The Hondo Anvil Herald. (Hondo, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1942 Page: 2 of 8
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A FRIEND’S FACE
By Marian Pays* Cooper
A friend’s face is a lantern.
No place in all the world;
No hidden mountain crevice;
No race, no flag unfurled.
But knows its welcome twinkle;
Its constant trusted beam
That smileif on rich and poor
alike;
An undimmed golden stream.
• ooo
OL’ DOC CUPID
By Marian Payne Cooper
a o
01’ Doc gave Raven her head af
ter he hit the ridge trail that lead
direct from the Jacksun logging
camp to the one over on the Saw-
tooth ridge. He needed hi» head
clear for thinking. That’s why he
had taken the horse instead of the
flivver. There was thinking to be
done of a caliber 01’ Doc had never
tested before.
He’d sort of missed out on ro-
mance himself; being a bachelor and
up till now Sidney, his young niece,
had never caused him a bit of con-
cern in that direction. So playing
Cupid to a busted romance was a
little out of his line.
Doc had a mental picture of him-
self playing Cupid, and the thought
brought laughter at which Raven
lunged forward in surprise. “Steady
01’ girl!" He reined in the black
beauty, reassuring her with a pat. “I
hain’t quite got down to a ribbon
yet! Though I do say this errand
I’m on looks just about as silly.”
Well, he reckoned he’d make a
stab at being the President himself
if it would take that queer white
look off Sidney’s face—Sidney
gamest little mite this side of Big
Bear mountain. It took an a.vful
lot to knock Sidney out fox the
count. And you could almost *ee
crying going on inside her, quiet like.
Whatever it was, Doc meant to fix
it.
was a mouthful. He set his teeth in-
to it grimly, however, and turned to
the distraught Tim.
“See here,-’ he began carefully.
"When I started out loggin’ I had
twenty cents to my name."
Tim looked up wearily. “Well?”
“Well, I’ve rung that up to two
hundred. With that and a part in-
terest in the best little logging camp
on Big Bear; harrin’ none,” he look-
ed about him grimly; disparagingly.
“But. I thought,” Tim gasped. “I
thought you and Sidney, well....”
“You thought we are rich, eh?”
Doc supplied the words. “We are
rich, hy golly. In good hard muscle
and gnt, which is more’n you car
say! You'll be rich all right but you
won’t know the satisfaction of a good
hard fight for it, or the pleasure of
sending logs spinnin’ off down-
stream to the mill, knowin’ it was
your Owe at that sent ’em there.
But Tim was laughing. So hard ha
didn’t hear a word of it. “Doc I’m
going back to loggin’ and get my.
camp the hard way. It’ll take more
than a rich man’s camp to run us
out of business. He whacked Doc on
the back and laughed some more.
Then he sobered. “Do you suppose,
Sidney’ll want me, after I ran out on
her like that?”
“You can ask her.” Doc grinned
and heaved a sigh of relief. The bat-!
tie was won! But first he had to call j
up the Jackson camp and have them;
shares he’d bought for Sidney, some
eight thousand dollars worth, trans-
fered to his name for a while. After
all, a man's entitled to his pride, now
ain’t he?
“Where’s a telephone?”
QU1HI NOTES
And let them gather all the food
of those good years . . . and that
food shall be for store against the
seven years of famine . . . that the
land perish not through the famine
Gen. 11:35.36.
Joseph is in conference with the
king of Egypt- Fresh ?r m the odi-
ous prison walls, he is favored with
a rare distinction. The dreams of
the king he has fully interpreted and
explained, and no one dared to in-
terrupt or contradict him. Some-
how he has attained full confidence
and ’ has them, sovereign and ser
vants, eating out of hi.' hand. Not a
word goes to waste in that royal
gathering where, ordinarily, only
the monarch gets full attention
Though unsolicited. Joseph had add
ed a few suggestions of political
economy for that impending famine
Is he getting top-heavy, arrogant
talking about matters far beyond his
horizon? Heads swell fast, some-
times, when they bask in the sun-
well before long!
