Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 103, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1941 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE TWO
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
TF
Running Over the Script
CARMINE NEWS
Brenham Banner-Press
—
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ME
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PRESS
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week ’'X
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. Monroe and Mow^Down Doctrines*
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SC'BOSS
H. E. SCHLEIDER, Secretary
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of Minn.
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562
7
FOR BETTER DRY CLEANING
<
t
rj>! ,
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i
£
OVR USED
fivers ARE
pi
I
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<
Our New
Number
t ,
Shipment of Kraft
SEALING TAPE
AT NEW LOW PRICES!
By LARS MORRIS
ANSWER TO
rKf.viois rizzi.r
CLEANERS
DYERS
HATTERS
T All AIRS
LIBERAL TRADE-IN!
GULF PRODUCTS
PubUnhn! by
•enner-Preas. Inc,
•very afternoon
■«rcept Sunday, at
Brenham. Texas
35c
50c
60c
75c
Lift
S
’ ’j' ' •**-
Crosswore? lBw«z
DIAL 2752
FREEZITALL
ESCAPE ~
HEARTBREAK
by MARGARETTA BRUCKER
' tn*. W OMw Man feaaalk k».
didn’t she even
name?
* •:
In
er th
ary :
C
filed
I’.iu!
< '.ran
grouf
- A
i
Admission: visited homefolks over the week-
Mrs. Leslie Doleshal and Miss
Audrey' Ida Bell Light of Brenham spent
v
T-
I
DEAL 6^4
SAVITALL
MARKET
fore and sunbonnet.
With each appearance, she re-
ceived a storm of applause. What
‘ 'JST™__'• niJZLi uuji*rjiiv‘ife-Aiwair
*1
*
ius of South
lean herb*
.. corptu
samgr iabbt.1
■trlet of Arabia
ol weight
prltlce
if death
> extrema
foadnoaa
. time
chestnut
cause to
ile
%///. F
Wff -'7 *
k ■■
ri:
FJI
on Wednesday night, May 7, ber Houston Business School students,
ginning at 8 p. m. Admission: ’’isHed homefolks over the week-
Adulta 10 cents and children 5 end.
cents. *
The many friends of <
Bathe welcome her return from Wednesday here.
.. „ . .. . ......— Mrs WUUe <^31.^ Mrs. w
E. Kuhn and daughter, Doris, were
Austin visitors last Wednesday.
A <3E
>FAK !®a
'J
j /
as
Production
. ■
' iLi
4 ■
p" *
KERS
9
1
I
answer. "Through the school.”
Somehow, she found her way
back to her dressing room and
slumped into a chair. She was un-
nerved -bewildered. ■ Her name
meant nothing to Lillian Prescott!
Yet how could she forget it when
she was responsible for the annul-
ment of Valerie Wentworth's mar-
riage to her son ?
Had Phil lied—had he never
told his mother about the
^a/’Ti’iiRor'WW’sw-'
1
^<*T t ’
^•(lo HQ™
j Then, “What is you name?”
"My my name?" Valerie stain-,
mered. u ‘
Phoebe Fetter smiled- "I think
the child is quite overcome by our
kindness," she said helpfully. “Her
lame is Wentworth—V a 1 £ r i e
Wentworth.” even „
"Valerie Wentworth." Mrs. marriage? Had he himself decided
Prescott repeated mechanically, on the annulment -or -or -had
litlng the name down. She there neytr been gpy annulment ?
lanced up. "‘I’ll get in touch with All the heady triumph of the
you later, Miss Wentworth. I sup- show was gone. In Its place, Val-
>cs« I can reach you through erle experienced a frightening
Models, Inc.?” feeling of foreboding.
Valerie stared at her. Didn’t— (To be continued)
,GR
:yiE
ST
DUE
4 L ee I
Must
i
TR8.I
•
Foor
Cxtsii
llui> t <
Ask t
«xplal
should both be chosen to work fo
Phoebe Fettjr? Lost in th!
thr.uyrht she failed to notice where
the designer waa leading her.
Then, suddenly, she found her-
CHAPTER XXX
As Lillian Prescott continued to
—. J Stare —at h^r. Valerie watched
I .____■ - 1-1- - . —. - ■ -
nition—but there was none.
