The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 42, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1930 Page: 1 of 8
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+ +
Ter-
Lee
SAUCE
For the Goose la
+ + Guaranteed the Largest Bona Fide Paid Circulation of Any Newspaper Published in McCulloch County.
Gar-
Llano
Mrs.
were
UB
♦ Sauce for the Gander *
♦ ♦♦♦ + + --******
ORDINARILY, Sauce does not
O have his sensibilities easily
shocked, but when we read in one
of our exchanges on acount of a
Poole-Hall wedding, we decided
that the limit of propriety had been
exceeded. However, closer reading
developed the fact that it was a
Miss Poole who was wedded to a
Hall. And that was something
owe again.
♦ * ♦
DERHAPS it’s just human na-
I ture, but had you ever observ-
ed how people are prone to make
the most difficult of problems out
of the simplest of propositions?
There’s Billie Smith, editor of the
San Saba News, f’rinstance. Billie
has long been an exponent of sim-
on-pure Democracy—but now Billie
admits to being all woozy on the I
subject and tangle-footed as to
what a simon-pure democrat should
do in the forthcoming gubernational
run-off primary .
* * *
Billie says he has never voted
for a Ferguson in a primary in his
life—BUT! He goes on to say:
“I believe a gigantic state bonded
indebtedness saddled on the backs
of the people would burden them
and would invite a saturnalia of
graft and encourage an era of ex-
travagance blighting to the prog-
ress of the state. Sterling favors
a big bond issue. * * * I am op-
posed to r y state bond issue.”
And now Billie admits he is up a
tree; that he doesn’t know whether
he is going to vote for Ma Fergu-
son or for Sterling: that he may
do either.
* * •
Which is quite a hefty argument
—about as weighty as to say that
Sterling thinks a sunflower is the
prettiest of our native wildflow-
ers, while I claim the honor for
the daisy. And since we cannot
agree, why how can you expect
me to vote for him?
* * •
8 Pages
The BRADY STANDARD sPugea
TWICE-A-WEEK
VOL. XXII, No. 42.
ABSORBED THE BRADY ENTERPRISE AND THE McCULLOCH COUNTY STAR, MAY 2, 1910.
TUESDAY-FRIDAY
THE BRADY ENTERPRISE
Brady, McCulloch County, Texas, Tuesday, August 12, 1930. MeCULLOSHSPNNT STAR
Whole No. 1966.
CONVENE DISTRICT COURT MONDAY IN SPECIAL SESSION
*------*------------------------------------=- ----------------------------- --------------------- e--N---ien-e--" "-—-"" ----------- ---------- —-u -- -*--*------------------------------------------------- --- ------------------ ------- -* —I * -- • • ---------- -------
OPENING M'CULLOCH FLEECY STAPLE CROWDS EARLIEST RECORDS
FIRST BALE OF 1930 COTTON IS
RECEIVED HERE ON FRIDAY
Garden Club Announces Second Showing
Illustrated Lecture on Gardens
TWO WEEKS’ SESSION COURT
Bale Sells for 11 l-2c; Premium List Is
Circulated and Honor Goes to Jesus Cord-
ero, Melvin; 482-lb. $44.75 Contributed
The honor of bringing in the first bale of 1930 cotton in
McCulloch county goes to Jesus Cordero, Mexican, who owns
and operates two farms in the Melvin-Lightner community,
and who brought in a 482-pound bale Friday. The cotton
was produced near Lightner, and was also ginned in that
community. A premium of $44.75 was made up Saturday
morning by Brady merchants and business men, the list of
contributors having been circulated by the Brady Chamber
In the meantime, Sauce is await-
ing, with bated breath, Billie’s ex-
planation of just how Sterling is msu Jale seen b.ougau . ..uu, ...
going to put his big state bonded an ear]jer date. Last year was 1
indebtedness over on the Texas _ day outlier the initial hale I
of Commerce. The bale was ginned free of charge by the
Wood & Silvers gin, and was sold Friday afternoon to Hamp-
ton & Maxwell, local cotton buying firm, who paid 11 1-2
cents per pound. On the following day, Saturday, another
bale was turned out in McCulloch county, Ernest Helge of the
Nine community having ginned a bale at the Embry Gin.
Hampton & Maxwell also bought this bale.
During the past thirteen-year
period, only three times has the
first bale been brought to Brady at
/ Members of the Garden Club are | many away. Members hope all AT DAD CANALOCT nHGAmpm
glad to announce for a second who are interested in their yards, AN I A YA TH I HID LA HI
showing this month, the “Illus- will come and enjoy the sixty col-*1 * * 4 • ±
trated Lecture on Beautiful Gar-ored slides shown of yards, rock
dens and Landscape Designs." This gardens and pools,
was given in the Spring, but a Date and place of showing will
storm coming at the time kept be announced later.