• • •
The Misses Els;e , .
Boehle were received
membership of nur
Welcome!
our
This is the „
for all the young confix?'1
to line up with the Cl-
ors. We hop,. their n
tp * ■'•‘ny °“™ •• ww?,
fo,r • •»«* "1 our recollects j
Hondo Fire engine cUrked^1
our Quihi premises d
peaceful and' quiet .^ttlem?f
its siren. The roof * ’
Boehle house had caught fbl ^
time, Mr. and Mrs. F. “J
fire was quenched before TJ
good start and mane ,. ;n;. 1 ^
start and many vullir.
there to tidy up
riatlon1,3Chicago,'"In' Commenting on K*t him under, did not sour and em
the new Perth winner, said that in hitter Ins disposition, his outlook on
order to obtain his sire, Mr. Wilson life, did not stifle his mental growth
were
Thanks are certainly due
and to the fire department’*
* * •
The grand champion Shorthorn
bull at the 1941 Perth Show and
Sale at Perth, Scotland, Feb. 11 and
12, is Calrossie Souvenir, red roan
son of the 1939 Perth grand champ
ion, the white Calrossie
now in the United States at the head had to pay some $8,500. “That seem- In that prison atmosphere where un
‘ ’ ‘ ‘ ‘ — - ...... c,i a high price at the time,” affirm- counted thousands slowly rot mtc
ed Gramltch, “but Calrossie Mer- physical or mental decay, or modi
cury’s worth as a breeding bull was tate every moment on a new chap
indicated today when his son also be- ter of their criminal career aftei
came grand champion at Perth,
of the herd of Thos. E. Wilson’:
Edellyn Farms, Wilson, 111. Mr. Wil-
son is chairman of the board of di-
rectors of the meat packing firm of
Wilson & Co., Chicago.
Announcemnts for Augu«t I
day school and Bible cliis „
English service at u ^
various reasons, we go back t*
former time schedule Th*
school teachers meet after
vice. Luther League projJJ
P. M. A cordial inviu-ioi
-Cl,
8:45
all!
• •
The champion sold at 7150 guineas greatest show of its kind in Britain.
“It is
TWILIGHT REVERIE
At evening near the close of day,
When nature dons her bright array,
I iove to turn from toil and care,
And gaze upon the landscape fair.
or a little over $7,000 t’o Cluny
Castle, famous Scotch Shorthorn cat- stockmen
tie firm. This is the highest price in
3 years to be paid for the Perth
champion.
to the
when
credit of American
sires, either owned
their release, Joseph might have
fallen under the quotation of Mel
ville. While ponderous planets of
unwaning woe revolve round mi*.
BANDERA NEWS
or produced here, perform so out- down and deep inland there 1
standingly all over the world. The .tl]j ^athe me in eternal mildness of
The Bandera N*w Era.
GAME WARDEN MOVED HU
FROM HONDO
war is inducing British stockmen to joy Yt. it was niore than the mere
According to Perth Officials, this part with animals they wouldn't sell in!ovan(.v an)| flexibility of youth
11WI .• 1 (I I I .iL.il ... .am . • illn nlk„ n.. , ,, I * *.. Inn irli /<M* I Linen III * .
When sunset tints bedeck the sky,
And not a cloud is seen on high,
! O what a joy steals o’er the heart,
i When thoughts divine the Soul im-
part.
Ah. could I in this tranquil hour,
Recall the years with magic power,
And live them in the sunset glow, j
Where sweetest moments come and '
voung 1941 grand champion was the
result of a mating made before Mr.
Wilson’s bull was shipped to this
country.
Of the champion. Janies Biggar,
Rritish livestock judge and exporter,
said: “The bull by Calrossie Mercury
is outstanding in that he has more
substance and breed character than
go
How sweet to think of goneby days,
While in the sunset’s lingering rays.
