The Hondo Anvil Herald. (Hondo, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, January 19, 1940 Page: 8 of 8
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Castroviiie Cullings-:-
l.OCAl PERSONAL ANl) BUSINfSb ITFMS f ROM
ru5' burc.
ISABF.LL KARM. LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE
New* and advertising ei.py for this <-n|n>vn f«r
should be submitted to Miss Harm or mai l’d direct to us
at Hondo not later than Tuesday night of each week. Miss Harm
i* authorised to collect and receipt for *..;y business t<»r tuts pa n*
CASTROVILLK, TEXAS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 16. 15140
ANVIL SPARKS
MAKING THE MOST OF EVERY r
OPPORTUNITY,
By Ralph Underhill
Divertification and Uwitatk Bring
Back Farm'* Productivity.
Many years ago the Henry Kauf
man farm in Conway County, Arkan-
sas was thought to have been worn
owes out. but today, due to the soil con-
servation methods that have been
Stop at the Blue Bonnet Cafe at
Castroville, Texas, for go..d Eats.
Bier rlid Home-made Ice Cream and
Bread Courteous Service. Patron-
ire a home industry and he.p your
home town. Bread for sale at all
stores in Castroville. tf.
Otto Berdele and daughter, Mis.'
Ruby, who recently mover to Kerr-
ville to make their home, spent the
\ .. end 1. ’ie with friends and rela-
tives.
Swing It At The Comet Hop, Sun.
day. Jan. 21. 5 940. at Wernrttej.
r- J»n. Mu, c hy Cuddy Hartman'
Orchestra. A-Jmi»»i in: Gent* 35c
Ladies 15c. Be there.
Miss Gladys Tcndre ar.d Harry
Fpeer of San Antonio spent the week
end with Miss Tondre's pa;, ts, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Tondre, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rogers and
Laughters, Margaret Ann and Eie-
nore, of San Antonio visited Mrs.
Rogers’ uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Lieber, and daughters Tuesday
evening.
Mesdames Hugo Mumme and J. L.
Tondre and Buster Wilkins, who
is home on a twelve days’ visit, at
tended a banquet at the Original
U::;~an Restaurant in San Antonio
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Emil Pursch of Atas-
cosa viaited in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Schmitt here Tuesday.
" and Mrs. Charles Naegelin and
granddaughters, Betty Jean and
I ranees Marie Hood, and giandson,
Louis Naegelin, of San Antonio spent
Sunday afternoon visiting in the
r ' :s Suehs home.
Mrs. Frank Bader and daughter
Ruby of Biry spent the week end as
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gabe
Tschirhart and daughters.
■. A. H. Falkenberg and Charles
Suehs, Jr. were in San Antonio Mon-
day evening visiting August Penkert,
who is seriously ill.
Charles Suehs, Sr., was a business
visitor in San Antonio Tuesday.
Megsre. Harry Hans, August
Schott ^nd Mr. and Mrs. Jui Jagge
were Hondo business visitors Mon-1
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Schott of San
Antonio were Sunday visitors of Mr. i
*nd Mrs. Emil Halbardier.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Naegelin and
daughter Dorothy visited Mr. and I
i'rs. August Mechler at their home:
tear I^aCoste Sunday.
Miss Catherine Tschirhart of San
Attrnio was the week end guest of
> r -nrents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam
'1 .chirhart, and family.
Mrs. Fred Lieber and daughter
-eddie spent the week end in San
♦orrio, the guests of relatives.
i'tr. and Mrs. Elmer Bader of Biry
v 'te the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Cnbe Tschirhart and daughter Sun-
< y-
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hans and
aughters, Leatrice Rose and Jacque-
1 ->e Ann, were in San Antonio Fri-
i >v visiting Mrs. Hans' brother-in-
1 w and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
i -irty, and baby son. Wayne Leon-
trd.
Mrs. Gabe Tschirhart and Haugh-
ty -, Ima Jean, spent Tuesday with
1 ". and Mrs. E. W. Tschirhart at
3 r Medina.
Visitors in the Adolph Ahr home
f ndav were Mr. and Mrs. Allan
1 h ek Nitsch and son, Buddy, of San
Antonio.
* * *
castroville community
CLUB MEETS
The Castroville Community Club
r ■' Thursday evenirg, Jan. 11, 1940
»t the public school. The meeting
‘d to order hv the president.
Mrs. J. F. Schott. The play of De-
cember fifteenth, given by high
fehool students, netted $1-1.05.
