The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 25, 1955 Page: 7 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 24 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
M)
THE BRADY STANDARD AND HEART O' TEXAS NEWS, BRADY, TEXAS TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955
Classy-Fi* Ads
FOR SALE •!•
NOTICE
^ OR SAKE House with foui
looms und bath. 1807 S. BRAD-
ley. Phone 3194.
| OK SALE 2 Itcuioom FI IA
house. See ANDY ALLEN at
HIGGINBOTHAM BROS & Co.
|uK SALK Polios] Hersfoi d
hulls. N. M. HARNETT, Melvin,
Texas. Phone 7-2420.
|oR SALE—Builain,;-, materials,
lumber, iIoom, wind own, hivutoi
tea, Commode*. pipe and filth,k*.
HAKBEE BROS., POW CAMP,
Biady. PHONE 2130.
foR SALK-—Army building, bar-
racks and hospital Wilds. Bur-
gains. BARBEE BROS., POW
CAMP. Brady. Phone 2130.
JoR SALE—U. S. Approved Pul-
loiuin Clean BB Bronze and
LOST—Parker 51 fountain pen.
Oiey with gold cap. Imst gift
;.wT,w°.n kill*d I wo Jima.
< HARLES A. SCHNABEL. 1103
Ave. H., Austin, Texas.
SAV? ioNEY ON SPINET
1 IA NO. rortnei buyer unable to
complete contract. Reasonable
payments arranged. Piuno can
be seen in Brady. Write CREDIT
mANA(;KK, Bux 504, Brown*
wood, Texas.
-PAGE SEVEN
Beltavillc White eggs and poults.,
Started poults available now.
BARTON'S TEXO FEED'
STORE, Brady.
|OR RENT OR SALE --a Bedroom
house at 1501 N. ELIZABETH
Contact Jim Robertson. Phone
2194.
|OR SALE— Bargain. 15 Cu. Ft.
Deep Freeze. Like new. (I. 1..
Sl'OGGIN, Rochelle, T«xu>.
FOR RENT
OK RENT- Furni .lied apart-
| ment; private Lath. Bargain; #25
per month. All bills paid. DAY
PHONE 5300, NIGHT l !l«i\K
*<{•22.
NOTICE
"** haie a nice selection of roses
•ud fruit trees. Time to plant!
1HE BRADY GARDENS. Phone
9033. 301 W. 17th St.
MILDRED AND MARVIN JEW-
ELL will do service and repair
all ^ makes of sewing mach-
ines. Will trade for anv machine.
«■**»•> # l*>* month. NECCH1*
elna Sewing circle, nr,
Bridge. Phone 2105.
NOTICE—$10 Reward for infor-
mation to recovery of ladie s Bul-
ovu watch, lost Dec. 14 at 4-H
party at Junior High gym in
Brady. MRS. J. B. EVRIDGE,
Box 192, Wall, Texas. ,
THE BRADY STANDARD
and Heart O* Texas News
Abaorbol 1 *>« Eim-rprix- nml The M I ullo, h County Sur M:,v i. 1910
tend llf.nl O' Ti-xln New*. Noo*J, 1942.
Published Twice A Week—Tuesdays und Fridays
SMITH A REED, Owner*
L. B. SMITH, Editor and Publisher
C. D. REED, Advertising Manager
BOB WILSON, News Editor
Any ur,ihn,u» iW hit ion upon the ehuist-ter or ftaiidinv ul any p. i»vn ar firm
appeanny in Ow -oiumnr »UI la- pladly niid promptly currm-tni upon railing
the attention of the management to the article in irueMion.
ADVERTISING K ATES
lilSPI.AY ,o ,-enta |a-r ruiumn itu h per insertion tor e>* tixitypea or mate, tu
cenla pet roiumti inch athlitioual if cotn|KMitiutt i* letjuired.
CLAS.SY-KT.au;-' .1 cent* iier wnni for Iir-t in«ertion; each iMhlitional insertion
at 2 cent* , *i word, ra-h with order. Minimum per i*--ue, 50 cent*. Ad*
enly at the line rate. 15 rent* per line fir*t interth n; 10 cent*
per line «uh additional irnrertion.
Notice of cliurrh entertainment where a choree of admi**ion made, oliitnarie*.