And with the breezes soft and low,
\\ e hear the songs of long ago,
hike strains of sweetest music given.
To waft >ur thoughts to peace and
Heaven.
—JESSIE MAHAFFEY.
FIELDS TOO LONELY
NAME
mind went back to the problem
again. Sidney believed what Tim
had told her, of course. That he |
didn’t have any right to ask a girl to
marry him without a pinny to bis
name, especally when that girl had
plenty in her own name. To Doc
that excuse sounded as full of ‘ioles
as last winter’s stripped woods.
There was something back of it
ail. Something they hadn't gj-.ssed
at.
He’d always liked that boy. some
how. Though he had to admit there
was something exasperating about
his closemouihedness. As much as to
say he wasn’t anybody’s business and
he’d thank you to leave him alone. |
Which Doc had been most obliging
about. Until Sidney stepped into the
picture.
Why, the hoy had been a fool j
about her. Floored the first time he i
saw her. Well, there was only one |
thing to do. No, two thing-. Find
out the real reason he'd quit the j
Jackson outfit and then figuie out
what to do about it. Beat him to the
draw, so to speak.
Raven took the last rise of the
Sawtooth ridge a little after noon.
A bit of professional jealousy grip-
ped Doc at the sight of the camp. '
Here was an outfit! Machined; pow Dogs of the house lie rotten
crftilly manned. Oh, well, he’d come Under the shoemake’s flame,
looking for Walters, not on a sight- And sill and hearth forgotten
i.. r.'..i i,. a . i..i4
Senator W. Lee O’Daniel has tele-
graphed the South Texas Chamber
of Commerce that “Government of-
ficials have finally recognized the
possibility and feasibility of manu-
facturing synthetic rubber from
grain.” The Texas senator suggest-
ed that the regional organization
take the matter up with other or-
ganizations or individuals in this sec-
tion. Executive Vice President Ray
Leeman of the South Texas Chamber
otherwise. Its tough for those itj jj)at o,p. ^j,, from being clawed bp
war-stricken countries but this sit- , ' t of melaneholia.
nation is making America head- n, J ro json ,ib nr
liSoTk ln display of news digest* and period!-
“It is a tribute to British grit that in ,h',se ****
they continue to hold outstanding 1,4 • °V- . ah*rt for the
livestock shows and the like in spite progress of civilization ouUide of
of war ami bombs.” those walls. Neither was there r
----------- schedule of useful trades and pro-
responded to O’Danicl’s wire by ad- fi .-ions, as today, where a prisonei
vising that the matter would be cull- might prepare himself, according t«>
ed to the attention of those interest- gilt ami adaptabilty, for a fitting lie states that he wants to ivopn
*>d. South Texas already is interest- and helpful place in human society with all and asks them to do
ed in the rubber industry in that this aftei his dismissal Apparently, de same,
section is both producing the petro- -pite the lack of these developing
leum ingredient for synthetic and agencies. Joseph did not vegetate ir
experimentally growing guayule with mental idleness.
State Game Warden W
Kruntz, with is wife and two ,
dren moved here this week ir.i
making their home in Mrs.
Hay’r place. Game Warder, I*
vill continue to be in charge of!
di ra and Medina Counties and
hereafter make his headquarteri
Band ira.
Mr. Kountz informs us thit
to the tire shortage the patrol
tern has bei'ii cut down and anj
wanting anything should call
I
TARPLEY
its natural rubber content.
Ask your neighbor to subscribe for
his home paper.
Song no lips will awaken
Lies by the path I came
Through hedges the winds
shaken
In fields too lonely to mime.
have
Red hills the cattle have trampled
Kneel down to a sheltered cove
Whose dwellers once huilded and
sampled
The meat of labor and love.
and the sage has cov-
They passed
ered
All but the humpy track
Of the broad-lertfed corn that hover-
ed
Over the meadow's back.
Wake Up, America !
