The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 64, Ed. 1 Friday, November 7, 1947 Page: 1 of 12
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vol
Friday, November 7,
1917
Whole Number 6641
•V
letter
s
»»
James King of Brady.
I
!k.
a
Iras
Hall and Kenneth Mitchell
room:
i ne
Saturday.
Ruth
WALDINE STINDT
The
has been employed
The
lis;
rvill w
feet gift is the opportunity
year
braith.
ex-
Melvin
derful
"Booger,
FROM NEVADA TO NEW MEXICO—
discussed
*1
i. g.
\BNEY
between
<1
i ho
JSJ*
J
*
rl
I i ady
J. EARL RUDDER, Mayor.
City of Brady.
1 no common
Coleman set
| first
land
rtha
lines
fearer;
School
ling in
on
was
and
dub '
and
Eola
last
good
F red
have
class, Joyce
iy
Rochelle
and
types
Mel-
skir.
>ur-
11.-
Attest:
W. R. MAYSE
City Secretary
Zion
Lake,
Mesa
and Billy Coffman
"A Gal in
Chorus
With third place and last hopes
second place tie in Dis-
rhe Brady
Winters Bnz-
8 IT—
aves
fcnmark
[ to leave his
itnrday. And could grow on their razed farms.
Done by my order and under the official seal of
office.
Blizzards and
Battle For 3rd
Game Starts At 8
The Junior High P-TA on the Court
South T.'.‘—'• " ‘ 1 .
Should the weather be severe.
| the sale will be postponed.
Mrs.
and
' ty
“ has
th-?
isent-
1’enn
r***far *b®ve
| in a
Holt.
feclty
j mistie
1 carnival
BULLDOGS MEET
WINTERS TONITE
Brady
Place;
More than 100 horses are on
hand for the Armistice Day Race
Meet, and July Jubilee, Inc. of-
ficials expect the total to top 120
IL®—
_it .....JU
Gary Schill <
a tonsilectomy at
I’radv’s
Vssociations
from the
held at
scheduled
addition,
will also
WITH SALE SATURDAY—
Mrs. Stowe Celebrates
17 Y ears At Penney’
SOUTHWEST’S
FASTEST HORSES
ARE EHTERED
Three-Day Meet Opens
1:30 Monday; Judges
Named for Affair; FFA
Has All Concessions
' for a
j trict 9-A at stake,
Bulldogs and the
zards will square off in Bulldog
Stadium tonight at 8 p. m. This
is the Bulldog's last home game
of the season.
Both Brady and Winters have
JMr *
I
PROCLAIM 11TH
HOLIDAY HERE
Horse Races Feature
Attraction In Brady;
R.M.A. Stores To Close
t House lawn
$77.10. South Ward i Saturday. November Sth.
I8S.48, North WarC, $36.69. and •
Central Ward, $91.76.
I
i Boyle* and Caffey.
I; Freshman, Young,
d Harold Me- Wanelie
|
Mrs. O. J. Walker able to
return to her home in Menard,
Thursday from Medical and Sur-
gical Hospital.
year's fire loss record in
was only 12.3 l>er cent.
26.9 per <•—- —
erage. .
Mr. Culberson explained
fire insurance i— _
a;
liiroi
jrson
al
dy.
cation and drainage work on the ,
Moapa Valley
been transferred
■
Io Texas next
traveled a-
id spent four
fents in Ben-
t e x."
I "Silver
parents ••Square
include the paternal grandpar- ■ in
ents. Mr and Mrs. Reed Steward jng brought to Brady for the
of Lohn. and the maternal grand-i Armistice meet, the horses stabt-
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Await ed aj the local track will also
of Brady. | be entered in many of the races.
....
MM
’ F
,i1 ■
I
• A
Turkey breeders and growers |
met in a district ineoting at the i
Hotel
J a nes,
Federation, of Austin,
1870, Mr. Abney
his parents to
came
\ ountv. 'r. xas. Three
to Goldthwaite.
until moving to
Indian Territory in 1898. lie
married In Quanah in 1900, and
he and Mrs. Abney lived in In-
dian Territory, which later be-
came Oklahoma, until they mov-
ed to Brady in 1907.
"You’d hardly recognize
Brndy of today from what we saw
when we first came here," Mr.
Abney ^hys. There was no pavinsr
anyplace in town, and on rainy
days the mud around Courthouse
square almost bogged down the
wagons. “But we didn’t have
mud very often." he chuckles.