"She's lovely, isn't she?" Mrs
prescott murmured -to her com-
panion. —< -
Then, Valerie -was moving on
Relief flooded through her.'Phil's
mother had not recognized her!
She did not know that the girl she
called “lovely" was the former no-’
tions clerk who had married her
son the; girl whom she'd forced
him to desert!
As Valerie made her exit, her
eyes were aglow tvith triumph.
elf standing before Lillian Pres-
:6tt.
“Here she is,” said Miss Fetter
Mrs. Prescott raised her^ lorg-
nette and studied Valerie sharply.
"I must have her,” she said de-
cisively. "I must certainly have
'ter for my spring show.”
“I’ve p’ans for |jer myself," said
?hoebe Fetter, smiling at Valerie.
“I want her for my show in Palm
Beach in January. However, that
’ won't interfere with your plans.
Mrs. Prescott. Tn fact, I could
bring her with me when I come to
Pelton with my models for your
■........._■»■■■■ ............■«-■■■■ IIS ...... —------
DIAL
night,, May 2r
"T,he Dearest thing in Boots”
and "In Reverse,” one-act plays,
and "Anton Muss Ruhe Haben,” a
one-act German play, and special-
ties will be presented in the Car-
mine school auditorium by the up-
per grades of the Carmine school
A'
7'1
change to disapproval if
thought that would please an
portant customer.
These thoughts flashed through
Valerie's mind In lightning suc-
cession While Lillian Prescqtt was
rummaging in h$r handbag for a
Insurance.
H. a. SIMMONS
«17 SCUOOL ST. . BRENHAM, TEXAS
Reprfwntative
NATIONAL AID LIFE
IISIIAICE COMPANY
Oklahoma Gty ,
MOSE THAMM7MUtUB>Aip iH DEATH CLA»<S
Entered m stooed
class matter at
postoffice, B r en-
ham, Tex. under
act of Mar. 3, 187»
Notice!
._____________________ 'A_____________
The office of the Washington
County A. C. A. will close at
noon on Saturdays, beginning
with the month of May, 1941.
Farmers who wish to attend to
business in tills office on Sat-
urdays are requested to call be-
fore noon. 5
Tom Whitehead---------1-------------------Publisher
Mrs Ruby Robsrtaon —------------------------Editor
F. W Proske ------------------------------Cashier
James E Byrd X—1 Mechanical Supt.
Subscription Rates: By carrier one week 15c; month 50c; year 35.00.
By Mail: Washington and adjoining counties: 33.50; Texas 35.00. out
of state 36 00
*
I
A
Buy them at home!
A COMPLETE LINE OF
WARDS
1 inch tape 800 feet - .
1 ’/» inch tape 800 feet .
2 inch tapej600 feet
3 inch tape 600 feet
The answer is simple. There is no connection whatever
. „ between what Germany is doing in Europe, Russia in Europe
and Asia, Japan in Asia, and the Monroe Doctrine-Pan
American plan for the Western Hemisphere.
In-the 188 years since the Monroe Doctrine, no American
nation has ever lost its sovereignty because of it. It has cer-
tainly preserved the sovereignty of many. ’
To be acting in the German-Japanese “new order” style,
the United States would already have had to seize Mexico
and all the American countries south to the Canal, as well as
Colombia and Venezuela on the north Cbast of South America.
It would have had to infiltrate thousands of spies into the
rest of South America with a view to < renting stooge govern-
ments ready trrtake over at a signair
These things we have not done, and do nQt propose to do.
First, we don’t think that way, and don't believe, it is ri^ht.
And second, we do not have huge minorities of American
residents in those countries sporting a_phony double citizen-
ship that gives them the protection of local law? while de-
manding their ultimate allegiance to the U. S
People fool themselves badly if they think that the
United States could sit back serenely in its hemisphere if the
rest of the world were parceled out into three or four pack-1
ages. For the aggressors have complete domination over their
areas, economic,- political and military, which the United
States does not have and does not want'in this hemisphere.
With the rest Of the world closed against us except on the
terms of a handful of conquerors, oub own hemisphere would
be” left open on equal terms to all, ripe for infiltration and
covert conquest as a preliminary to actual military subjec-
tion.
------ No. Our way will work only if the seas and most of the
rest of the world are reasonably free. That is why our
whole future hangs on keeping it free.
