed
Lohn is $2,200. Thus, the school
fund is $700 short. This $700 will
be paid by those surrounding dis-
tricts that send students to Lohn
High School. If the surrounding
districts find it difficult to pay
this $700 tuition fee, the state
school and in carrying on the P.-T.
A.
—LHS—
Tuesday morning the biology
This
was the first field trip that the
class has made this year. The bi-
ology class was divided into four
parts. Each part was assigned to
collect certain things. The pur-
pose of the field trip was to col-
lect different kinds of roots, leaves,
flowers, and animal specimens for
the laboratory. The hour and half
Whittling
—LHS
will grant them that amount on
the condition that the surround-
ing schools are standardized. Lohn
Sombody was a sayin somthin an-
other about a stinkin verb. That
was a new one on me and while it
is somthin i dont hardly eve do 1
stopped whittlin and lissened. I
found out it was mrs Mitchell her-
sef in purson a talkin and she
wasent saying stinkin a tall. She
was a talkin about a linkin verb.
But a linkin verb was just as new
to me as a stinkin verb wood of
ben. I gess mrs Yeager had told
us about it before but i gess i was
so busy a whittlin i never heard
her. I dont gess i will ever no jest
what it was but it allays remins
me of Angeline Hatcher, Mrs.
Mitchell says a linkin verb is al-
lays follered by somthin and 1 no-
ticed Angeline is most genrally fol-
lered.
New ’36 Terraplanes
Are Now Displayed
Completely new and more mod-
ern than ever in appearance, more
luxurious in style, and with a
wealth of engineering develop-
ment, the new Terraplanes for 1936
are on display at Wiley & McDon-
ald showroom. Not only do the new
cars attain entirely new standards
of beauty, but they incorporate
safety engineering features to a
degree never before found in au-
tomobile chassis and bodies. In
addition, there are a number of in-
novations of a fundamental nature
which no cars have ever had be-
fore.
Although these cars are still in
the low price field, they are much
bigger and finer than their predec-
essors of the same make. Of in-
terest from a safety, as well as
comfort standpoint, is the
wholly new principle, Radial Safe-
ty Control, which makes possible
greater safety in riding, steering,
Say i enjoid Chapple toosday
mornin. You no i thank that mr
Pettie a takin them seanyours
down to Austin is jest a plum good
treet. They told a heap about
their trip in Chapple. I dont thank
thy told it all tho. They says they
visited the insayn assilem while - .. --------.,
they was down there. They dident and stopping. So marked a differ-
tell it but i thank they had a lot ence does this new front end sys-
of trubble with the gards whin they ter 4-
went to leave. I dont thank the
gards wonted to let sum of them
out for sum reason or another.
Say did you no that Lohn is a
gonna have a foot bawl team a-
gain this yr? They had one last
yr. Looks like that orter satis-
fie them. But no. There at it a-
___________,. Jackie Cooper and Wallace Beery
tem incorporate in the riding qual- in “O’Shaughnessy’s Boy,” at the
ities of the car that the manufac-’Palace Theatre, Sunday and Mon-
turers of the Terraplane have giv- day.
en the name, Rhythmic Ride, to -----------------—
the result of the synchronized and • Scotch Cellulose Mending Tissue
unified suspension system, requires no moistening. The Brady
This new front end system also , Standard.
introduces Tru-Line steering, ---—---------------—----------
bringing a new road sense to the shifting, is optional on all models. 1
steering wheel because of the ac- The Terraplane is made in two se-
curate control of the steering sys- ries Deluxe
gain this yr. Now aint that a go-
in it? Theys a bunch of boys a curate control of the steering sys- ries Deluxe and Custom. A full
goin out their on the grounds ever tem, regardless of road condition, line of bodies being available in
Another new feature is the Duo- either series.
Automatic hydraulic brakes which
incorporate a big husky hydrau-
lie system with the double safety
factor of an automatic reserve
brake of the rotary-equalized me-
chanical type.
On the bodies, which have one-
fifth more room inside than many
cars selling at double the price, is
the automatic draft eliminator—a
feature added to Terraplane’s all-
year ventilation system which au-
tomatically equalizes air pressure!
inside and outside the car and
screens the air entering the body in |
connection with the ventilating sys-
tem.
evenin durin the last period of
books. They all hump over in a
line and sombody that dont no how
to count trys to count them then
they all runs into sombody ealce.
Then them thats aible gets up and
humps over again. I dont thank
Vernon Carroll is a gonna make
much of a playr tho. He taken the
bawl the other evenin and run
thru the hole buntch and it seems
like he couldnt run into nobody.
I think i am goint to go out for
foot bawl next weak. It gets a
body out of that steady hall. I
could youse part of that time a
whit rock i am a gonna whit up
my long blaid and go back and
finish them inishuls.
—LHS—
What's Happening In the
Grammar Grades
The first grade is very happy to
have the Bob and Nancy book to
read. They are reading the real
Bob and Nancy book now; and
their sand table has an illustra-
tion of Bob and Nancy at the farm.