Mod*r«t«d by
FRED 6 CLARK
G«ntr«l Chairman
Amtrican Economic
Foundation
Do Workers Really Want To
Share In Management?
He did not pose as a silent martin.
Difficulties and forced restraints of-
ten show the true metal of man. Da
* id comp**1 d his host psalms in times
of ‘distress. Homer, though totally
blind, wrote his immortal epics, th«
Iliad ami the Od;.ssej Milton, under
similai r.indicuo gave the world his
unique I’jiadi/e L st and Paradis*
Regained. Under economic pressure
Khaki *pt are penned hts mighty
dramas, and under political turmoils
Mrs. Jesse Caffall and son of
lingen have been visiting hcrpwi
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Singleton
Mr and Mr- M L Hauler
son, Travis, attended the Kotb
reunion at Mason Sunday and
day.
Mrs. Charles Sandtdge aad
('. T Sandidge. Mrs. M R Sir
and son were g|R Antonio vsi
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Tucker
d: ughte: i,f San Antonio vurttf
anil Mrs F.d Tm
Dante produce his Divine Comedy
, wherea.i Bunyan blessed the spiritual parents, Mr
world with his profound allegory. Sunday.
Tin Pilgrim’s Progress, while fan M. B. Padgett attended the
atics had him confined to prison. Did and goat sale at Junctior last*
Aa debated by
James B. Carry
Secretary. C..I.O.
Whiling William*
I ontuliiinl anti 4uthor
MR WILLIAMS OPENS: It is my
observatnn that rank-and-file work-
ers. organized and unorganized, have
no w'^h to fun tion in the double
MR. CAREY OPENS: Workers do
not want to take over management
They desire only that management
recognize that workers have more to
offer than brawn and sweat They capacJty of wage-earners while car-
have intelligent understanding of the ryll it the tame time, MR u n
machines and equipment with which ; s?orsib:l:ty for the enterprise’s man-
thev are in daily contact < I aRemer.:.
Management does not have i rr.c- wage-earners
seeing tour.
He rode slowly along, combing the
groups of men with keen eyes. Bui
hi-, eyes kept snagging on the equip-
ment. Finally, as he rode into the
main clearing where the sheds and
the office were he sat back in the
saddle and allowed himself to admire
the place though he felt like a trai-
tor, doing it. “By cracky! A neat
place alright, alright.” “Well, Ra
veil,’ he said as he swung out of the
saddle, “We’ll look up the boss and
find out u thing or two.”
A big, square shouldered young
man was coming down the main
steps of the office as OP Doc reach-
cd them. He was counting what ap-
peared to he his pay. “Can 1 find
the boss iti there, young man?” Doc
asked.
The voung man looked up, hesi
t ‘ d, then nodded. "Sure, go right
in.”
Doc walked in though he
chair quick when he did
Walters was the boss.
W hen Doc got a grip on his skit-
In fields too lonely to name.
—BYRON HERBERT REECE
in May KALEIDOGRAPH.
RETURN
found a
Tim
so.
‘Kinda sue!
terish voice he observed,
den, wasn’t it?”
Tim looked up, winced at what he
saw. “Doc!”
Doc reminded him slowly. “Two.
,three days ago you was a loggei
‘over at the Jackson camp. Now
you’re big boss here."
I’ini looked like he was doing
some fast thinking. “It’d better be
good,” Doe warned him.
Tim looked for a long minute into
♦ he honest gaze of 01’ Doe. Then he
sighed. “Well, I suppose you might
as well know. I own this place.”
"On your wages!" Doe gripped
his knees with his two hands and
stared.
It belonged to my mother. Sh<
married again when my father died.
A mnn with money. They invested
in logging ramps This one is to be
mine providing..."
Doc guessed what wa- coming.
“Go an,” he said.
“Providing I make it such a sue
to** that it runs all the icit of tin
camps on Big Hear out of busines-
That means you and Sidney, too,"
He took his head in his hand . “Dos,
what can I do I can’t marry Sidney
withnul a cent and I isn't marry her
snd keep thi»...What’ll I do?"