The painting of the auditorium
t ftp, instrumental!,v responsible for
the beautification work that s rapid-
ly being accomplished by the club
vo-bers. Misses Vivian Haller, Pa
trie a Suehs and Isabel Karm were
»nnointed to solicit advertisements
for the curtain that the club contem-
1 !■>*' ourchasing in the near future.
Proposal of a plan to complete
payment on the benches secured
from the Lutheran Church was dis-
eu««ed at length.
Proceeds from the box supper and
dunce to be held Sunday night, Jan.
21, will go into the fund to buy
sweaters for the Comet football
squad.
Landscaping the school grounds
with native shrubbery or shrubs from
a nursery offered an interesting dis-
eu'Hnn.
Mrs. J. F. Schott, Misses Alberta
FAVORITE RECIPES.
Besch, Ruth I-awler and Helen Falls
served white cake and coffee to the
members after adjournment. The
club will meet next month on the
eighth of February.
Reporter, Isabel Karm.
* * •
C. Y. O. ORGANIZED
Responding to the plea of their
i aster, Very Rev Dean J. Ler.zen, to
join a Catholic Youth Sodality, twen-
ty-four r.on-sodalists answered the
■•all and attended the business meet-
ing ar.d social of the senior branch
or tie CCIdren of Maw Sodality,
Wednesday night, January 10, at
the parish hall.
This meeting was called to order
hv the president, Miss Isabel Karm,
ar.d opened with prayer by the spirit-
ual director. Rev. Dean L*’nzen.
Other officers include. Patricia
Suehs, vice-pros.; Dorothy Mechler,
see.; Catherine Schmitt, treasurer,
and Isabel! Kami, reporter. Hereaf-
ter the sodality will be known as the
Catholic Youth Organization.
Formulation of plans to stage a
play, the proceeds of which will be
used tij purchase chairs for the hall,
were completed. The definite date
of presentation will take place some-
time in Lent. The members decided
to sing with the school children in
Church on their monthly general
Communion Sunday.
Rev. Dean J. Lenzen introduced
the speaker of the evening, Rev. P.
J. Rubrocks of Honey Creek, spiritu-
al director of the C. Y. 0. of Texas,
who spoke on the organization of the
C. Y. O. and its incalcuable benefits.
His address in part, "The C. Y. O.
was organized in Chicago in 1922.
The one responsible for this vast or-
ganization being Rev. Shield of Chi-
cago. The Catholic Church never
changes its laws, but changes its ap-
plication due to the adaptation of
modem demands. This organization
aids our young men and women in
becoming bettor citizens, gives them
the initiative to take part in civic af-
fairs and trains them for leadership
later on in life. Socially speaking,
the C. Y. O. brings the young unmar-
ried men and women together and
gives them a chance to get acquaint-
ed with each other.’’
Meeting adjourned with closing
praver by Rev. P. J. Roebrocks.
WTiile refreshments of cheese
sandwiches, assorted cookies, hot
chocolate and marshmallows were
served to the fifty-two members dur-
ing the social hour, Misses Helen
Tschirhart and Isabell Karm sang
two popular songs, "South of the
Border" and “Over the Rainbow.”
Hostesses for the evening were
Misses Catherine Schmitt, Patty
Suehs, Bernice and Ruby Tschirhart,
Mary Hoog, Isabel Karm, Laura Mae
Schott and Helen Tschirhart. The
next meeting will be held on Feb. 14,
at 8:00 o’clock.
• • •
DID YOU KNOW—
Continued tf-om First Page
with the smallest income, who prob-
uhly delays going to the dentist or
hesitates to buy a new pair of shoe’s
because he can’t afford it,
Uncle Sam nearly $500!
Some day u start must be made to practiced on this 720-acre farm the
pay the public debt. Paying it will mnd has been remarkably improved,
be painful but less painful than not and the place is returning a profit,
paying it, which is something all of Diversification of crop- and the
us will eventually find out if we production of livestock and their pro
continue to follow the line of least ducts for the market have solved the
resistance. Those who have sub- problem of this apparently wornout
scribed to the belief that we have farm. A small dairy, a large poultry
hern getting something for nothing flock, a large garden, nn on herd for
are due for a rude awakening, and home use, much pasturage for live-
th“ sooner it comes the better off we slock, two trench silos, some general
shall bo.
