The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 85, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 21, 1947 Page: 2 of 8
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vn -you
DEAD
I
| Gallup poll that they are satis-
' Tied with the progress made by
and
( J:
group
,’l
J
&
A
everywhere
CUBES
To EWES Before and
During Lambing Time
Manufactured By
Farmers-Ranchers
17
10
£
'1 ,
will have
28.
Totals
13
at
24
Patients entering Brady
Bos--
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n hi h
Why Be Without Hot Water?
EVANS DELUXE AUTOMATIC
i
KEROSENE OIL BURNING
WATER HEATERS
i
Gives gallons and gallons of piping hot water. Intense
I
volume flame when heating demands are heavy. Ix>w
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Feed 20%
HEART-O-TEXAS
Co-op
Brady. Texas — Phone 157
FT
1
0
0
0
0
1
The
homes
afraid to go
Dismissals Saturday and
day from Brady Hospital
Belle
Grace
olyn
Brady
Their
FT
0
2
1
0
0
0
*
Mr.
sons
Guns And Cycles
Bought, Sold And
Repaired.
WESTERN GUN &
CYCLE SHOP
THE WESTERN AUTO
STORE
Brady. Texas
BUICK AND DIAMOND T DEALER
Conveniently Located At 607 W. Commerce
Phone 214 Brady, Texas
When Better Automobiles Are Built, BUICK Will
Build Them.
I
FG
6
3
6
1
0
0
1
FG
4
4
o
0
1
or
Angelo for reservations.
x<rr« E of dissolution
Mr.
Fife,
and 1
and |
and j
We’ll install a new factory-built Buick engine “Power
Package”—in one simple operation.
I
Rudder and all demands on
I said partnership are to be
sented to him for payment.
Frank Corder
J. Ear] Rudder
At U. S. Delegation headquar-
i a
i group sitting around a I
horseshoe-shaped table the other1
\T SAN FRANCISCO—
Special To National
nay Wool Growers’ Meet
and the past two weeks'
Corpus Christi. Mrs. J. M. |
Jones and little daughters. Car-1
and Marilyn, returned 1
with
----STANDARD AND HEART O’ TEXAS NEWS. READY,TEXAS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 21. 1947
' Ehrler
[ Williams
Wise
White, T.
Norton
White, W.
(UNSKINNED)
OR DISABLED
ANIMALS
REMOVED FREE
CALL COLLECT
PHONE 59C*/
PROMPT SERVICE
Gregory Rendering
Company
TP
12
13
14
A
0
0)
2
—
44
NEW SPEAKER -Rep. W.
D. Reed of Dallas, was elect-
ed Speaker of the Texas
House of Representatives as
the Legislature organized in
Austin. (AP Photo).
TP
9
8
4
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2 1
5
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SS I
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1
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i
I
I
KI
'A REAL LAXATIVE
FOR ACTIVE FOLKS!
You caft’t enjoy living when you’re
be!v** per, sluggish. and headachy be-
cauu you need a laxative. Get really
thorough relief with RAMON’S Pink
Palls. Not one—but four laxative* in
one. combined for extra-eflectivenea*.
Caution; U*e only aa directed. More
than 12 million packages sold——an old
stand-by of active folks for over 70
years. Buy RAMON’S Pink Pills, with
satisfaction guaranteed or your money
back, wherever you see the picture of
RAMON’S LITTLE DOCTOR, your
friend when you need a friend.
< RA.GB TWO ------------=
Mr. and Mrs. N. I.. Smith uf’
WrttSr tre rejekrfag- o’.c. the rate
arrival of a daughter at Brady|
Hospital last Tuesday.
Goodgion of Calf Creek
has been a patient at Brady Hos-
pital since last Tuesday. J. C.
Deeds of Placid was admitted the
•ante day.
It’s easier and cheaper in the long run than part-by<
part replacement, and it makes your Buick as good as
new as far as engine performance is concerned. The
cost is a lot less than you might think —come on in
and ask us about it. And if you like, we’ll arrange fof
easy payments to suit your budget.
BARTON MOTORS
voices j
in
I
On these cold, wet. muddy days
your children just can’t keep
clean. And there is nothing you
can do about it, except to know
that your cleaner is reliable and
prompt. . . Bring, not only your
children’s clothes but the rest of
program i
Association
essential to safer communities.