Card* of thank*, re*olutioii* of re-pr-ct, and all matter* not ii< w* will be
charged for at regular rate*.
Enter**! a* •*-*,,nd-cla** mail matter on McCulloch and adjoining countie* $3 00
May 17, 10)0 at the poatoffhe at Elsewhere In Tea a* $4.00
Brady, Te*a« under the Art of City hrliwry in Brady $4.00
Congre** of March 3. IH79. Out-of.«tate 15.00
Ini/ RENT
\ pari ini’i*.
Al *<• 1
■ 1;, nl.ll ;;u7
\\ 1'ITI
|i R 111 NT I • a i f
-hid duplex apartment. MRS.
S. E. MEEKS. Phone 2394.
I ■ i:LNT < it
age. PHONE 7107 \ \ S< E
YATES.
| i|; REN T L- .! i ■
apaitment. 3 private cut raneeJ, I
garage. PHONE 4952, 702 S.
v! ESWLTTE.
‘ »R RENT-Kurnished apart | ,
ment in duplex or garage. MRS. I * none -III
A. B COX, 800 S. Church or
Cox Studio. [
|<>K RENT 2 Room furnished
upstairs apartment. Recently re-
decorated. 707 S. PECAN or call
5265. __ ____
|OR RENT Nio- 2 bedroom
apartment with floor fuinace.
On (Tothers Ave. CALL 8422.
FRANK H. COKIIKK
Uvtsluck Order buyer
(jllitrolla Building
jffice Ph. 2468 — Ken. Pb. Uii
Brady, Texas
rvtV + tvtvSf + t*
I’ROFKSSIONAL CARDS
r ♦ t * ♦ t — ♦♦♦♦-vs
KVANS J. ADKINS
LAWYER
Over Rrady Nat’I Rank
Brady Rhone 2.‘J4C
ROYO. WILKKRSON
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Hot Under the Collar !
■HRI
9Mn£!
\ w ^
VJ.0
\ S-
i C\t
Rurial Insurance
Ambulance Service •
Rrady, Texas
Shelters at THE
York Nut
PANDARD.
JOR RENT Modern 3 bedroom
house, corner lot, paved streets.
Near two schools. Available now.
PHONE 2140 or 4433.
/ufirAenj
■ Y MULLINS
VsrU i terisst Mkin if tttte titckMi
¥
( '> ^
*’.Vw-7 —
4/' X. 1
■ i' v . i/: Sr
v\b* >
fa'J'i
APV/LY
PoPilAB pCESS fEATUt?£5 >/ iQ/ff
• Lumber and all kinds of
Ruilder's Hardware
WANTED
ANTED—To take your ordets
for dressed fryers to be delivered
latter part of February and
March. CARROLL WATKINS,
Pear Valley.
.ANTED—5 Young ladies 18-23.
of neat appearance, to^ travel
eastern states. New York to
Florida with chaperoned group,
engaged in circulation work. No
experience necessary, we train
you. Earn $6U to $75 weekly.
Permanent position, car furnish-
ed. Advancement to crow captain.
Contact MRS. JEANNE BALD-
WIN at Hotel Brady Friday
and Saturday of this week.
Mrt' 1
77jTa
By John C. Whits, Comminion#r
W. H. (Bill) Miller, Mgr.
Kenneth J. Mitchell, Asst. Mgr.
Phone 2131
NOTICE
FOR . . .
Imported hor\s d’oeuvres,
party snacks from the
House of Reese & Co.,
fancy canned foods, com-
plete line of monoKram-
med and crystal glass-
ware and your favorite
brands of beers visit . . .
iOTICE—What could be better
than a prescription line of cos-
metics? That is what Luzier’s I
Cosmetics is. Contact MRS. L. j
B. SMITH at The Brady Stand-
art! or at. home 801 \N . 12th at- ,
ter 6 p. m.
LOST Yellow cold Wyler ladies’
watch, downtown in Brady Mon-
day. MRS. r. T. MONROE.
Phone 8162. _
Hallmtt i- ;■ reeting cartD for att j
occasions at THE STANDARD.
Hratly-Mcnard Highway
Students! s,tR
buy a new REMINGTON
Qiug&A’i&t
Our Services are Available |
in This Locality N«bn
Taylor Exploration
Company
Houston. Texas
Truck Mounted Rotary
Drilling Rigs
Wells up to 2.000 Feet
Permanent Electric Well
Logging.