Sehool 5'ews
The 1940-41 session of the Car-
mine School Closed on Mopday,
April 28. Perfect attendance cer-
tificates will be awarded to the
following pupils: Emily Maxie
Zenkner, Mabellee Peters, Ora
Mae Ebner, Lloyd Zwernemann,
A. G. Jacob, Nevilee Fuchs, Gladys
J aster, Doris Jean Haberleln, Le
Verne Jaeger, Clarence Arn5l,
Durwood Fuchs, L. W. Slebel, Jr.,
Curtis Albers, W. A. Plueckhahn,
- Jr., Hulda Llmmer, Doris Jean
Ullrich, Lloyd Arndt, Lucile Sie-
belt Ella Mae Andt, A. D. Ullrich
and Idell Schoenberg.
The fifth six-week’s. honor roll
includes the following pupils: Earl
Kieke, Nelson Kieke, Hulda Lim-
mer, Ruth Schindler, Nevilee Wag-
ner, Lillie^ Schmidt, ninth grade;
Burney Kieke, Mary Belle Eichler,
tenth grade; Doris Kuhn, Le Ver-
ne Jaeger, eighth grade; Della
Marie Rachui, Nevilee Fuchs, Dur-
wood Fuchs, seventh grade; Ly-
nette Schindler, sixth grade; Max
.^e. Jrv Elwood Jaeger. Rudy,[
Piefz, rtA. D. Ullrich, Melvin Vier-
tel, Nina Dean Blackburn, Idell
Schoenberg, fourth grade; Alois
1 gmIV Wt »Vly laivux namivuj lahvu v»* ax. «•>•«*». ftiaop cu*» vino. tuiiuun a ■ w
i anxiously for Some slgnToTrecog-’“was” more. Lilkari Pi'eNCfitt StoppetT wanted to MwthrFleyd-Ptaeek-
- -■ ■ • •• nahn, third grade.
Membars of the seventF grade
graduating class mentioned in last
week's issue will attend the grad-
uation exexcises held at the La
r0 coo^'.
her each time and,gave her flat-
tering attention.
It was this that gratified her fat1
more than the general applause. It
made up for all those bitter hours’
following Phil's letter telling her
that this woman his mother -
had perswaded him to have' his
marriage annulled.
What if Lillian Prescott knew!
What if she knew! Valerie longed
to confront her and announce.,
"The rtiodel you admire so much
is the girl' you thought too insig-
nificant for your precious son!"
■wrought Much a change in her that. When ‘”»e lfetu1tnedh l° J?"
- ing room following her display of
the play "sult,~~iKe found" a tail,
thln.’ -brown-eyed woman waiting
for her.
"I’m Proebe-^etter,” the woman
introduced herself. "Girl, you're Lpencil and small notebook,
good! What's your name?”
"Valerie Wentworth."
“Come with me,” Miss Fetter
■aid briefly.
Vdlerie, her heart racing, fol-
lowed the designer through a side
entrance Jnto the ballroom.
As they entered the room,
Helene was coming down the run-
way, with the ermine coat held In
graceful folds with one jeweled
I hand. Her red hair shone beneath
I tfie glare of tht overhead lights.
"She's nice, too,” commented
Miss Fetter. ,, '
Valerie drpw a wishful breath.
Wouldn’t be winderful if Helene’,r
hopes should come true If they.
Chevrolet 1938 1*4-ton Dual
Wheel Truck, cab and chassis,
good tires, paint like new. mo-
tor in excellent ^JlCC00
condition <« —*vUv
1M4 International >4-ton pick
up, n«w motor, good tires, new-
ly repainted. A real $4 A® 00
buy at J AS
IMO Ford Model A. long wheel
base truck in good condition,
naw paint, platform body, fair
tires, mechanically tAgOO
eleafi ..............—— QQ
1935 International pick-up, ful-
ly reconditioned, new paint, a
pick-up that will render many
mote economical $ A FW
milM..........._.. ....x.. . 213
IM4 Chevrolet short wheel base
114-ton Truck with stake body,
new iftotor. A real 34 A F00
buy at I QJ
SAVE 25% TO 45% WITH
L. G- McCULLAR, Kepre^enttag
HARDWARE MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.