“The Legion believes that the
addition of 200 men for the Texas
Highway Patrol is necessary. At j
high speed motorists
—s are making
death corridors of rural common-
Hun-
were
Mrs. H. C. Allsup and baby of
Junction, Mrs. J. C. Bush of Pla-
cid, Mrs. C. M. Abbott of Men-
ard, W. A. Parker and Mrs. J. C. I
Fnew engineX
r narlarMniifa I \
penormance ror i
n • l_ 1
I DUiCKS /
L1937 thru 1942/
Al
i in im iim— 4 msjrwotfax'i
BOARD CHAIRMAN—M.
Riley Wyatt of San Antonio,
is the new chairman of the
Texas Prison Board. (AP
Photo).
can actually give you magnificent new-Buick
engine performance right in your ’37, ’38, ’39,
’40, ’41, or ’42 Buick.
■ Rickman
Whiteley
Jay
Pennington
Lewallen
Jacobson ...
'Campbell .
1 Totals...
I Coleman
“It believes that driver license
driver
administration and for
Patrol—not
Insured Trucking
All Points In Texas
Ray Burger
Tel. 915 or 435
pre- )r see at Lett Auto Service
HAVE BULLDOZER AND
TRACTOR
For Building Tanks Or
Pushing Brush
| Coleman B,sqmursUge<ralburthithis stfaitger might ■veil be one
;5UaBerS -° rtSC°r‘\Jh\? % expt^ed 4the ^in^onTa recenJjjor
dy B stringers by a score of 3b * H I ”
Ito 23. This game was a nip and'
tuck affair with the lead chang- i
ing hands several times in the
first three periods. W. White led |
the Bluecats in the scoring par-j
ade with 13 points, while Leach
of Brady was high man for the
losers with eight.
i Box score on the main event:
Brady
Kids Can’t
keep
CLEAN
DOGS HACK UP
THIRD t-A WIN
Jay Leads Mates In
Turning Back Coleman
Thursday Night. 44-28
Racking up their third win in
four starts in District 8-A play,
the Brady Bulldogs turned back i
the Coleman Bluecats here Thurs-1 Jne - -
dav night bv a score of 44 to 28 he hvea in Philadelphia. He works iers on 57th Street there was
• . . • . . _ i____ 'i ____________ I irrnim uittimr urann/l
Dr. anil Mrs. Wm. Jones
have returned from a two
' months' stay on the Gulf Coast.
They spent two weeks during,
the holidays visiting W. C. |
Jones. Jr., and family in 1
town, and the past two wj?eks[
in Corpus Christi. Mrs. J.
9
a
••
World tariff negotiations in
Geneva to be bast’d on reciprocity.
Out-u'-towM K-nklt-iiu, in-re 1m»l
week to attend the fuaerai for
Mrs. A. H. Broad were Mr. and
Mrs. Toni Holmsley of Comanche,
Oran Ballou and Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Ballou, of Albuquerque, N.
Mex,, Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Flack
of Menard, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
S. Martin of San Antonio,
Mrs. E. L. Guyton of
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Broad
and Mrs. Janies Col?
of Fort Worth, Mr.
Mrs. Ben Cox and daughter and
Mrs. Belie Broad of Coleman,
Mrs. Grace Shaw and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Broad of Brownwood.
Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Reardon. Mrs. |
Jim Brown and Mrs. Gus Hau of
Mason, L. P. Cooke of Corpus,
and Marvin Churchill of Sterling.
and (
to | Angelo, via special train, on Jan-
them Wednesday. 1 uary 24. f
son. James, spent Sunday
here and returned with his fam-
ily to Corpus Christi Sunday
evening.
ed to permit sight-seeing in the
Los Angeles area.
The delegation will leave Los
Angeles by special train 7:00 A.
M., February 2, and return to
San Angelo,’ 4:00 P. M„ Febru-
ary 3. Officers of
Sheep
tion n
hotel reservations are still avail- eliminate the long wait and heavy I
abie and urge interested parties charges for visas . . . About 20,-
to contact the Association office 000,000 words were spoken during i
__I Assembly sessions. •
[ This is equivalent to 200 hefty
. But that’s not all—these
I words had to be translated into
' , English, Spanish, Rus-'
their native lands because of ,.9Ae8ecj5e Austin,
fears and
t to
but have
or means to live.
back >»y i,s Commander Bertram I
f v n,“““»ke of Austin.
the latter. | “The Executive Committee off
go back to the Legion officially approved
nowhere blueprints for an action program
, to be carried out in every Legion
i Post,” said Giesecke. “The Amer-
. lean Legion, for one. has declar-
ed war against this traffic mur-
der.
