The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1932 Page: 3 of 8
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THE BRADY STANDARD, BRADY TEXAS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1932
No Wolves Found In ************** New Taxes Raise 3%
McCulloch Section t By Nirs. H. E. Crawford. : U. S. Income In July
No more does the howl of the ****** ****
wolf and coyote shrill through the Placid Couple Married—School To
night__as far as McCulloch county Open on September 5th. yet been realized by far, but they
is concerned | Placid, Texas, August 25.—Mrs. | contributed more than 3% of the
The last one of this line of pred- Fannie Wagoner, Mr. Rickman,
atory animals stumbled into a trap . Estell Rickman, Bud and William
more than a year ago, and lost it- Wagoner are now visitingin Por-
scalp. Wolf scalps in McCulloch tales. New Mexico, with Mrs.
county during the past few years | Wagoner’s sister. ,
have been worth fifty dollars—the The A. A. Jordan’s, Mis G.
bounty paid by the local wolf club. Yates, Royce and Gordon Yates
1 No wolf scalp has been brought and J. D. Pointer returned Monday
4 to the office of the local wolf club from Port Lavaca, where they have
for over twelve months; neither has been visiting Mr. Jordan s daugh-
. —-the presence of a wolf been report-ter. Hallie. . . . .
31 Mrs. E. L. West has returned included these returns, many
from a short visit with her son, which are expected to get larger
Joe Parker, with a full month of application.
Two-cent tax on bank checks,
$1,094,287; 1-cent a gallon on gaso-
line, $539,461; various rates on
brewers’ wort, malt and grape con-
centiates, $221,359; tires and tubes,
$96,057; soft drinks, $89,569; auto-
mobiles and motorcycles, $47,629;
radios, $32,848; electrical energy,
$32,196; toilet preparations, $68,-
860; candy and chewing gum, $52,-
324; safe deposit boxes, $45,848.
Income taxes dropped from $24,-
376,183 last year; cigarette returns
from $32,103,233.
ed in this county during this time.
Ten years ago when the McCul-
loch County Wolf Club was organ-
ized, no farm flock was safe against
the nocturnal raids of these preda-
tory pests. Ranchmen estimated the
depredations of livestock and poul-
try by each wolf at one thousand
dollars per year.
Since then, almost 700 scalps
have been turned in to the McCul-
loch County Wolf Club for collec-
tion of bounty. It has cost the
stockmen approximately $20,000 to
get rid of this crafty livestock
thief, but they have saved $700,000
worth of livestock.
Rodney Parker, of Placid, and
Miss Lorene Jenkins of Milburn,
were married last Wednesday and
are now making their home in Bra-
dy. Their many friends wish
them much happiness and success
in their married life and invite
them back to Placid.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19—The
, full benefit of the new taxes hasn’t
federal income in July.
The treasury’s report, though,
shows that some of the old stand-
bys provided a big share of the
$61,686,467 received in that month.
Income taxes, for instance, gave
$17,457,131; cigarettes $28,605,437;
chewing and smoking tobacco $4,-
373,873.
The total fell short of that of
$74,169,258 in July, 1931. But it
’ of
There has been a considerable
growth in the turkey, chicken,
sheep and goat industry with the
extermination of the wolf and the
coyote.
Bring us your shoe and boot
repairing. H. P. C. EVERS,
Oldest and Best. Located
East of Brady National Bank.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Bartlett vis-
ited in the H. E. Crawford home
Sunday.
Mercury defeated Placid in base-
ball Sunday, 5 to 4.
L. G. Arledge of Rochelle, has
been visiting in Placid lately.
Fay Poole visited Mrs. G. M,
Yates Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Haynes vis-
ited Mr. Haynes’ sister at Bend,
Texas, Saturday and Sunday.
School begins September 5th.
Everybody be ready to start.
The Nat Gault’s were in Placid
on Wednesday.
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Wonders Found Below
New York Streets
***** *** +** * * * Magic Light Grows
♦ FAIRVIEW ® ,
♦ By Mrs. K. W. Huffman. ♦ Green Apples Red
****** --*****4 Green apples are now grown a u
Sond Ereschinga at M-rinaz Vis. bright......the Boyce ..............ulto thielercenusr ADpicArthur s: Esere Though they REMS Ch ^
Brady, Texas, August 23, 1932. Institute for Plant Research at in forthy-eight hours and in no experiments have a well-planned