Il didil "T fa’tn very often then.
(Turn to Page 12, Col. 4. Please)
|L proclaiming it an
L_ ............
Mayor Rudder Proclaims Tuesday, Nov. 11
As Official Holiday In City of Brady
Whereas Tuesday is Armistice Day, one of the
outstanding holidays* of the year as the entire nation
pauses from its labor to celebrate the successful conclu-
sion of the First World War, and
Whereas this is a fitting time to think, and to pray
to the Prince of Peace that wars and strifes
nations jjludl not again rend the earth, and
m order int->.>
their employes ample opportunity to observe such a
worthy occasion, or to otherwise spend a few hours in
reunion and greeting with their friends.
Now. therefore, 1. J. Earl Rudder, as Mayor of the
City of Brady, do hereby proclaim Tuesday, November
11. an official holiday, and I do earnestly request and
urge all places of business to close in observance of this
holiday.
Most Brady stores will be < los-
1 ed all day Tuesday, Armistice
Day. with Mayor J. Earl Rudder
official holi-
i_i_„,, " . Ab-
jvho celebrated ins ninetieth pressed irratitude for
iplain about
itures in the
Jt’s cold spell
Dercury down
B, just don't
Ither is. I G.
Il College, re-
thermometer
zero for a
10 „
will be Ann Joiner. Concho Homo;
Demonstration agent; Mrs. W. 1
Bryson. Rochelle homemaking
teacher, and Tressie Shaver,
Brady homemakng instructor.
Rochelle, Richland
In Important Match
Rochelle and Richland Springs (
will be battling to keep alive last won one and lost one In confer-
knnnfl # •» I’Loi'O I »* * Vt aA 1 I —41 ’ * ’ 1 At- _ T~> 1J _ — _1 _ 1_ —___
won
Billy
were
ushers; Mrs. A. L. Neal was ac-
John Jones,
moved
Mississippi,
to , Hamil-
years
ceremony in-
program in which
lir.<- and second grades pre
ed "Balloon Dance"; Joyce I
a vocal duet.
•••■’ he Girls
blossom
chorus included
Juanita Cun-
Stcwart; ningham, Betty Parrish. Jo Nell
Thelma
Beverly
PT. A. president,
novneements.
The coronation
eluded a
and
“Ben
B," Newman Lowe will bring
"Ginger" and Buck Dentoir.
"Blondy Sis." Other top-flight,
horses to race here are "Wee-
"S c o o t e r," “Buck,”
King." "Booger.” and
H.”
addition to the horses be-
to
day in the city.
Likewise, the McCulloch Coun-
Retail Merchants Association
announced that its member
stores will close for the holiday,
and asks that their patrons plan
their shopping accordingly.
No patriotic celebration is
planned in Brady, with the Ar-
mistice Day race meet sponsored
l.y July Jubilee. Inc., the day’s
leading attraction. Many Brady-
ites are expected to journey to
Coleman to view the Ballinger-
Coleman game which will pro-
bably determine the District 9-A
champion.
; In
*with
and in 1SS5 h..
I ■>>] ------- —
later ho moved
i where he lived
Territory
The exhibit opens at It) a. ’ ’‘
ay. closing at 5 o’clock this /
^8
it
record earn- j pTemiums, insurance buyers
Lnce buyers : ceived a 15 per
L reduction when they buy
| 22 years-
hnetd i
CROWNED TONIGHT—
Waldine Stindt is
s j Brady Grid Queen
.i Waldine Stindt, the daughter1
for sale. Proceeds! of Mr. and Mrs. W. H Stindt. has
be divided between the In-•been elected football queen of I
Brady High School. She will be |
crowned during half-tlmp cere- J
monies at the Brady-Winters
game here tonight.
Many of the horses have won
several races over the state dur-
! ing the present season. Among
expected to1 the top horses to be entered in
1 the. Brady meet are Doc Jobn-
- | son’s "Valdina Ripple," Radliff’»
| "Ranch Rider" and "Sunny.”
Rlfon Inflint Babe Lucas s "Liberty Girl, the
iLllOn Siewdru imam Gordon brothers’ "Thunder.” and
Is Buried At Lohn Mike O’Dougherty’s "Litttle Ma-
Leslie Don Steward, infant son |
of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Elton Ste-
ward of Brady, was buried in ,
Water Line Contract
Awarded To Thornton
The city council met
and awarded a contract to R.