Dozers for Terracing.
Brush Hearing. Tank
Building and Roads.
Also Surveying Service
Rrady Representative
PAUL WHITE
Tel. 2210 1H03 S. Pine
W
The Brady Standard
DIAL 2236
NEED FOR INCREASED
1955 COITON ALLOTMENTS
Texas eotton fanners will be
allowed to plant 7,612,779 acres of
cotton this season.
The question now arises; Has
the pendulum swung too far in
favor of controlled production?
In Texas, agriculture has been
hard-hit by a four-year drouth. In
many areas, the few acres allowed
for cotton under the allotment pro-
gram failed to produce at all. This
brought economic hardship where
cotton is the main cash crop.
This year, the cotton farmer
Quail Expert
(Continued From Page 3, Col. 7)
offered the State when hunting
is good. Yet when hunting is had,
there is a tendency to blame the'
State and demand more action.
"Since the bird crop depends on j
the productive capacity of the land, I
most of which is in private bunds, I
the landowner is more directly ie-
sponsible. The State’s powei to
produce quail is limited to advice,
eiu - uiagement und perhaps some
materials, voluntarily accepted by
landowners.
"For the individual hunter, the
implication is clear, lie should
place part of his demand for action
with the landowner. He should
find himself a place to hunt and
do whatever is necessary to get
the landownei to maintain or im-1
prove the crop . . . Timing is the i
important factor. Usually, the j
technician is called in after the,
brush is removed. Waiting until it
is gone makes the job of quail |
management slower anil more dil- i
ficult. If cover is lacking, it must |
be developed before anything else!
can lie done to increase quail.” i
Lay’s extensive appraisal of the
i ao-e and cure for the quail crisis,
with generous illustrations, is pub-
lished in full in the cui rent edi-
tion of Texas Game and Fish Mag-
azine which is available at C'om-
inission headquarters, Walton
Building, Austin, Texas. If the 1
demand for the material warrants,
the Direetor of Wildlife Restora-
tion said lai.v’- article will l»e pub-
lished in individual pamphlet form.
needs to make money on his crop.
However, price alone, guaranteed,
by a parity program based on re-
duced acreage, does not insure
farm prosperity. It is price times
volume that will determine profits
in 1955.
After all, it is what remains in
the farmer’s pocket after the bills
are paid—bis net income—that
measures whether he has had a
good year or a bad one.
Deeper crop cutbacks are or-
dinarily used as a basis to support
the parity program. They act as
a temporary restraining force to
prevent a burdensome surplus that
would break the market price. This
has been the practice in former
years and in many cases has
worked to gooii advantage.
But these days in Texas, due to
the drouth, aie not ordinary in any
sense of the word.
The Texas farmer will need to
plant more cotton this year and |
still be assured of u good price.
Instead, present plans call for
cutting last year’s acreage back by I
an additional 16 percent.
At the very minimum. Texas
should have at least as much ac-
reage as it had last year, if not
more. Now that our fanners are I
under economic stress, it is no
time to bolster the price of cotton |
l>y further reducing the acreage.
This year, the farmer needs
price plus volume.
Facts and Fancies—
(Continued From Page 6, Col. 7)
the outer edge of active lives. And
we must have something to inter-
est us and cause a little work too.
When we visited Mr. and Mrs. D.
A. Roper of < ur community recent-
ly, Mrs. Roper showed us the birds
she loves and cares for now that
her children and grandchildren no
longer need her care. Then she
has an assortment of salt and pep-
pers from some thirty of the Uni-
ted States and many foreign coun-
tries, and little dolls she dresses dp
for ornaments for beds or dressing
tallies. She told us that her daugh-
ter, Loretta, now Mis Vestor Myrl
Engdahl, living in Aikansas, and
sending her three children to school
there, lives not very far from the
Area Poultry Men
To Meet Thursday
Every person in the Hcait o’
Texas interested in chickens and
turkeys hus a special invitation to
attend the meeting at Bell’s Feed
j Store Thursday night, Jan. 27, at
1 ,:3t) o’clock. The meeting is being
sponsored by Western Hatcheries,
Paymaster Feeds and Bell’s Feed
Store. Representatives from the
hatchery and the feed company
will be here for the parley.