Doc slumped In hi* chair. He'd
‘My heritage? These emeiald seas
of corn
And all the wealth of gold the wheat-
crop yields?”
Forgive me if [ turn my head in
scorn!
Unwelcome legacv of fertile fields!
The maze < f patterned avenues was
limned
' pon i mind loo small to compre-
hend
ri nt this pi riplicry was interimed
To link my years in comfort, to the
end
nop >’y or. brains. Bits business must
recognize that this i; democracy not
autocracy or dictatorship. M inaRe-
ment in its infinite wisdom has im-
posed company unions on workers
but that failed and today any fair-
minded executive will admit that
collective bargaining must be sub
stituted for business autocracy.
Workers' organizational talents must
not go to waste. Can many employers
deny that labor’s knowledge of or-
ganization technique are most def-
initely applicable to democratic
functioning of co-operative labor-
management committees? Workers
know production because they are
the producers. It is logical that man-
agement should look to its workers'
labor unions for improvements in
production technique.
Senator Truman's Committee in-
vestigating the progress of national
defense has pointed out that indus-
try has absolutely failed to utilize its
full productive resources Manage-
ment alone has failed to do the Job.
have great re-
sri'-c? for their chief means of in-
creasing their skill, judgment and in-
tcliigence—namely their own per
sonal e.~i>PTH'vcp This respect for ex-
perience makes them very consciou
of its limitation:.
In the field of his tegular work the
worker’s exper i*oce gives him so
valuable viewpoint that every wise
manager utilize it by various meth-
o Is >f cooperation. By “promoting
from within,” also he regularly re-
c'Uits hi managerial group from
tl se wage-earners whose widening
exnerience fits tnem for managerial
responsibility. This is why American
management leads the world. Also,
why we here have never approached
the “Working Class” ideology which
a few of Labor's leaders now uti-
wisely seek to impose.
All this Is why the wage-earner
has no desire to do what some, not
many, of his leaders have lately
done —- namely, demand a place in
management, not as the result of In-
dividual experience and fitness but.
instead, simply as a union, group or
'bit I r ‘turned again to look upon
What ."till was mine, now alien to
toil.
To find the very soul of it was pone.
And life, itself, had seemed to leave
tlie soil
Now dust and ashes, victim of the
drouth.
But oh, the taste was sweet within
my mouth!
-COSETTE MIDDLETON.
The workers' unused human talent
on production problems'^ lying dor-
mant. It can and must be'tailed upon 1 c‘:,ss Prerogative and "right.’’
if we are to out-produce the Axis MR. CAREY CHALLENGES: Mr
powers. | Williams obviously docs not under
MR. WILLIAMS CHALLENGES: I stand how unions function. Labor
Certainly workers have more to of- leaders speak for the rank and file
RELUCTANT EXPANSION
The little school house where I teach
Has stood for many year*;
The lop* and stones were carried fur
Hy sturdy pioneer*
Whose vision scanned a future day
Where happy childhood feet
Could cross the threshold of the door
To wisdom’s august seat.
And
♦ here within the small class
room
Where jolly girls and hoys
Have pn the red, met, and shared alike
Their sorrows and their joys;
Tie antique clock is weurinp out,
The walF are scratched anil marred;
Tin floor;" indented deep hy rinil«
Where shoes were shuffeled hard.
tc paufc U- -g* ’4 *•!
And thnuph I love a modern place i
I felt no joy at nil.
When word went around the other
day
“Wa’ra moving in the fall." ,
-MViiTL£ UTLNG. I
fer than brawn and sweat and every
wise manager recognizes this hy re-
cruiting his managerial family from
the most capable workers. Although
I believe in collective bargaining
and I believe that forward-looking
labor unions can help management
out-produce the Axis, such agreement
doesn’t prove that workers really de-
sire to’carry complicated managerial
responsibility. Nor does it prove that
labor unions can carry a worthwhile
share of the principal managerial
function; obtaining a continuing equi-
librium between the always-compet-
ing yet alwa.vs-common interest of
employees, managers, owners, cus-
tomer*. and public
MR. CAREY REPLIED: Manage
ment is a victim of its own propa-
ganda A little more cooperation with
labor would not only improve labor
management relation- but would fur-
ther Improve production.