(Standard Non-Assessable Policies) and
HARPWARE INDEMNITY INSURANCE CO. of Minn.
(A parttcijiating Sto€k Companyt
PHONE *8^ BRENHAM, TEX. P. O, BOX 787
Thursday; may i,.i94i
"WASHINGTON LETTER
?Mwash8e's »a£
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
W/ASHINGTON. — One of the
W best things that has happened
in Washington in a long time
is the coming of William S.
Knudsen as director of the
Office of Production Manage-
ment. Twice in "• -
the last i
he has been be- pj
fore congres-
sional commit-
tees which are
trying to find
out w laa t’s
wrong with the ’
defense setup.
First, he went
to the Military
Affairs Co m-'
mittee, which
could only see
red on labor
troubles, then
to the Truman Edson v
Senate Commit-
tee, which really has a chance to
do constructive work in explor-
ing contracts that may have been
too hastily made afid too expen-
sively carried out
Before these committees, Mr.
Knudsen has handled himself so
well that he has had the commit-
teemen eating out. of his hand
and thinking everything was
great, which it was. After Knud-
sen’s testimony before the Tru-
man committee, a little old lady
edged her way through the crowd
and said she just wanted to shake
his hand and pat him on the back
and tell him what a good job he
was doing.
T’HE man’s utter simplicity and
A unaffectedness, plus a rich
sense of humor, ard his knowl-
edge of what he’s talking about,
enable him to get things done.
Giving the background of leav-
ing his job in Detroit to take over
defense production, he said sim-
ply that one day “the President
called me up on the telephone to
say he wanted me to come down
to Washington. I asked for a day
to go to New York to tell my peo-
ple about it. The next day X
I
—I
1 was .1 r-1
210 IfOH K.WUU
WHY SO MANY FAMILIES
NEED OUR INSURANCE?
That may seem to be a foolish question, but I ask it in
- order to bring out an important point about the type of
protection provided by my company, the National Aid
Life Insurance Company. You see, there is a difference
in life insurance as provided'by different companies.
Many families do not have the insurance they actually
want, simply because their financial means are limited.
Those are the families who njeed our insurance, because
the cost of National Aid Ljfe protection is low. You
CXt? V* Ue for ^our Ptemium dollar, If I could
talk with you, I could show you that ywti^an afford the
protection you need and want.
Insurance for Women
and Children
Among the many types of
our policies which have
proved so popular are
those covering the lives
of women and, children.
The modem idea in in-
surance is to protect the
lives of every member of
the family. You will find
our premium Tates on
such policies most attrac-
tive!
A FEW Americans are being led down a mental one-way
street these days that leads smack up against a. brick
wiiil. It runs about like this:
Why not let Germany control all of Europe, Russia aR of
east Europe and west Asia, Japan all of east Asia and the
western Pacific? That would still leave us the Western Hemi-
sphere. After all. what are they doing in their parts of the
world that we’;re not doing with the Monroe Doctrine in our
own? Why couldn't a pretty good world order be worked
out that way”
7 - 14D iHCKnnhte
8 fn-tain in tb
Jnvunrt.D B’Mcilimt
ft livid ■>; -
D—-Corrrn with ftnt
• dirt
10-Fronl limb
1 l - God ot love
12 -rTenth of dnllar
13 ->Ienv.enl» body
21 —Writing fluid
23 -Dye from roal-fnr
2ftvFirst note of ecrU
27—Three-dimenMonal
expanse
21—Article of furniture
29Kind uf flower
31 - You
.13 LikeneM
■H — Mtrtn*r• of-pewrt
fat
TT-Comhlnin« fOTTfl
4 i—Spools
45- Pio jec HU
44—Art
47-Read
4B—Cent
AfrK— -
M-Point ol
M—Btei
54— DISC.
5«—Fituni
57— Unit L.
58— Hindu
tone.;:
M - Long til
83- FIJt —
84- Hslt
tl—ButTlx:
resembl
Of courae, she might not have re-
called her. anyway, for the owner
of a More paid little attention to
notions clerks, but Valerie had a
fueling that Lillian Prescott was
a woman who took note-of every
clerk in her store, however minor.
Golly, why are you all aglow?"
inquired Helene, as Valerie "passed
her. "Make a hit with some one?
See Phoebe Fetter?”
- • ”No,” said Valerie.