“Too many of our veterans
have returned from the hell of
, , .l i . war to die on our peaceful streets I
for our goods. While thousands of and highways. The Legion he-
people are kept in DP (displaced Heves that the ‘ - - I
HsIIow&y and A. l. Juhuion q£
Brady, and II. J. Morgan of Ft.
McKavett.
! __
highways. The Legion
, - , ------ —. ...j enactment of the
( persons) camps, the ecenomy of siX-point legislative program of
, Europe is unstable and thus so is the Texas Safety Association is
i the market for our goods. She
! said further that people are de- i
teriorating in these camps—that
j there is nothing constructive for
| them to do—there is no regular- present, high c,..
| ity to their lives when they live and drunk drivers
i in uncertainty and unhappiness,
separated from families and ities and open highways. So long
i homes and wondering if their vil-] as
lages are still there, and if they men
a chance to go back
to help rebuild what’s left. She in-
) dicated that many of the displac-
j ed persons hesitate to go back i
to their native lands for these ec-
onomic reason? as well as some |
who are afraid for political rea-
sons.
I ALSO . . . When UNRRA offer-
ed sixty days rations to displaced , in the trial of the drunk dri-j
‘ and
i?, J
k -
jh j
January’ 24, and arrive
I pital Thursday were M. T. Hay- j Francisco, 8:30 A. M.,
I wood of Pear Valley, Mrs. Car-126.
son Durbon of Junction, and Ber-' . = --
nice, daughter of Mr. and - _
H. G. Ewing of Brady. gation will travel by Southern curity Council, begins in Athen, I
----- — — ! Pacific Coastwise train to I *
H| Angeles. Hotel and other arrange-1 Neck, Long Island,
ments have been made in L_.. 7
Angeles to accomodate the entire 1 located, had
1---- . ^v. *.» w. * ... W J. V. - . — - ^..1. .... aww ■
tion of the trip has been arrang-1 cooperated in entertaining secre-!this causp of «aTe7’Tpv»?
attending a large .community gath-
ering with top-name speakers ...1 gr
The UN is trying to simplify
passport regulations to make in-
ternational travel easier. Experts '
Officers of the Texas ■ representing all fifty-five mem
and Goat Raisers’ Associa- ber nations will meet in Geneva
lave announced that rail and in March to try to plan ways to
On Traffic Murder
Official declaration of war a-
i made
Whiteley had an
night from the free throw line,
scoring seven points on
chances.
Ehrler was high scorer
Coleman with nine points, clolely
followed bv Williams, who got |
Hsb.t- . .. . that
The baby of Mr. anil Mrs.
Claud" Turner of Melvin, and L.
H. Carter of Santa Anna were
admitted to Brady Hospital,
Sunday.
this
in muni iiiane any uiucrt'iire, •••••.» One ot the tre-
exceptional where the headquarters are. He mendously important tasks of the
,,,,v ' volunteered further that to have UN is to work out further de-
eight ’he UN in the City of Brotherly tails of the IRO to take over the
I Love would certainly have meant settling of the plight of the thou-
for much to his business opportuni- , sands of displaced persons in
ties, but he’d rather not waste Europe. This situation will be left
time thinking of that. He was high and dry when UNRAA’s ac-
i ■ . . - | primarily concerned with the hope tivities end this spring unless the
I e. 1 oil that people everywhere would necessary 15 countries sign the
, t 1 U « 1 rever learn to understand the UN and IRO constitution and pledge the ■ j • ■ x iWnv
n.I )h outcome v a. ne r inijts Operations. I needed funds to carry on opera- I/6(LirCS <IF
. . .. I It’s possible to conclude that tions. The U. S. signed, contin-'p' “*••
In the preliminary bou , *■ . i... gent upon congressional approval.------------
Briefly, the IRO faces two ma-j C.'.;.
problem resettlement and soinat traffic murder was
■ repatriation. The former deals, ^his week by the American Le-1
, with finding homes for those kion in a statewide radio address I
people who are
to t
political
j those who want
i their homes ’ ’
there to live
As Mrs. Roosevelt pointed out,
the money our country would
pledge for the IRO could not be
considered just for charity, but
rather for our own economic wel-
fare in that Europe is a market
able and urge interested parties charges for visas . . . About 20,-
the Santa Fe Railway of Sen 1 the General
By Eleanor Mitchel 1
New York . . . The man on the'fied with the
! Washington train sitting beside the UN.