They have some pretty clean sand.
It is fun to build things in it. The
pupils made a little Indian village
some few days ago.
The first grade students have a
new milk chart. Everyone wants
to drink it, at ten thirty, by the
use of a straw. They seem to en-
joy it very much.
They have had the pleasure of
having several visitors the past
two weeks, and are always glad to
have different parents and friends
come to visit them.
There are sixteen pupils enrolled
in the first grade.
The younger pupils enjoyed
watching the big black bear, of the
show here last week very much.
The first grade wrote a story a-
bout him.
In the second grade there are
twenty-two students, but several
have been absent more than half
of the month. Every child wishes
all of the children who are absent
could return to school everyday,
as regular attendance surely means
better work.
The second grade have learned a
new song about “Little Polly Wog."
They all enjoy singing it very
much.
The second grade has been mak-
ing Hallowe’en posters this week.
There are sixteen students en-
rolled in the third grade. Quite a
few have been absent the first
month, but most of them are back
in school now.
The third grade is enjoying their
geographies very much. They have
been learning to sing “Beautiful
Texas,” this week.
In checking up on the reading of
the library books, they found that
Billy Ray Stricland has read the
largest number of books so far.
There is a new reading chart in
the third grade.
Mounted on a full 115 inch
wheelbase and equipped with an 88
horsepower engine, and 100 horse-
power available optionally, the car
is not only roomier, but is capa-
ble of maintaining the reputation
that Terraplane has established for
performance. This car carries on
the tradition of the models which
have broken AAA records for
speed, economy and hill climbing,
all over the country. The bodies
are all of steel, having a steel
floor, steel roof and a complete
steel structure throughout. The
Electric Hand which was introduc-
ed on the Terraplane last year for
smoother, safety, faster, gear-
—By Lem Bernek
Last mundy i was a settin in
mrs Mitchells english class a whit-
tlin on a desk, I allreddy had my
inishuls cut on the top of the desk
and had started my Swettys ini-
shuls when somthin another hit me
in the ear. No. It wasent no pap-
per wad nor nuthin like that. Them
kind of thangs jest dont happen in
Last Resort
Moe—Would you merry for
money ?
Less—Not until I had exhaust-
mrs Mitchells classes. No, it was ed every other means of getting
somthin sombody was a sayin. it.
The HOUSTON POST
Bargain Offer Rates
Good to December 1,1935, Only. By Mail Only. In State
of Texas Only.
Daily and Sunday)
$6.50
One Year )
By
Only
Daily Only
$5.00
One Year
No subscriptions accepted at the above rates for less than one year. Three
and six months rate, or any period of time more or less than one year,
is 75c per month straight for daily and Sunday and 50c per month straight
for daily only.
Short Pants
A college boy recently establish-
ed a record by eating forty-eight
eggs in forty-eight minutes. And
yet some folks wonder if a college
education is worth while.
Deadly ’
Wise Guy: “What is the most
deadly fluid? d
Chemical Student: “Potassium
Cyanide, because you’re dead as
soon as it touches you.”
Wise Guy: “Wrong; embalming
fluid; you’re dead before it touches
you.”
SAVE
Money
On Cleaning
and Pressing
Suits
and
Dresses
60c
—At—
Southside Cleaners
L. Y. CALLIHAM
Phone 105
THANKSGIVING TURKEY
MARKET
For the information of turkey growers in our membership
territory, this Association has a Membership Marketing Con-
tact with the Northwestern Turkey Growers Association, Salt
Lake City, which markets the entire output for most Coopera-
tive organizations in the Northwestern States through its Sales
Agencies in the Principal Cities, and it will market our turkey
shipments this season through its New York Sales Agency, and
return to you the extra profits.
We will buy your turkeys outright at Top local market
prices,—or we will handle them for you in a Co-operative way
through the New York Sales Agency and make you a liberal
advance payment at the time of delivery.
Receiving Stations—BROWNWOOD, Goldthwaite, Rising
Star. Santa Anna, May. Richland Springs, San Saba, Coleman.
Comanche.
FARMERS’ CO-OPERATIVE, INC.
Location: BROWNWOOD, TEXAS
W. 0, McCully W. R. CH A MBERS, President
Building, T. A. SMITH, Manager
otice.
The Supreme Court held “Unconstitutional and
Void” a law passed by the 43rd Legislature offering a 3
per cent discount for payment in October, 2 per cent in
November, 1 per cent in December.
Your Taxes
are due and payable between October 1st and January
31st.
Half
may be made by paying first half by November 30,1935,
second half due June 30,1936.
Pay now and avoid the rush in January.
I
Yours Very Truly,
John C. Moffatt
TAX ASSESSOR-COLLECTOR
McCULLOCH COUNTY
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The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, November 1, 1935, newspaper, November 1, 1935; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1668099/m1/7/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.