»_l
I •
D Hanis Doings
M
• i
t
ater
*11(110
und up of Local Personal and Business Items
our regular Correspondent
Miss Josie Rothe
• horn all Items intended for thia column should h«
Wednesday noon of each week vt.^ .d*4|
than
zed to
collect and receipt for money due
Roth.
p»p«
DHANIS. TEXAS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
Mrs. Thom-is Koch and children,
Mrs. Ervin Nester and daughter,
Misses Irene Batot and Mamyedel
In about nine months, at the pres-
SENIORS HONORED
field crops and 100 acres of Bcrmu- in' t'heTomV'of jof"J,nu«n’|
nt. FoMowinjt this, the lUl
ent rate of spending, the debt of the wr.rd making this one of the most
Federal government will reach $45,- profitable farms in central Arkansas.
000,000,000. In 1939 alone, the Cream from 23 milk cows is being
United Ftates spent $3,600,000,000 shipped weekly. Skim-n.dk is fed to
more than it received in taxes. This ;everal hogs. A herd of 120 beef 1 11 rt.ia_
is not due to meager tax receipts, (attic is kept.
but heavy spending. America is While a profitable herd of beef
taxed to the hilt. Our citizens pay cattle and milk
Mr. and Mrs D. L. I^inford and
r. anu airs. r* entertained them with 7 U™
of San Antonio spent tne week jn lh , p,ll iiiV, ,, ,’n * bunco
.................... Prize,
Those visiting in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Batot Sunday were
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tondre and
tors. . I..,, iin, - — .
fophoa
—•- -■-in wun - •
:n the Parish Hall
awarded to Ruth Huser'ilTJ
Zinstneyer for h cl- Jn*
ryn Holliday for
hij-h,
:or«. and
. share ’MS.’S
war expenses are excepted. British Aecuvate record keeping has help- trs and family, Mi. oe a zt n, an
taxes in 1938 took 21.7 per cent of cd wondei fully in working out a Robert Brotze of San An onto,
income; in the same period American profitable program for the Kauf- Mr. and Mrs. laul Weynand
taxes took 22.4 per cent of income, mans. Records are kept so carefully ( aughters of San Antonio^ spent tn^
The present government fiscal that costs can be ascertained at any
situation requires little comment. We time, and profits are easily
will cither economize or go broke.— lated
Gcete Save the Day in
Industrial News Review.
--oOo
Since April 1935, th
Robert Brotze of San Antonio.
1
t
week-end at the home of Mr. and
tabu- Mrs. Hy. Nester.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fillinger of San
Combatting Antonio spent last week end in the
tne members of the
K'rT >h’ir
OBITUARY
The burial of Mis* Mir, n.J
who died in a San Antoni* hod
rriday, tgok place here U,t J
the prcs«i(|
relatives
_ Graat During Rainy Seaion. home of August Koch. _
................. . total sum When rainfall became so frequent Mrs. Joe Reily. Mrs. Jacob Rein- day, January 13, in
of $10,349,125,793 has been appro- in the delta country of eastern Ark- hart and Miss Aggie Reily of Sabinal many sorrowing
printed by the federal pover^ment anifts that keeping cotton and other visited relatives and fnends here .nends.
for relief. Of this amount, $9,632- crops clean was practically impos- Sunday. i Miss Brotze was eitrhtv vim
271,228 has already been disbursed, sible, many farmers used geese to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ney Rteber at the time of her death Shi
All but $480,746,432 of the unexpen- eat the fast growing grass. That it and daughter and Mrs. Ben Hodges nalive of D-Hanis but h
ded balance of $716,854,565 was ob- >s economical and profitable to keep and baby of Silver City, New Mexico, ^an Antonio for fifty -mm *1
ligated. Of the $9,632, 271, 228 thus cotton clean by the use of geese was arrived Tuesday for a visit with their wag scvert>1>. burned whfn l)*,f J
disbursed, $270,740,561.61 was ex- shown by the records of Sam Brice, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rieber. caught fire front a ras h*t I
pended ir. Texas for the following Mississippi county, Arkansas farmer. Mrs. Emma King of Marshall is Christmas E\.-, and the follow!