__The Fairview meeting is now Yonkers, N. Y. This amazing feat way impair its natural flavor, says purpose.
in progress with fairly good at-is accomplished by means of the P ula Science Monthly The on- Leakage of illuminating gas
tendance. A lot of good preach-ultra-violet lamp, in the rays of ly apparatus required is the lamp, from pipes in greenhouses causes
ng, but so far no response. The I which the green apple is trans- 'a pane of glass that transmits ul-| a taggering loss to nurserymen by
meeting will continue over next formed. The process, originated traviole rays and a refrigerator poisoning their plants. "We have
| L rd’s Day. Would be glad for by Dr. John M. Arthur, has far- sha be . in which to keep the apple , found a way to detect it," Dr. Wil-
you to come and spend the day. reaching commercial possibilities; i co ling during the process. Sim-liam Crocker, director of the insti-
C. P. Eklund of Austin, visited, is expected to prove of enormous e as it seems, it was only thru tute, explained, "as effective as the
his granddaughter, Miss Margaret value to the American fruit grow- patient experiment with a myriad canaries that miners carry down
Nelson, last week. She returned ers. light sources and color filters that shafts to warn them of gas peril,
to Austin with him for a few days Apple consumer- like their fruit Dr. Arthur found the particular The humble tomato plant is our
visit with relatives there, red and the blushing, scarlet- ray responsible for the mysterious lookout. So sensitive is this "bo-
We extend our sympathy to W. streaked varities always command transformation of the fruit and tanical canary bird that it will
H. Hudson in the death of his sis- the highest prices in the market, learned how to use them, detect one part of gas in 100,000
ter, Mrs. John Matlock, of Rich- Many apples ripen te a white juici- Since the Boyce Thompson Insti- parts of air and warn of danger by
land Springs, ness inside, but retain the green tute is an endowed, noprofit-mak-dropping ts. leaves.
Among those attending church skin that make- small appeal to ing organization, the new process | Not satisfied with learning how
here Sunday from other places we the eye. Hereafter the miracle- of coloring apple- will be present-, to guard against it, the Boyce
noted G. C. Black and daughter, working method of Dr. Arthur ed as a gift to the world, as have Thompson experts, want to know
Miss Lizzie, Miss Blanche Guice may be extended to the entire yield been its many achievements in the | just how, illuminating gas poisons
and Howard Haynes of Eden; Mr. of an orchard, and the apples green
and Mrs. C. A. Latimer and family, by nature will ripen to a fascinat-
Mrs. Willie Watkins and daughters, ing crimson as the magic light
Misses Leta and Phalia, Mr. and plays upon them. Indeed, the plant
Mrs. Marion Fowler and son, Egan; wizards, beating nature at her own
and Mr. Priest of Pear Valley; Mr. game, can give the green apple an
and Mrs. Tom Brown of Voca; Mr. even, brilliant red all around, while
and Mrs. W. L. Hemphill of Lohn, the apple colored by the sun will
and several from Brady. be darkly stained on one side and
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Duncan and fade to an unattractive pink on the
Mr. and Mrs. Shaw of Richland _
other.
a leaf. Into a room full of vege-
With only the sun to color them, tation coal gas is piped and the
apples need all the summer months plants thrive on it. A rosebud
to acquire their red, but with hisdro PS and wither under a bell jar
■ ■ * 4- 1 filled with illuminating gas. Fan-
nes
inside, but retain the green tute is
detect one part of gas in 100,000
Since the Boyce Thompson Insti- parts of air and warn of danger by
an endowed, noprofit-mak- , dropping its. leaves." .
Not satisfied with learning how
past. |plants. It was Dr. Crocker who
Meanwhile its experimenters go j conceived the unconventional no
on with other important and novel tion of growing the plants upside
investigations. Plants are grown down while gassing them. His
upside down. Flower pots travel associates were first amused, them
along a railway, following a spot surprised. Inverted, the plants
of sunlight from a huge lens in a were immune to poison.
greenhouse roof. An instrument,
resembling a spectroscope is used The bee can not see for more
to imprint a rainbow pattern upon | than a few feet.
♦
STACY
♦
Like the veins, arteries, nerves,
and tubes of the human body, the
underground pipes, wires, tunnels |
conduits, and ducts that keeps New '
York functioning spread in a be-
wildering maze below the pave-
ments. Here is New York’s 1
underworld, a problem not for the
police but for an army of engi-
Springs attended services here on —
Tuesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Boyles and '
daughter. Miss Lucy, are spending 1
the week with their son, Mr. and'
Mrs. Ollie Boyles, and family, of i
Eola. 1
‘ On Thursday evening of last
real we k, Mrs. G. A. Lehmann enter-
***************
♦ BUSINESS CARDS *
++*+**-♦♦♦♦♦♦
H. A. WULFF
INSURANCE
IN ALL ITS PHASES
Phone 30
Brady, Texas
J. E. Stevens - Gober
Co.