Thornton & Son to lay
1.500 t’eet of 6-inch water
to extend from the power plant
to the city lino adjacent to the
Irish addition.
This is the line which will e-
ventually extend to Brady cem-
>tery and provide added fire pro-
tection for residents of the Villa
Lerdo district west of Brady.
Tb.i' council >iisn approved tor
$ 1
127.02.
but Mr. White said the many-
fast horses in the five purse races
and several match races each af-
ternoon should provide plenty ot
entertainment for all spectators
All concessions Tor the three
days will be operated by Brady
_2 -1— _ ___.• Farmers
10 gallons of punch will be on Of America, under the direction
of J. W. Holcomb, .ocational ag-
of Brady, was buried in .
Lohn cemetery Wednesday after-
noon. The baby was born on
Tuesday and died the following
day.
Survivors besides the
the paternal grandpar-1
edOverj M r.
I Year
Work
Farris, Velma
Engdahl and
Adams. Misses Evelyn
I Patsy Spivey (tjPvisay, assistad by Miss
keventh grade,1 Watson, directed the coronation
[and Edward , ceremonies. The Queen's race
kde. Clydale1 netted the grades about $350.
krd Longley; | The other attractions of the I
fell and Glenn i carnival netteu the Parent-Tea-1
L Linda Ha"-|cher Association about $350. The |
Booher; third ’ greatest benefit of the presenta-
le Price and tion of the carnival was in the
second building of community and school
IcAnelly t
grade, The
Mtchua! _
Murrah to pay the pledge of 1500
Barber
Billy which
play, but the Blizzards have
four out of seven through-
out the season while the Bulldogs
have only a three out of seven all-
record.
Nevertheless, the Bulldogs
would rate a slight edge over the
Blizzards, but for the fact that
they pointed for last week’s Bal-
, and might be due
letdown tonight. In addi-
a rest
should be in
cent
new
*—■ On the other hand,
miv... *s ^ar' losaes are 1 .
f this state," | of the premiums, property
Uo worth of in.ur.t.ee Co. *
Only„ ?hi. monnen the Brady Bo>-j 'X °"er'n’ P'”-
unteer Fire Department has wlH bc G;,;dr.u .... ....,
saved BradyHes almost J100JXM) divldua, clubs and fhe council.
The exhibit committee of the
Home Demonstration council,
j with Mrs. Frank V. Hurd, chair-
an(l I man. is sponsoring the two-day
for j
the im- 1
member-!
, U
I for
; Eden play next Tuesday. Eola
plained the extension plan to be | and pa|n{ Rock arc playing non-
conference foes today, and Lohn
has completed its schedule and
will turn attention to basketball.
Probable starting line-up for
: Benefield and Jacoly-
son, ends; Williams and Eng-
dahl. tackles; Moseley and Hall,
Mitchell, center; Neal.
Morrison, and Stewart,
[first to Aus-
his daugh-
[training at
phal Next
f1' Austin by i
k. w here he j
[he Swedish I
F01' Europe,
rith his par-
' *lh Lund
I itt time for
phth hirth-
lr Lund will I
F‘ (Iripsh tlm
knd will get I
pt March 1. I
I their two I
| and I
Pa>'> on the I
[' been leas- I
The J. C. Penney Store in Bra-
dy will celebrate Mrs, Mamie
Stowe's 17 years at the store Sat-
urday with an anniversary party
and a special «ale.
Mrs. Stowe has lived in Brady
dy for 32 years. She moved here
from Ft. Worth after the death
of her husband. She has reared
three daughters in Brady,
A. C. Staline of Houston.
Mrs. Gordon Samuelson and Mrs. , before entries are taken Sunday
Four different men.
Skelton, A. C. Midkiff, J.
Lawlis and present manager.
L. Davis, have directed Penney’s
Brady store during the 17 years (
Mrs. Stowe has been employed
there.
A huge cake, 2*4x4 feet, and chapter of ~thZ Future
1G gallons ui punvli win mv vn (
hand at Penney’s tomorrow fromi
10 a. m. until 7 p. m.. and Mrs. riculture instructor and FFA ad-
Stowe will serve the refreshments visor.
to friends and customers. One of the match races already
Mrs. Stowe says her most per- t scheduled is a $500 affair be-
fect gift is the opportunity to tw^en Tex Jones’ "Sonny Parks”
give her customers unusual mer- and H*«tis and Howell’s "Kay
chandise. And Saturday the en- Francis
tire store personnel will be in T"
their best dresses for the annt-'
versary party, ready to take care|
of the customers
flock to the sale.