the Coleman Bluecats here Thurs-1
day night by a score of 44 to 28
The home team was paced by (With a . , ,
Center Donald Jay, who scored When I asked him if Philadephia
six field goals and three free peeved with New York (Phila-
throws for a total of 14 points. He'Helphia wanted the UN headquar-
was pushed for high point honors, | ters there) his answer was in the
however, by two teammates, White-1 negative because, he pointed out,
ley. who’ score 13 points, and I “I think the United Nations is the
Rickman, who was credited w’ith 'only hope of the world and that
12. lit didn’t make any difference
Whiteley
volunteered further that to have UN is to work out further de-
rate of 1000
llCsl 1’ BlVvIlU LIIL cllJlHlcll J LIlv I > 111 j I vUIlli j wllllll llc»?v
Wool Growers Convention in San I started negotiations to bring dis- license
making arrangements ^Or purposes totally unrelated to
traffic control.
“The Legion believes that a
Controlled Access Highway Law
is necessary to permit safer en-
try into and departure from heav-
ily travelled highways.
“The Legion believes that driv-
er education and driver training
courses should be adopted in the
curricula of our schools.
| “Texas can control traffic mur- ‘
der If the majority of law-abiding I
citizens will make their vc*
i heard, and their actions felt.
tanat members at dinner and in !
i1 *y*1 *11!**1 yy
the | the juvenile traffic violator,
a day . . . Brazil <
to attend the National is the only country which has ! fees should be used for
Francisco, California. The special placed peoples into their borders. ! the Texas Highw-ay
Santa Fe train consisting of pull- They are i....„i..^,
man cars, observation and diner,' for 30,000 . . . Mark Ethridge of
will leave San Angelo, 4:30 P. M., Louisville, Kentucky, will be chief
oa —i -—:—, jn gan u. S. representative on the UN
January commission which investigates the
I Greek complaint against Albania,
Following close of the Conven- Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. The
Mrs. tion, January 31, the Texas dele- commission, appointed by the Se-
1——i will travel by f ----'---------”, ,
Pacific Coastwise train to Los. Greece on January 30 . . , Great
', where Lake
Los i Success headquarters for UN are
la big welcome ob-
party until February 2. This por- servance for UN. All its citizens
I secre-
during the holiday rush said
large oil company there, i small
day listening to Mrs. Franklin D. j
Roosevelt talking about the IRO
—the International Refugee Or-
ganization. I sat there too, and
was impressed anew with the j
competence and charm of t...„
lady diplomat.
sitting
Texas has only 250 patrol-
to cover 26.000 miles of
state highways, these death
corridors will continue to exact
their ghastly toll.
“The Legion believes that the I
adoption of a Model Traffic Code
for uniform traffic regulations :
is essential to safe travel.
I “The Legion believes that more
certainty of punishment is need-
- — — o laiivno iv uirjuay vvi «•
Approximately 125 Texas sheep peoples returning to their home- I yer< Gie hit-and-run driver
goat raisers will leave San lands, Poles moved back
I r\ inn az> i o 1 ♦ wo t am I n 1 1 fADd <> zlnn
which
' novels.
Notice is hereby given that the ' Frdnch
Rudder, of McCulloch County, SHence not K0,aen-
Texas, under the firmyname of
“Corder-Rudder”, was dissolved
by mutual consent, on the 1st
! day of January. 1947. All debts
owing to the said partnership are
• to be received by the said J. Earl
the
A. H. BROAD FARM
MACHINERY CO.
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cleaning
pressing.
money. Automatic operation. No fuss, no personal at-
tention needed. Self contained for quick, easy installa-
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111
the
pilot fire at all times to conserve fuel and save you
family’s to us for expert
i
Brady, Texas
Phone 103
We Guarantee All Our Work .. .
Pick-Up and Delivery Service, Phone 474
City Cleaners
. w*
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i
204 E. Commerce St.
2 Doors East of Brady National Bank
i
215 S.
How
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FAM
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But
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Brai
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Buta
Cook
Heat
Som
ever
ernu
aiome
Siutien
visiting i
inestors ]
\Va>ne I
Engdahl
Cardul. mi
lief from t
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llk» » ton
- aid C
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DR.P
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ROOFINS
*
t
Brady, Texas
i
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A Variety Of
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Colors And
Patterns On Hand
You Select the Roofing—We Apply It
Terms If Desired
Call Brady Morris
PUEBLO ROOFING & SALES CO.
Phone 446
SHINGLES...
ROLL
BUILT-UP
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Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 85, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 21, 1947, newspaper, January 21, 1947; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357427/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.