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
Day Phone 4, Night Phone 195
W. H. BALLOU & CO..
+ By Miss Earnestine Pry :
Church Services Held—Home After
Illness—Injures Hand
Stacy, Texas, August 24.—Rev.
Charles T. Tally and Rembert A.
Lechner of Dallas, conducted the
church services here Friday night
and Saturday night.
Mrs. J. C. Deakin- and daughter,
Miss Helen, visited friends in Nov-
ice. Sunday and Monday.
We are glad to report Leonard
Guice improving since his tonsil
operation at the Sealy hospital last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dillard and
children of Stockton, California,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Flem Powell
Monday night.
Winfield Waits, who has been
sick for several weeks out at
Ozona was brought home Wed-
nesday of last week. He is im-
proving nicely at this writing.
Wade Dickerson had the mis-
fortune of getting his hand in-
jured while a fishing trip a few
weeks ago and it is giving him
quite a lot of trouble just now.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦♦
♦ MERCURY ♦
+ By Mrs. I). S. Pumphrey. +
♦ + ♦ + ♦♦ --♦♦♦♦♦♦
Large Concourse of Friends At-
neers
ned with a nice 8 o’clock dinner |
. her niece. Mrs. Louisa Niles of |
upon whose ingenuity and Palestine. The personnel of the
iner included Mrs. J. H. Burton;
Washington, D. C., Mrs. Jessie 1
vigilance depend the comfort and
safety of 7,000,000 people. .........- . _ ., ____
As an example of this ingenuity, tenfro and daughter, Catherine.
consider the safeguards surround- Fort Worth, and Mr. and Mrs.
the flow of electric current for
Fort Worth, and Mr. and Mrs.
GENERAL
INSURANCE
Office Over
Commercial National Bank
BRADY. TEXAS
light and power, without which it
would be imp >. sible to have illumi-
nation. run elevators, subways, |
street cars, telephone circuits, and
the machine- in th city’s thou-
ands of factories, writes John
Chapman Hilder in Popular Science
Monthly.
Precautions taken to protect
Manhattan against a lack of elec-j
tricity include four great genera-
tion stations, located in different
tend Final Rites For Mrs. Matlock
MERCURY, Aug. 24.—Mr. and
Mrs. C. C. House of Fort Worth, j in Manhattan are underground,
spent last Saturday and Sunday
with Misses Louise and Rozelle
House. They enjoyed visiting with
other friends and relatives and
returned home Monday morning.
Mrs. Waller and son and daugh-
ter Lonnie and Pauline, are enjoy-
ing a visit with relatives in South
***************
♦ PROFESSIONAL CARDS +
+♦+++♦-♦♦♦♦♦♦
Dr. Hallie Hartgraves
Eye Specialist
BRADY HOSPITAL
Every Monday—9 o’clock to 5
DR WM.
C. JONES
Dentist
X-RAY EXAMINATION AND
DENTAL DIAGNOSIS
Office Phone - - - - 79
Residence Phone - - - 202
Office front suite rooms on the 2nd
floor, Brady National Bank Bldg.
Texas.
Harl Teague, who has been con-
valescing from a very serious
operation, was sick again last week
following the removal of several
teeth.
Miss Mildred Crew of Rochelle
is visiting in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. E. Pool this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Holland and
children have returned from a
delightful visit fith Mr. Holland’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Holland
of Mountain Home.
Mrs. Driscoe Woods and child-
ren visited Mr. Woods' mother,
Mrs. E. W. Woods of Streeter last
week.
Son Bratton is in the Medical
Hugo Lehmann of Brady. It was
il enjoyed by telling big bee and
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Heinzke and I
i family returned home last week
from Taylor, where they visited
♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ WONDER WORDS ♦
+ + ++++ ♦♦♦♦ + ♦
Here and There, Now and Then.
Pro and Con.