She had forgotten about Phoebe
better.
However, it was in creations
—-i Jittolhe school by Phoebe Fet-
■»r that Valerie made the hit of
■>e show.
S’te appeared in three of these.
”lrst, in rose pink slacks and a
ght blue shirt, with a strihg of
\4iter blue beads ropeg about
• neck and with a figured pink
’ bound around her head.
>■<1. she wore a rad-whlte-and-
'"’’e slacks outfit and, finally, a
due and white play suit with pina-
Charch News •
Carmine Lutheran Church
1 Choir practice on Friday night,
May 2. and on Friday night. May
9.
Sunday, May 4:
Sunday schpol at 9 a. m.
German services at 10 a. m.
Orchestra practice M o n d h y
night, May 5.
H. Brunotte, Pastor.
Mrs. Alvin Albers was hostess
to the Carmine Civic Club Thurs-
day afternoon, when the following
members were present: Mesdasnes
W. A. Plueckhahn, Hugo Ebner,
Gus Harzke, W. O. Neumann, E.
L. Light, W. G. Oberrander, R. J.
Marta, Emil Albers. Willie Scha-
rath, Miss Nojina Bauer. The next
meeting will be held at the home
of Mrs. H. F. Hoermann on Thurs-
day. May 8.
Mrs. W. A. Plueckhahn an-
nounces the regular monthly
meeting of the Carmine Mothers
Club on Wednesday afternoon,
May 7.
The Church Music Club met
Monday night when ,H. L. F.
’ Doerr, chairman, preaided Topics
of discussion were the decorattan
services to be held at the Carmine
cemetery at 10 a. m. An Sunday,
May 11, and the Mothers Day
program to be given bi .the (Car-
mine church that, night beginning
at 8 p. xn. The club's next meet-
ing is scheduled for Monday night,
June 2.
Bennie Eldred
Alli r SERVICE
UULl STATION
eame to see the President. It was
all over in 15 minutes. 1
working in Washington." r
The story of what he has done
in Washington has of course bega
told. How the plans for an army
of 400,000 were raised to provide
for an army of 1,400,000^ -Mow
plane production schedules were
raised from 7000 to. 33,00<J a year.
How the machine tool industry
expanded from S200 million in
1939 to $400 million in 1940 to
$750 million now. How tank pro-
duction was stepped up, even
though that meant redesigning the
27-ton medium tank, all except
the running gear. And so on.
Four big .bomber plants built.
New powder mills. Five new tank
plants.
Concerning the biggest of those
tank plants, Knudsen spid, “I
went to Chrysler and got: Chrys-
ler to agree to make 14 tanks a
day.” It was as simple as that.
The $20 million plant was sched-
uled to open April 22,_and will
be turning out its 14 a day by
October.
Knudsen knows all the answers',
and he explained patiently how
his organization was set up.
“We’re all on the same floor,” he
went on to explain. “We can get
together every hour. Hillman is
right next door to me. I have a f
private wire to Stimson and Knox
and whenever I want to talk to
them I pick up the phone. The
biggest , part of my work is done
oh the phone.”
tpHAT may apply to the time
Knudsen is in the office, but
he spends an amazing part of the
time on the road, inspecting these
defense industry plants to find out
what they're doing—not to check
up on them or look for trouble,
but just to know. ■/
Knudsen’s office has been vitally
concerned with the reliability of
plants getting defense contracts.
“We usually get in on negotiations
before they reach the contract
stage. If everything isn’t all
right. I recommend it be reconsid-
ered,” Knudsen explained, and
then added, “It usually is.”
Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Meinen of
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Schmidt of
Houston visited in the Willie
Schoenberg, Jr., home over the
wdek-end. ~ ‘ ■
Mr, and Mfs. Oscar Ammann
and daughter of Brenham visited
relatives here Sunday.
Kervin Jacob and Elvis Jastcr,
the Brenham hospital, where she
recently underwent an appendix"
operation frbni*' which she is re-
covering nicely.
Esther Wunderlich, Reporter.
Scouts Meet
The Carmine Scouts. Scoutmas-
ter W. F Graeher Assistants W-
I J. Neese and A.- E. Kellers, and1
H. L. Plueckhahn and Await
Harzke, guests, met at the Scout
Hut on Monday night. They will
_v w„ _ meet next on Tuesday night, May ■
Grange High " school ’ on Friday On the nl*^t ot May 9 char"
---- - ter presentation and advancements
w|ll be held at tfie Carmine school
auditorium. The public is invited.