Labor unions are ready and will-
ing to cooperate with management
through labor-management produc-
tion committees to "out-produce" the
Axis.
To sa.v otherwise, a Mi Williams
seems to. is be 'ourting the i sue with
fals" H'-i u-at > T. I or is capable of
assuming it* full rhaie of responsi-
bility in all join! endeavurment with
management on the proluction front.
Thi* is self-evident to anyone who
wilt take the time In examine the
success of lh»' joint labor manage-
and with their approval.
Workers not only approve of la-
bor-management committees but their
whole-hearted cooperation on exist-
ing committees has resulted in as-
tounding production records in steel,
copper and many munitions.
Labor's desire to cooperate is not
"working class” ideology, but an at-
tempt to democratize the autocratic
functions of “pre-machine-agc" ex-
ecutives. Workers are proving that
their knowledge, if used, will con-
tinue to benefit plant efficiency and
production. g
Thi* is evident to any Intelligent
executive who has cooperated with
unions oh labor-management commit-
tees
Joseph busy hmsclf with problems of
economy?
Could he foresee the boom of thi
seven years of plenty: The vast in
vestments, wild speculations, fat con-
tracts. the humming factories, lusty
spending (even a Mrs. Lincoln is re-
puted to have spent $300 for gloves
anil $5000 for a shawl), extravagant
merriment with crowded race-track*
gambling dens, liquor tavern*, ban-
quit halls, brothels, concessions and
| calabooses, the general laxity with
shrieks and revelry rending the mid-
night air, and the ideals of honesty
godfearing, and decency thrown t<j
the dogs?
Did he anticipate the fury of th<
famine creeping in? The deal’
siroke--.tacks, the long rows of va
cant stores, the convulsive tramp of
the urn mployed, the V arrpn fields
t!ie hungry bread-lines, the starving
widows and children, disease stalk
ing unabated, passion* unleashed!
rumbling sedition, the mighty chorus
veiling, self-determination, arbitra
tion, cooperation, confiscation, anni-
hilation of capital (and the echo
laughing them to scorn), with crimi
in aggressive, desperate mood, bank
ruptcy n money, morals and relig-
ion, and t!ie hectic, morbid crooning
of high and low, of th«* bloated wise
acres ar.d the listless rabble alike
“We don’t know where we're going
but we’re on our way?” The timi
whi ti many a one “the moment It be
gins to get dark, as soon as it if
night, he goes out and howls over
the grave of God.” Does Joseph set
nil this, and more, beforehand?
Duly a few rude an 1 elementary
but very fundamental suggestions he
makes to combat the ominoua fu<
turo. But it's more than the voici
of Joseph, the prisoner. And hi'
God always knows what He is about.
He never fails!
The death of Mrs. John Saathoff
has brought sadness to a number of
families in our flock. Our sincere
sympathies!
MR. WILLIA'MS REPLIES: If Mr
Carey means that workers desire
only to share in the production
phase of management through “Nel-
son-t.vpe' plant council*, I see no
ground for argument. As elsewhere
^taled, I believe such cooperation can
prove altogether helpful.
But the question under di*cussion
was raised not by the “Nelaon-plan,"
hut Instead by the plans of M sr’s
Murrtiv sn-t Reuther, who appa-ent-
ly are demanding that the unions be
given i share in the entire field of
management.
Clayton John Saathoff were the
names selected by Mr. and Mrs
Stanley Saathoff for their baby-boy
who was brought, to Holv Baptism
last Sunday. Mr. anil Mrs. Milton
Leinwebcr took over the sponsorship.