WONDER, Oregon, Aug. 18.—
. Fishing in the rivers has been good
parts of the city that send high-
voltage current, via underground
feeder cables, to thirty-odd sub- ,
stations, which distribute it, in re-all this summer. Perhaps owing to
• ■ voltag . , street mains in ’ eries shut ne the
their district, mouth of the river. Of previous g
Practically every inch of cable years they have been pay ingfish- |
and wire in this huge transmission lermen ix-cents a pour i for fish to | 1
and distributing system is carried can. ‘ is season they only offered 1
underground through great ducts three cents, and the fishermen U
owned by a private corporation woul t catch them r that price,
and rented to the utility companies. " course it makes it fine for us
Access to these ducts’ is obtained country jakes. Heretofore we had
through manholes at the street cor- to pay 35 cents : pound at the
ners, new cable being drawn in at : market. Now we can buy it
one end of the block as old cable is sliced at the block for ten cents,
drawn out at the other end. Not only that, but peddlers bring
Or take the telephone service. In them right to your door along the
the late nineties, telephone wires highway. We bought a 24 pound
were still carried on poles. Today salmon and canned most of it. Real
all but a small percentage of them red salmon too! Just as good as
; Alaskan salmon.
Now craving your indulgence I '
will change the subject to that of |
There is plenty of it, as you can
imagine on realizing that New York
uses 1,800,000 telephones, exclu- tl,e world s.present social and eco-
sive of 25,000 private line tele- - - - - .....
phones. This is more than one and
one-half times the total used
nomic condition. Here is my views
uu as expressed by a more competent
in person. First I wish that every
reader of these remarks would go
J. E. Shropshire, T. J. Sanders.
Shropshire & Sanders
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
Office Over Broad Mercantile Co.
Phone 224.
France, more than three times reader of these remarks would go
total in South America, and a * to the trouble to read the 5th chap-
than nine tenths of the number of ter of,James, in your bible. It
British Isle.
The average daily traffic origi- !
nating in the city’s telephones in
1930 was 8,181,117 calls, an average
of ninety-five each second. To
handle this huge volume of talk
there are in New York City 9,400,-
000 miles of exchange and toll
wire, which would stretch about
376 times around the world, enough
to string thirty-nine wires from the
earth to the moon.
That is a lot of wire, and only
ceaseless research in the field of
cable development has made it
possible to compress it into the
scant space available beneath the
New York streets. One cable now-
in use, developed only four years
ago, contains, within a sheath’ only
'two and five-eights inches in dia- . , ,
o supposedly Christian land.
, The present administration has
such cable overhead, as in the old legally looted the treasury of bil-
days, would require thirteen poles, lions in tax refunds to wartime
each with twenty-eight cross arms, profiteers, and in loans to so-
each cross arm carrying ten wires called big business to bolster up
As for the subways, when the the value of its speculative hold-
mileage now under construction is ings.
"completed, the city will have ap-...
proximately 1,075 running track and homeless veteran comes
miles—exclusive of yard and side ine
trackage—more than the distance
between New York and Chicago.
starts like this: “Go to now, ye
rich men, weep and howl for your
miseries that shall come upon you."
What for does the millionaire want |
more money than he needs? He
can’t take it to hades with him. ,
when he goes. Here is his article. '
as expressed in The Grant's Pass
Daily Courier. Voice Briefs:
Hoover, the Great Humanitarian.
The recent action of President
Hoover in driving from Washing-
ton, our homeless veterans, with
their wives and children, should
be condemned by every fair-mind-
ed citizen regardless of political
affiliation.
I. J. BURNS
Attorney - at - Law
GENERAL PRACTICE
OFFICE, ABNEY BUILDING.
Brady, Texas
WM. W. McEthannen
Graduate
Chiropractor-Masseur
$ Ten Years’ Experience.
Office Over Wilensky’s.
Phone 466.
Arts Hospital at Brownwood fol-
lowing a tonsil operation.
Friends of Robert McCarty will.. - —
regret to learn of his death. The meter, 3,636 individual wires. To
news came in a letter from his son support the contents of just one
Marvin McCarty, to relatives here,'
that his father was buried at
Tuscon, Arizona, August 17th.
The inany friends and relatives
in this and adjoining communities
were much grieved to learn of the
sudden and unexpected death of
Mrs. J. P. Matlock of Richland
Springs Monday morning. Her
passing leaves a void that cannot
be filled and the sincere sympathy
of everyone goes out to Mr. Mat-
lock and Elsie and Ethel, her im-
mediate family and to her other
loved ones who will miss her quiet
loving influence in so many ways.
Funeral services were conducted
for Mrs. Matlock at the Holt
cemetery Tuesday morning in the
presence of a large crowd. The
many beautiful floral offerings
showed in a small way the great
love in the hearts of her friends
for the quiet, unassuming little
woman who had spent her life in
kindness to others and the many
It was an act more in keeping
with the American concept of
some Oriental despot, than of the
Christian chief executive of this
UP
ings.