Mr,, and Mrs. P. J. Weisner of
Houston and Eldie Weisner of
Austin visited Mr. and Mrs. Al-
fred Etzel over the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Elof of
La Grange were Sunday guests in
rerfiemW The the * Kuhn home
X --rn , —Heys* ■ L A I1 JB-L
1938 lawig Wheel Base Chev-
rolet, Iti-ton, cab and chassis
Yuliy reconditioned, $0
with new rubber
19M Chevrolet, 1 Mi-ton Sedan
delivery in good cOn- $4 Jtg>00
ditton, priced to sell .-,
1935 Ford H-ton platform body
a real bargain ''AC"
at........ ...............
1934 Chevrolet l«4-ton in.
wheel base, cab and chassis, ex-
tra goixi rubber, good paint,
fully reconditioned. Hurry for
thia one $4| ^g00
at.
1986 International %*ton tong
wheel base pickup, recondition-
ed, new paint, good rubber, hy-
draulic brakes, ex- lARFJOO
oeptional value at
OLLIE MILLER CHEVROLET CO. I
'* ■ BRENHAM, Tj^CAS
71- Short isttw
72— amocioU
7J— Ne:e«*ivou»
74—FrrD<h prot«tor»t»- ,
> DOWN
1— Httvun aai»U
,< velocity.
2— Put load os
3— M»seiCeoid
4— Examiners
5— Support oneself
on feet
8—Trave line burkatera
A RECORD OF “5
CONSISTENT GROWTH
During the past 19 years, the Na-
ttonal Aid Life Insurance Com-
pany h^s grot/n from a small be-
ginning to onNof the largest and
strongest fife insurance compa-
nies in the Southwest. Its variety
of policies, which meet the o
of people in all walks of life, is
responsible for this development,
together with a reputation gained
dcath'd1111^ Pr°m^ Paymcnt °f
ob,i8atcd1in ,hc •»«»«•« by writing
or phorung me for information relative to National Aid Life
1—Narrow onrn’nr
I' 5—RtriMlm^eei:' ICOT**
70—passine tashluna
f " 14—Elnbrotdrrx
[ IS-Eadrta*
18—Loare out
17 —Short pooma
Combining form;.
s'. 18—Capital ot ltal»
20—Di’tan^a accom-
t < pliabrd toward weal
I, 22—Ope who guide*
24,— Terminated
H—Th*: *■■
27-Inflexible
L_-----jg-Miui a name S •
' 32- FUrer tn -FraSee.—
E ....... 3fi—. Ob bg .
. 37 Alupuacrlot jabbt.i
M^Rlddlea ' ~
40-About iabbr.1
’■ 41—pres*: aeaia
42— Prefix into
Br- —• 43—Exertion ot power
44 -Man a name
fc-..... AZ-JUiW.ln Italy
4S—Mythical (taut
I 4»—Weird
B. W—Single
b2—Young ox
!•- 53—Cupnlng
F7'-;-. »*—An«er
l. B5-.-Hin.lu cereal plant
M-Wet
Tidy
|; *8—Dye indigo '
k. 70 In German Llk-lote
L Attila
jtW"
We've got some of the
BEST USED
TRUCK BARGAHNS
in town
[hABpJ
f the largest and
! compa-
of policies, which meet the
i
show. Would that suit you?"
Valerie stood rigidly, .trying to
grasp all this. Lillian Prescott
learned who she was—what then?
She had not recognized her face,
but she would certainly remember
the name of the girl whpm her
son had married. ir vw '
What would she say and dp?
She would withdraw her offer, of
course, but that didn't matter.
Would she go further than that ?
Might she even influence Phoebe
FCtfer? It was plain, that the de-
signer' deferred' to her—courting
her favor desiring her trade.
Phoebe Fetter's approval might
she
im-
1H
I
Hi
phi
iDnaEiiaia Khbri r^nSni
•ii
y J
sT •
V- u
*')
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 103, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1941, newspaper, May 1, 1941; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1354720/m1/2/?q=woolen+mills: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.