B.
some | Of his
main says sonic of the finest irrigable
land will Im? around the base of
the "nationall)-famous Shiprock
which rises as a sheer and huge
porphyry intrusion into the Cre-
taceous sedlmentaries to make
a majestic mainmast 2.000 feet
above the surrounding country.”
He says one government official
once termed the area "a vast
empiinc^'
! oral producing wells of high gra-
' vity oil at 735 teet. Toclto Dom>.
approximately eleven miles to the
(south, has the unique ability tn
I produce the best artesian water
, in the wrea and also helium gas.
im' Rummage Sale To
Be Held Saturday
The Datnrosch Music Cluh of
I -VOU XXXIX‘ N“~ 61 12 ‘‘A(;ES TOI)AY Kra<y’ McCull,,ch l uu"1'- Te*«» t-ridav. November 7, 1917 Whole Number 6Ml~
f Track In Fine Shape For Armistice Races
cent below the state av- - —————————— _____.
irb^^M^lAnnual Fall Exhibit Of HD
to insurance premiums during the I “ ■ ■ ■
Clubs Opens In Brady Today
The annual fall exhibit of the'
McCulloch County Home Demon-
Tickets may be
trom W P.
be contacted at
traight race
e event
\! \ vit v CTrkWE' r,n ni»al attractions and
MK>. MAMIE, S1UVVE. performances that have
Gia(|v customary with the July Jubilee.
' L. ....... ..... ’ *’*“ -----
T.
Describes Work In Irrigation Districts
T. A. Parker, former vocation- is irrigable, but when completed
agriculture instructor in Bra- the project will mean farms for
has completed land classlfi-j 3,000 destitute Navajo families
• ■ • rb “ ““’I Water and power for the pro-
project and has'ject will be furnished by a pro-
front Overton, posed dam seventy miles above
Nevada, to Shiprock, New Mexico, j Shiprock on the San Juan River.
At Shiprock.
plan irrigation for
bout 300.000 acres.
that only 125.000 acres of this
table
cial occasions;
t angement; I
• made favors; East
Christmas wrappings
decorations;
toys; and
recreational
afternoon for the first day's ra-
ces.
The three-day meet starts at
1:30 Monday afternoon, with five
purse races scheduled for each
afternoon In addition. several
match races will also be run
each afternoon.
"The track is in fine shape and
we’re going to have some of th“
Southwest’s fastest horses run-
ning on it." said Ben L. White,
general manager of July Jubilee.
Inc.
Lewis Bell is in charge of the
ra«es, assisted by Mr. White. J.
H Maves of Floresville will he
h?*ad judge, assisted by John O'-
Donnell of Mason and Damon
White of Brady Jack Locklear
of Goldthwaite will be a starter.
Box seat tickets for the races
- 11 for $2, reserved seats for
,?1.5o. and grandstand admission
is $1. Tickets may be obtained
Bill t Jones who may
telephone 155.
meet, the Ar-
will not include
added
become
Mr. Parker will It will be an earth fill with a pro-
an area of a-1 posed height of 300 Teet and a
He estimates | crest length of one mile.
Mr. and Mrs. Parker describ-
ed their trip from Nevada to New
Mexico in a letter to Mrs. Park-
er's parents. Mr and Mrs. Wal-
ter Jordan. They visited
National Park. Great Salt
Tuesday the rtah Centennial, and
Verda National Park.
Of his new job, Mr. Parker
PSI).\Y—
ke, 82,
Voca
Wpie held
r; '’’clock
Pr,r John E.
[ho died at
[ af'rmoon.
Las 82 years
Field Creek.
'"iiducted
I Hurlal was
p under di-
F’Hkerson &
Plyp(| by bis
U, Wallace
allace ,)f
F111rt' three
of Ra-
nephens of
P'y Bradley
h and one
F °f Robert
Miss Stindt won out in the se-1
cret balloting conducted Wednes-
day by the school’s government
class. Other candidates were
Josephine Turner and Peggy
Campbell.
Brady PT A UnPs Net
$383 From Carnival
five Parent-readier
profited $383.93 f
Hallowe'en Carnival i
the Athletic Field
week. This is about $8 more than
last year’s carnival profit.