major purposes: Highways and roads When persons employed to keep the the guest of her sister, Mrs. Annie she sustained a broken arm tJf|
$71,417,913.56; public buildings cotton fields hoed could not cope Haby and brothers, FVitz and Hugo injurjp, being fata: because »
$19,322,921.98; educational projects with the situation, Mr. Price placed Brotze. ! advanced age. She exmred 1
$22,577,858.64; conservation work his flock of 35 geese in the field, Mrs. Henry Poerner returned from (jay morning, January 12 mi
$36,646,462.12. The expenditures for which consisted of 27 acres of cot- El Paso last week after visiting Mr. hodv was brought to B’Har
payrolls in Texas was $127,297,738.- ton. and Mrs. J. F. Finger. 'burial was made in the familvt
21; material and supplies $23, 711,- Besides the quickly growing crab The St. Anthony’s Community thp Hrotzo home at 3 o’clock th™
514.40; equipment $2,034,552.62; grass, so common in the cotton dis- Club met in regular business session |owjn(f afternoon. Reverend W 5
construction, maintenance and repair trict, Mr. Price’s farm also has much Friday afternoon, Jan. 12, at the ct John’s I utheran Thurri, c ”
$C,664,259.53. Included in the Texas Johnson grass. The geese rapidly Parish Hall. Fourteen members jonio p#rforTTle() the last ni«"
expenditures: $125,798,050.31 for devoured the Johnson grass, and Mr. were present. Reports of standing pajj1 betrers
the Works Progress Administration, Price estimates that besides meeting committees were heard. The Fr**'- Reinhart Albert Nester id
$27,418,957.10 for the Farm Sceur- an emergency situation, $40.50 was dent, Mrs. Louis Carle, Jr., appoint Rotb.. k'irb‘ . ‘ i.,„i
ity Administration. No wonder that saved from the labor bill. ed Mrs. Eric Rothe as chairman of a (;rjffjn Adair ?
when asked for an opinion of the The geese ate grass 16 hours daily, committee to have new playground. Surviving Mis* Rent™ *»
Roosevelt administration, a Demo- both during dry and wet days. The equipment installed. The hostesses te^s Mrs Vmma Kin? of Mr!
cratic statesman of the old school fowls cost very little for feed for January announced a Keno party Mr,' «in„ R' iK. nf "
up wiih the statement: throughout thb year, as Nlr. Price for Sunday January 21, at the Par- nie Haby of DHanis Mr»
ish Hall.
That Supt. Albert Vance of the
Castroville public school has taught
the almost identical Jagge twins,
Stanley and Sterley, for two years,
not successive lyears though, and
cannot tell them apart. The majority
of people never know to which one
they are speaking.
* ' • *
Miss Helen Tschirhart, a lovely
blonde who clerks in her father’s
store, has a lovely singing voice. Hel-
en’s voice could be trained to sing
blues songs because she sings such
numbers very well.
• * *
ZION'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
SUNDAY, JAN. 21, 1940
Engliih Pickle*.
(Delicious, and easy to prepare, and
keen indefinitely.)
Pick fresh, small cucumbers each
day while they are in season, wash
ltd DRY them thoroughly and drop
in'o the following mixture, which you
hrfvo poured into a stone jar, with a
Well-Dtting lid. Keep the pickles in
a cool, dark place, and lit1 sur-e to
eover well, after dropping them in.
ench day Use tlx vinegar "as is".
Sk) not hent.
Mixture.
J gallon good cider vinegar.
A*lb. bruised Ginger Root. (Use a
eU- n, dry hammei to bruise the
Gu -or Root.)
u lb. dry mustard.
'4 lb. aalt
2 or while mustard seed
l,or black peppet
9:00 A. M. Sunday School and
Bible classes.
10:00 A. M. English Divine service
The Luther League will have v
hort business meeting right after
service this coming Sunday. Leaguers-
please attend.
On Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 24
1940, the Castroville Lutheran La
dies Aid Society will meet it) the
Fuos building at 2 P. M. sharp, for
heir regular monthly meeting.
Please get ready to go to churrh.
Sunday, Jan. 21, 1940, will be a fine
'ime. You are most cordially invited
to any and all services of the Zions
Lutheran Church of Castroville.
“Worship Regularly, Reverently,
:n the Lord’s House on the Lord's
Day," is our slogan. Please try it.
It is good for anybody. The pastor
has a message for you. Come and
hear him, please.
The Church with a welcome.
A. H. FALKENBERG, Pastor
—Mrs. Gertrude T. Heinen, Brew-
ster, New York
English Tea Wafer*.
Cream together half rupful butter,
j one cupful of brown sugar and one
unbeaten egg. Sift one and a half ,
cupfuls of flour with half teaspoon :
full of baking powder and At t.ea-
spoon salt, add to the sugar and hut- |
ter mixture v it It one rupful of clean-
ed currants. Stir well, then drop
.from the end of a teaspoon on a but-
tered linking <hcet, sift n little gran-
ulated sugar over the enkes and bake
a golden brown in a moderately hot,
| nven. Elite Wilcox Burt, Olympia,
Wash
DEGREE.
summed it up wilh the statement: throughout thb
“It’s spending too damn much mon- keeps them in his corn fields and
ey“. other crops. The geese d* their
-oOo- work thoroughly, seldom stray from
In the opinion of that great Texas the field and rest only about one
daily newspaper, The Galveston hour each day.