But when the hungry, ragged
BENHAM HAS INTERESTING
OFFER FOR LADIES
W. S. HANCOCK
CHIROPRACTOR
X-Ray Service
FREE
Brady National Bank
Building
Phone 408
friends present tried to show by
their presence and their loving
greetings the great sympathy felt
toward Mr. Matlock and the girls
in their time of trial.
Mrs. Billie Sansom had her
tonsils removed Tuesday afternoon
at Medical Arts Hospital. She
stood the operation unusually well
anA ;. W.AAA 411 1 .at ala
€*4**4 4y 4M AVPUY vOV out **** ******
a speedy recovery and feel much
benefited from the operation.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Finnigan
and Mrs. Finnigan’s mother, Mrs.
Alley were in the Fife community
Sunday.
Doyle Cates and J. T. Galloway of
Rochelle were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Jud Bratton.
Howey Crothers of Memphis,
Tenn., is visiting friends at Mer-
l cury this week.
Benham’s Beauty Parlor has a
most interesting offer for the
ladies the first three days of next
week in a free scalp treatment or
manicure with each shampoo and
set at 50c. This offer is made pos-
sible by reason of Mr. Benham
having secured the services of Miss
Eva Niland to assist in the beauty
shop, thus assuring two operators,
with prompt service and the most
up-to-the-minute of beauty aids.
Miss Niland was trained in the
Marinello School in Chicago, and
for two years was engaged in
traveling for the Nestle LeMur
Permanent Wave Machine Co. She
will be here several days giving
new ideas in wave sets, and will
be glad to give patrons of Ben-
ham’s Beauty Parlor the benefit
of her knowledge and experience
Incidentally, Miss Niland has been
trained as special make-up artist
and is in position to advise the
ladies in their make-up of cosmet-
ics.
That’s A Suggestion
You think the land has gone
wholly effeminate and then you re-
flect happily that nobody yet serves
whipped cvream on hot dogs.—Bob
Quillen, Boston Transcript.
LOOK
at these
7 QUALITY
FEATURES!
Why be satis-
fied with a sec-
ond-choice tire
when FIRST-
i choice costs no
more?
. Latest Improved Lifetime Guaranteed
GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY
SUPERTWIST CORD TIRES
RI-tnis i Cash Prices
Full Oversize—4.40-21
$40 49
Tube 9o
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$13.90 per set
Full Oversize—4.50-21
$ y 83
Tube 91c
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EACH
in Pairs
$15.32 per set
Fuil Oversize—4.75-20
Tube 9le
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57
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Full Oversize—5.00-20
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_______to1
Washington to beg for payment |
of a just and acknowledged debt I
when its payment is most des-
perately needed, he is coldly in-
formed there is nothing there for
him. The treasury is empty.
And the great humanitarian,
the man who fed starving Bel-
gium during the war, drives the
starving American veteran of that
war with his wife and children |
from the capital of the land that
he offered his life in defense of.
Hurries him out like he was poi-
sonous vermin to the mercy of
the open countryside, with bomb ..
and torch and bayonet.
And official Washington lifts
hands in holy horror when it dis-
covers that a few, just a few, of
the poor, hungry devils, are
actually tainted with radicalism.
C. L. ROGERS,
Box 381, Grants Pass, Ore.
0. I. C. U. R RIGHT.
Even Tho Changeable
“I wonder if von will love me
1 Lifetime Guar-
" anteed.
A Goodyear name
and house flag
on sidewall.
9
• Full oversize.
4Built with
""Supertwist
5
6
7
cord, Goodyear
patent.
Husky, heavy
tread.
Deep-cut trac-
tion.
New in every
TUNE IN
Wednesday, 7 P. M.
Goodyear Radio
Program
SIX or a "PLIES"*
Of the 6 or 8 layers of Supertwist
Cord in this Goodyear, two do
not run from head to bead-
they are really cord breaker
strips and that's what we call
them although some tire makers
call them extra plies.
GOODYEAR
PATHFINDER
4.40-21
s 65
Each
eiin Pre
Single $4.79
Tube $1.03
4.50-21
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Each
win Prs.
Single $5.43
Tube $1.03
5.00-19
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WO Each
S in Prs
Single ••.»$
Tube $1.17
when my hair has turned to gray.”
“Why not? I’ve loved you every
times you've changed color so far.”
Experienced T ge al Avsease Alast ATS WA
To littoguhm :O MEOEEEG
their noses pressed against a bar- - * - * S
ber shop window.
“Gee, Mickey, look at that one!”
said one, pointing to a barber
wielding a singeing taper: “He’s
looking for 'em with a light!”
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RR ADY, TEXAS
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The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1932, newspaper, August 26, 1932; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1667764/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.