The High School P-TA was the
biggest money maker, turning in Brady will hold a rummage sale
$124.90 Th,» Junior Hinh P-TA on the Court House lawn on
realized
Rider” and
I Babe Lucas’s "Liberty Girl.
Gordon brothers' "Thunder,'
Mike O’Dougherty’s
i-y-”
! Tex Jones will also enter
Newman Lowe will
and Buck
Other
here
j year.
no money and lived on what th?y '
' discussed at the Sonora meet-
ing. and asked the district offi-
cers to participate In the pro-
gram. Mr. Roddie announced that
the annual district meeting and Rochelle":
ladies night will be held Dec. 16 i
In Scout Hall.
District officers attending the guards;
Tuesday meeting were Jim Sha-iBurk.
fer, Claud Marshall, Gartinan, backs.
E. J. Powell. Dick Winters, Tav-1
lor, Lehman, A. J. Ricks, Rod-,
die, Bird, and Galbraith. , went a tonsilectomy at Medical 2~_. „
; and Surgical Hospital. Thursday. fbree pounds
_ — . . Jin -
Ifc,.
o,
acity a? seC*
anc1 Fire
of Texas, | jH-eccdtng
local de- |0SSes exceed 75 per
Mrs. Rennie Yarborough and
Brady, Wednesday. R. E. i baby were dismissed Thursday
president of the Turkey j from Medical and Surgical Hospi- prs*(’oach Tloliand
attended. | tai.
IEY. 90 YEARS OLD ■ Frank Roddie. Hugo Lehman, lost one in district play, and the;
__ Jack Gartinan. and W. L. Tay-, winner of tonight’s game will be!
CAIjT AE TtV AC I. Dll IN I°r- ! assured of at least second place
KAKI Vi 1 UHVW i At a meeting of district ofl'i-i *n<* co**ld tie tor the title it E-
cers at Scout Hall Tuesday night, den should beat league-leading
couple of days, and the Colorado Mr. Lehman announced that the,
River froze over completely—I Heart of Texas District’s mem-'
even the fast-running water. bership has grown to 79 Scouts
That cold spell came in 1898. hi four troops. 39 Cubs in one
which might seem like a long pack, and 13 Senior Scouts In
time ago to some of you, but it’s ’,n®i Explorer unit. Joe
fairly recent history to Mr.
ney. ;
birthday October 31.
Mr. Abney was born in Georgia
in 1857. He remembers well the
hardships of reconstruction days
in the South, when stores for
miles around his home had no-
thing to sell, and the people had
season,
; victory
j week.
The Rochelle-Richland i
the only 11-B tilt scheduled
this week-end Melvin
play next Tuesday,
rowned Queen of Annual
Carnival. Saturday Night
crowned Moseley. Junior Morrison,
Ihelle Parent-
Car-,
the (ompanist and Mrs.
tlmdiii'1 Bry- P T A. president, made the an-,
I escort. Both
|r class.
Lrt ii'ii ■■■
L of cei cnion-
I Helen Hay-
Ln Neal and
ks. Ducht ( chorus si
bng the ot Wedding.’’
I class, Joyce jap0 Woodford,
should beat league-leading
Melvin on Armistice Day.
Th© Rochelle Hornets dropped; linger game,
a 13-12 heartbreaker to Melvin for a
last week, and hope to rebound ( tion, Winters took
against Richland. Coach Roy Gre- week, and
Gal- Kor>' 8uys Gie Hornets are in i shape for the game.
Coaches Russ Holland,
Sailing, and Bert Brewer
been working with their charges
of
which
up in the Ballinger
game. All of the squad is in good
physical condition, despite the
bruising line play of the Bear-
cat game.
Head coach Holland has been
experimenting with his backfield ' *” ’ ' < rr? i_ • o
some this week, and kickoff time j T. A. Parker, r ormer V. A. 1 eacher in oraay,
may find one or two new start-
ers in the lineup.