News, “the basic problem of the cot- Co-operative Poultry Production Plan
ton industry is inability to find mar- Prove* Profitable to Aggie
kets and consumers for what is pro- College Youth*
BENDELE-WALTON
Haby
j Metzger and Mrs. Hettie Wipff|
San Antonio; and four brot
, Fritz and Hugo Brotze of D’H
Charles Brotze of Marshall, and |
nest Brotze of San Antonio.
BRIDGE CLUB
A quiet wedding of interest to
many friends here was that of Miss
Rubye Rae Walton of Sabinal, daugh-
duced, or lather inability to find con- A co-operative poultry raising pro- ter of Mrs. Ira Davenport, and Amos
sumers with money to buy it at a gram for F. F. A. vocational training Bendele, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. On Tuesday afternoon of last
price which will return to the pro- students and night agricultural class- George Bendele of O’Han is. The Mrs. Henry Biry was hostess to
dueer a profit’’. Obviously, then es in the vicinity of the Junior Agri- marriage took place at Sabinal in tables of players At the close of
the solution is an exchange of com- cultural College was worked effect- the home of Reverend Kirk, who per- games Mrs. A J. Finger held
modifies. Farmers have told this ively among farm youth of White formed the ceremony at 4 P. M., score and Miss Tina Rothe lot
writer that so long as a pound of cot- county, Arkansas, and could be car- Thursday, January 1 1, 1940. The John Richer received the conul
ton will buy a pound of bacon a cot- ried out as profitably elsewhere. Ar- attendants were Miss Frances Grif- prize and Miss Cornelia Koch
ton farmer can feed his “nigger*” rangement was made whereby the fin and Fritzie Bendele. The young holder of the traveling prize,
and make money raising cotton no farm girls and boys obtained 5,000 couple are at home on the F. J. Rothe A delicious salad course
matter the selling price of the com- purebred baby chicks from a nearby Ranch near D’Hanis. i served. Others present were
modity in dollars and cents. Upset hatchery on a strictly co-operative -----dames John Zlnsmeyer, Herman
that balance and you make his prof- basis. years ago Robert has taken short jjena Ijangfield, Ferd Rock,
its uncertain or nil. And we know For each 100 chicks received, the courses at the University of Illinois Kocb Frjf Jtcthe, Ben Koch, ini
one farmer who bought and paid for youth returned 60 pounds of broilers an<* at Cornell University, with suf- ^ Zinstneyer.
two good farms during the Cleve- or about 20 broilers. Thus all pullets ficient time to start a stock farm of ’ ______
land low-price era who has trouble were left in hands of the students own . . . Strange that so many
now in raising the taxes on these who raised them and some broilers adventures can be crowded into
same farms. Doesn’t solution He were also marketed, too. Thus the twenty-four years!
along these lines rather than hunting vocational students got a start of ----
“cash buyers"—or even some purebred hens and made enough A NEW DANCING HABIT.
“chemurgic" fabrication to help the profit to help them continue their ed-! - |
farmer? . ucation. Some of the girls and boys The Top Hatters with their shuffle
---oOo-- were so elated at their initial success I rhythm
Clayton Rand of the Dixie Guide ‘ that they will continue in the poultry Have the whole country shuffling
is worried. Says he; “Indications industry. with ’em; |
point to a bumper crop of wild black- -::- It seems as though their leader, Jan I
berries and we are getting up a peti
'ion to see if Henry W. Wallace, U.
S. Secretary of Agriculture, can’t
’urtail it. * * * More berries mean
more birds and more birds fewer
worms. Fgwer worms mean more
corn and cotton and more corn and
•otton means the inevitable plenty
tnd poverty * * * We plow under
"otton, corn and cane, burn black-
berry briars and kill birds—we sub-
idize crops, control production and
dumo surpluses, but it looks like
nothing can save us hut a dearth.
We are the only people so blest that
"0 prav for a famine in the land, not
‘hat we may share our wealth, but
hat we may share our poverty."
---oOo--—
The available school fund
ROBERT ROMACK
By Sam Mini*
The Romack farm was six miles
from the high school at Slidell, Illi-
nois, scarcely sufficient distance to
warm the motor of a modern auto-
mobile—if you have the automobile.