G. D. Bell of the lcfcal store -aid
yesterday that free coffee, dough-
llaiid (V. B.) Hendersons, who
reared their family in Rochelle
community.
We heard also this week that
Mr. Burns Lane, who was Supt. of
School two years, when the present I
building in Rochelle was brand
new, is now head of the schools
in 1 hroikmoiton. Wc presume Mrs.
Burns is also teaching there. They
were some of the muny fine teach-
ers who have been a blessing to
this community and have moved on.
Fortunately for Rochelle, in
these days of teacher shortages,
when emergencies arise, and a
competent teacher is needed to re-
place an unexpected vacancy there
are a dozen former teachers who
live heie, anyone of whom can step j
light in the gap. Now Mrs. Lock-
ett Bryson, with a Smith Hughes j
Home Economic^ major from
TSCW is teaching homemaking in I
Rochelle.
As it has happened in the past
and will happen again, the home!
maker can contribute something
more than instruction to the boys l
and girls of her classes. Some- I
times trustees arc a little uneasy ,
for fear “We can’t get rid of ii
home tonchu.” However, this
seems a lather unfounded fear—
why wish to “get rid” of a teach-
er who is qualified and experienced
in the business of actuaj living
besides. And too homemakers and
theii partners get tired of the
grind, and so soon as economic
conditions are bettei they want to
return to their own homemaking.
We must close if we make the
(leadline. Thanks for leading,
friends and goodbye now.
! nuts and soda pop will lx* served,
ami free alien.lai.ee prizes will Pc
given.
"This meeting is very important
to the poultry folks over this area,
and will be of great interest to
those in the business and to ttidke
who plan to go int4* the business/’
said Bell.
‘Plentiful List’
For February Has
Variety of Food
Thrift-wise homemakers will find
u vaiied choice of plentiful foods,
at the grocer’s in February.
Eggs head the column of abund-
ant foods on the U. S. Department
of Agriculture’s February plentiful
foous list.
Many seafoods, .* ,ch as shrimp,
frozen haddoek fiiiets, frozen hali-
but and canned tuna, are on the
list.
Holdings of heavy turkeys re-
main near record high, making
them a bargain.
Diied beans, mainly pinto and
large and baby limas, uro in good
supply.
Only fruits scored as February
plentiful are orange* and grape-
fruit, both fresh and processed.
Lettuce, carrots, canned green
beans and canned corn are more
plentiful now than in several
months, says USDA.
Other foods in large supply in-
clude rice, raisins, almonds, ianl,
vegetable fats and oils.
80TH BIRTH DAY—Dr. Al-
bert Schweitzer, winner of the
Prize for Peace, eele-
LraU'ih his 80th birthday dodg-
ing the world’s acclaim of his
“humble” service to humanity.
Deep in the steaming jungle
he chose for a home, Schweit-
zer spent the day as he had
spent half his life—taking care
of lepers, and other ailing na-
tives in the hospital he built.
Consign your Livestock
Heart o’ Texas Commission Co.
“Where your busini-as is always appreciated”
drady, Texas Fhone 47U
All Kinds of Livestock Sold Every Tuesday
Sales Start at 12:30 Residence Phone 8311
H. D. “Jerry" Griffith
NOTICE!
... to Everyone Interested in
POULTRY & TURKEYS
• You have a cordial invitation to attend the meeting
THURSDAY NIGHT, JANUARY 27 at 7:30 P. M. at
Bell’s Feed Store.
• Plan to be here—Tell your friends and neighbors
about this important meeting.
-WE ARE EXPECTING YOU-
FREE
Coffee, Donuts and
Soda Water will be Served
ALSO ...
FREE Attendant Prizes
•WESTERN HATCHERIES
• paijtnastel FEEDS
•BELL’S FEED STORE
Remember the place, the date and the time Bell’s Feed
Store, Thursday Night, January 27 at 7:30 P. M.
f -V 9 J
> v-r
Available Phis Week!
Heavy Breed
DADY CHICKS
I*er
Hundred
IBelPs Feed Store
iPhone 2230
G. 1). Bell, Owner
Brady, Texas
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 25, 1955, newspaper, January 25, 1955; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth881594/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.