The Bulldogs have become so
accustomed to going into a game
outweighed, it isn’t news that the
Blizzards also top them in the
poundage department. But the
difference won’t be anything like
— the 20 pounds the Bulldogs gave
of Brady ^ tinder- Ballinger last week. The Winters
** ' I squad averages 152 pounds, just
‘ i more than Brady,
fact, the Blizzards probable
starting lineup averages about
four pounds less than the start-
C II. " 1 used last week
Winters and Brady have had
_.t opponents this season
back the Blizzard-
26-6, two weeks ago. Since tin
Lluicats are supposed to rate al-
most on a par with Ballinger,
v ho struggled over Brady last
week. 19-13. then the Bulldogs
could take the Blizzards. Certain-
ly if the Bulldogs show the same
fighting attack tonight as they
did against Ballinger last week,
the Blizzards will turn into a
I gentle snowfall.
nuTtbenng \hat Coach ilollati.
j has practically promised at least
I one change, are:
Brady: Nixon and Jacobson,
ends; Simpson and Irish, tackles:
I Samuelson and Adams, guards;
Oldham, center; Whiteley, Jones
Gotcher and Rickman, backs.
Winters: Henniger and Wilson,
ends; Mooreland and Frierson,
tackles; Pierce and Dixon, guards.
James Smith, center; Baldwin.
Forties, Johnnie Smith, and Vin-
son backs.
.how, . S.l°n”er. "(“.'Ah":..) b^i lo.lng. 2-». earner In the
in the program of Scouting for >a*on. rocl« to an easy
boys." He also stressed — I victory over Paint Rock
portance of increasing
ship during the remainder of the I
• '
A. H. Bird, field executive, ex-
four troops, 39 Cubs in
Scouts
O.
assistant executive.
• "the won-
building which
~z~„- zz"3 the Hornets are i
good shape and ready to go to-1
night. Richland Springs, who al-
so gave Melvin a tough battle (
0’: all week polishing up some
tuJ ^e defensive weaknesses
a' i showed up in the
game,
Culberson said,
past five years,
fire loss ratio for all de-
fer a share in the 11-B
title when they meet in Rich-
1 the land tonight at 7:30. The two
Chairman, teams have each won three and
iseason
4 Scout Officials
To Sonora Session
Four officers of the Heart of!
and spirit through working together. | Texas District of the Concho Val-
’’ «nd in
pdules
Holidays
Lis will close |
r v'w^hit saveu uia.iji.vco
W. E. 'y’ ijn tht. last five years.
vd "oJ Person added. He
(holiday ir-i* —t kt
the schools
7 and 28.
18
Department
“enviable
insurance premiums during the
five-year period. If
cent of the
> re-
penalty j
insurance.!
if the fire
kept below 24 percent
*----, property owners
cent credit. Thus i 9J,a,‘on ‘'lubB ,od®y *«*e
Brady fire insurance buyers i Yu.ru." ------y.
- • fay
Dibit Saturday.
In this manner, the Brady B«I-
unteer Fire Department has j win
, Mr. Cul-
• congratulated
Chief Holt and his volunteers on
. .,x their “enviable record,’’
“will begin stated that the department has ghow
will resume, "served well the citizens of m today, closing at 5 o’clock this
l Brady. ! afternoon. Saturday it will run
_____ __ ——~ ~~ from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m.
A general exhibit of 4-H Club
handiwork will be shown,
each Home Demonstration
! has been assigned a special
theme for the show.
The Fife club will show
of pictures for the home;
vln’s exhibit will discuss
care; Calf Creek, pressing equip-'
nient; Doole. home-made equin-j
ment for the sick room; Fair-j
view, table decoration for spe-!
; Dodge, flower ar-
I’ear Valley,, honie-
I’avors; East Sweden,
and home-
made decorations; Mercury,
home-made toys; and Lohn. I
home-made recreational equip-j
nient. ’
The exhibits will he judged at j
o'clock Saturday. Judges i*
v”!"
L.|
Parent-Teacher Association ley Council, Boy Scouts of A-
j Its part the proceeds , merlca. T a' end in advisory
this Scouting meeting in Sonora Fri-
the principal’s cottage, day noon to discuss the develop-
erected last year. ; ment of an extension plan for hopes
-------------------— further growth of the council.
Those planning to attend
are District
Roddie,
and W.
R
highly commends
FIRE DEPARI MENT
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MCULLOCH COUNTY 3TAE
Vol. III. No. T
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Vol. XIII, No. 84
HEART O’ TEXAS NEWS
Vol. LXII1, No. 80
THE Brady Standard
and The McCulloch County Star nnb Heart Cexas Netos
May 2, 1910. and Heart O’ Texas O
New,. November 2. 042. Published TWICE-A-WEEK, TUESDAY and FRIDA Y!
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Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 64, Ed. 1 Friday, November 7, 1947, newspaper, November 7, 1947; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357510/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.