But to ride a pony twelve miles each
day, especially during winter months,
is rather taxing on a youthful body.
Savitt,
Has started a new dancing habit j
tV ith this tuneful new swing style
creation
That is simply swiftly sweeping
across the nation.
—DALE GUHL '
I XI
am
Where’er
Perhaps washing, dishes in a res- j l aT? '®~ . .
taurant and getting for such labor „n.<),waore 18 * ,
your food, lodging, laundry and one ' CVer aWUy fr°'n the
dollar a week, is not making note- j utner’
worthy advances toward ^education I
or financial security. However, when
Robert abandoned the pony and sad- i
(die in favor of the restaurant job he!
has believed he had made a step toward !
-EDITH ANISFIELD WOLF.
Of Course
1’aul: “Can any of you school girl.-,
profited to the sum of $3 969,716.83 P,.mc far-away goal. Itel! nu’ what a mandate is?”
from the liquor traffic in Texas dur- Being a hired man on a farm dur-1 Jane; “Yes, sir, an appointment
mg the three-year period ending in ng. summer months has never been with a gentleman."- Atlanta Two
November 1938. When this editor (considered a sinecure, but ’uch work Bells
was a boy in school a large portion was more in tine with Robert’s am-1.. ’___
of his physiology book was taken up bition than standing over a kitchen i
in describing the evil effe 's of liquor sink. Having finished high school'
on the human anatomy, including— |,e planned to work on the farm until!
that now seemingly soi ree portion he could find some agricultural col-1
--the brain! In this era of higher lege that was willing to exchange ed-1
learning(?) the most important part ucation for hard work,
of a youngster’s training, including He was accustomed to the friend-!
our girls, and paraphrasing the iy attitude of farm folk and partial-1
“first lady”, is "to learn how much iariv enjoyed the motorcycle rides!
liquor she can carry”. Presumably wjt^ a young neighbor. One even-
It's Interesting
and Profitable
to Know Your
Texas
Businessmen, teachers,
dents, farmer- everrone
terested in the state "h■ •,
much helpful
1939-1940 edit. ; of Tit I
as Almanac and State
al Guide. Whether the qu«
i* history, it-
population, government, OT
trade, athletic records J
day of the week on «hi h
were born, the wer j»-
found in thi v ' ‘ ,
,h:; bSr“£*■nSj
buy.
Hi --T“
OUR SPECIAL
jARMER’S BARGAIN
this important knowledge is to be ae- jnjfi after many hours of labor in the
FARMING,
1 Know
Mother knows heat
But Grandma knows better!
EDITH ANISFIELD WOLF,
quired by the truly Rooseveltian hay field, the friend came riding up
“trial by error method - without to the farm house, whistled a call to
ever admitting error! Robert, and they were soon streaking
--°0°---- down the highway.
The presumption that organized Fifteen minutes later they were
society owes any one more than pro- lying helpless on the roadside where
tection from unwarranted interfer- a hit-and-run driver had left them,
ence in the pursuit of his own right- For five hours Robert lay there semi-
ful affairs is destructive of society conscious, with a broken hone pro-
itself. When organized society fails truding through flesh and skin, won-
to accord that protection to its humb- dering why his left leg v.as curlod
les* members to that extent it has and twisted about his hip,
failed. When organized society, in He spent twelve months in a hos-
tile person of whatever government pit al with infection in that broken
agency it functions, becomes subver- hone, begging doctors not to nmpu-
sive of this function by creating tate It is leg. In spite of pain and a
special privileged classes, it ceases to di-mu! vision of the future, Robert
be government in the rightful sense fad and studied many hours nf each
of the term and becomes a “racket", day, not knowing that he wa- espec
Apply this Democratic “yard ..tick" ill pit paring him. . If [oi the job
to present trends in government and of Managing Editor of THE AMEkI-1
what have you? CAN FARM YOUTH, a magazine!
. that !« . ’roiiiated among th" H’-
fot new* TURK FARMERS OF AMERICA
III
our monthly rural
home journal, three $ 1 00
yaar* for X —
Semi-Weekly Farm New*,
a Texa* newspaper for the
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HONDO. TEXAS
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Texas’ greatest reference
PRICE: 65c a W
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Davis, Fletcher. The Hondo Anvil Herald. (Hondo, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, January 19, 1940, newspaper, January 19, 1940; Hondo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth563325/m1/8/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hondo Public Library.