Wi commend the child to God's
precious care.
• • •
And on the same Sunday another
event took place. Mr. and Mrs. Rolf
Saathoff were gladdened hy the ar-
rival of a little hoy in their family.
1 rue-cause for joy for all concern-
ed, and we join with the rejoicing,
• * •
The sick-list is somewhat on the
increase: Mr* Milton Ralzen has
been down for several days. So has
little Howard Saathoff. the son of
I Mr. and Mrs t'larencr
Mrs. Geo,
Mr and Mr.-. Henry Erfurt
son ridt*4 Mr and Mr« Jack 0
well at Sinton last wick
Mr end Mrs UWA
daughter attended the funenl
!toax Cochrane at Moore.
Mr*. Erwin b mweber »nd d
ter and Jo Noll Ceuta visited
parent*. Mi ami Mr* (. F. (*
last week.
Mr*. Henry Hermes of S»r
tonio is vi.sting relatives here.
Mr. and Mr* Jim (Hass n
Mr. and M» Ed Ca*F at >"
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Mnrquil
son visited Mr and Mrs. I
Cavitt Sunday
Leslie Cobb of Hondo *p«t
week-end with hi- mother, Mrs.
ma Cobb. ,
Mr. and Mrs Gene l lbrich
as their guest thi- week r>onm*
combe of Devine. u
Mr. and Mr Snathofl
Mr and Mr*. Fritz Eous of
visited Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
SUMr Vand Mr* J- W. Schmidt
liildren. Mr. and Mrs. "
Schmidt. Mr and Mr*. ' »
and son. Buster and '
Schmidt of Tarpley. Mr. »»
Alex Karg. r of Comfort "
Schmidt and Esther Zeller of
l-eirn attended the barbecue «
at the home of Mr. and M
Fritz Sunday, the occasion
Mrs. Fritz’s birthday.
Paul Garrison and Marvin
field of Medina were Tarpley
Saturday afternoon.
Ernest Hermes of Hondo
relatives here Tuesday.
Donald McGovern of
tonio is a visitor in
Schmidt home.
Mr. and Mrs. Burk of I**
hia mother of Brady ari
San
the
W. A. Laird ^
Mr. and Mrs. A. N- ® -
daughters of San Anlomo
Mrs. R. N. Padgett and Mr*
Saathoff Sunday. , rJ
Mr. and Mrs. W. M Anf
cliik/ren*of"Hondo visited^*1.
Mr*.
ents. Mr. and
Sunday.
A -a.becue supper w«
the home of Mr. and ■ ^ jnf
f.eld Monday nifiht ! >n
birthday* of Lew .* * M,
Dean. These present wer
Mrs. Lewi* Dean . ’"Ti
and Mr*. Hope Dean.
ac ft u iwIifi. Mr. »r,n p -
M. R. Sandulifis mr. a-
bet Hicks Hnd children. M
A. Slezak, Bill Osborn^ »
Penley and Mr. and Mi* ^
field. . uni.
Mrs. F. Turner and » .
Sauter were Hondo visit
• • •
Mr. anil Mrs
Hondo -pent the week-'^
Saathoff | *n' | v|r. Mi»rt
* Alfred spoth and Mr.
Mr Carey ha* certainly not proved
that the workers support thi* labor
dcmaml Indeed, he confirm* my ba-
ment committee' iliendy edabli.sbed I fid that they do not.
so...,, Jans fis£MHpr rigras,
improving nicely, Wilfred Schult* ploanant riattor W
went through the nrdenl of a tonsil- ^*1’- , ,i nr H°t'*’
edomy. Mrs Anton Grell took to J. R. Hudspetl ' ^
the mountains of Frederirksburir for hi" hr"” r- \
recuperation. We truat that all l*
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Davis, Fletcher. The Hondo Anvil Herald. (Hondo, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1942, newspaper, August 7, 1942; Hondo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth565050/m1/2/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hondo Public Library.