Contract Menard New Brady Firemen Attend
School to Richards
Junction Convention
H. H. Richards, Brady contrac- Some dozen members of the
tor, was last week awarded the Brady Volunteer Fire Department
contract for building Menard’s new left this morning for Junction
school building, and for which $50,- where they will be in attendance at
000 bonds were recently voted by the quarterly convention of the
the Menard citizenship, with $40,- ~
000 to be spent on the building.
Richards' bid was $33,924, being
the lowest of 12 bidders, with high
bid $45,858, and the second low-
Hill Country Firemen’s Associa-
tion which will be held there all
Liquor Cases Predominate; Session of
Grand Jury Is Probable; Civil Cases May
Come Up for Trial
For the first time in many years, the McCulloch county
district court will next Monday be convened in special two
weeks session. A congested docket is assigned by District
Judge E. J. Miller as the reason for the extra term of court,
Judge Miller being desirous of clearing the court records of
people.
Ho, Hum! The more you observe
the antics of Texas politicians, the
less you wonder why Texas politics
provides the clown act in the na-
tion’s political circus.
* * *
GOME CONSIDERABLE relief
D from the hot weather and hot
political atmosphere is afforded by
John Esten Cooke’s “Reporterman'’
. column in last week’s issue of the
Wkdale Reporter. Cooke says
lit according to the records of the
Rockdale waterworks office, he was
the banner customer during the
month of July, having used 62,000
gallons of city water “in the noble
and glorious undertaking of sav-
ing his lawn and shrubbery from
the drouth which has existed in
Regal Rockdale since May.”
* * *
Cooke goes on to say that the
city waterworks standpipe holds
100,000 gallons of water; where-
fore he has been guilty of using
more than three-fifths of a stand-
pipe full. He points out, however,
that Rockdale's summer water rate
only a day earlier, the initial bale
having been brought in on August
7th.. Other times were in 1921
when the first brie was received |
on August 6th, and then in 1927,
the first McCulloch county cotton
having been ginned on August 2.
HOT, DRY WEATHER CAUSES
COTTON TO OPEN FAST
While the cotton crop over Me-
Culloch county is generally late,
the hot, dry weather has served
to cause the cotton to mature rap-
idly, as is evidenced by the first
bale being received this early in
the season. The latest date for the
first bale on record here was in
1919 when it was ginned on Sep-
tember 4th, nearly a month later
than this year's initial bale.
Following is a record of the pro-
duction of first bales during the
past 13 years:
1930—August 8, Jesus Cordero,
Lightner.
1929—August 7, Jimmie James,
Doole.
1928-—August 15, Frank Sapate,
Stacy.
1927—August 2, Lon Salazar,
Doole.
1926—August 13, J. 0. Chaffin,
COTTON YIELD
OF 14,362,000
BALES IS SEEN
Texas Estimate 4,496,000
Bales; August 1st Condi-
tions Reported 61 Percent
of Normal
est bid $35,828, or $1,904 higher
than that of Richards’.
The contract calls for a two
story building. It will have 12
rooms in it with a large first floor
auditorium with a seating capac-
ity of 612. The auditorium part
of the structure will be only one
story in height, and will extend
back from the main part of the
structure. The auditorium will
have a modern elevated floor with
an up-to-date stage, etc., that will
enable the school to hold its var-
ious functions there.
an accumulation of cases, chief among which are various liq-
uor charges. At the close of the regular court term in May,
there remained on the docket some 30 or 40 criminal cases;
exclusive of the several bank robbery charges. With these
time the problems of the firemen latter set for trial at the January term, and with the district
will be aired, while the afternoon attorney giving part of his time to the grand jury, it will
will be turned over to contests and jn all liklihood, be impossible to bring any other than the
amusement features of other des-ti -8 any other than the
bank robbery cases to trial, in January; hence every effort
will be made to rid the docket of the cases now pending.
day Tuesday.
to
The forenoon will be given over
a business session at which
|criptions.
The Brady team will endeavor to " . .. _ ------------P-*****G-
defend her honors in the pumper should time permit, a number of civil cases may also be call-
races during the afternoon. Brady J 4 -4 41-
won this event at the convention
ed for trial at the special term. )
DOGGIES OPEN
here last May. Members of the
team are Gordon Samuelson, pres-
ident of the department, Irvine
Hurd, chief, and D. L. West, Rav- An IT. CEA CANT
mond Engdahl, Cap Steelhammer, Irk II J AHA By
Gene Samuelson and E. C. Mitch- UAL 0 4 ADV1
ell. ON ATTCTICT 5
Other members of the Brady AUUU D1
MAY RECONVENE McCULLOCH
GRAND JURY
is most reasonable: the first 3,000 Waldrip.
gallons cost $2.75, after which each' 1925—August 22, 0. T. Rush,
aditional 1,000 gallons cost but 15c. Brady.
1924—August 12, Ed
The Rockdale rate compares very
favorably with that of Brady, our
rate being $2.50 for the first 4,000
gallons, and 15c per 1,000 gallons
for additional consumption. That
this low rate is appreciated and
taken advantage of by the Brady
citizenship, finds proof in the many
beautiful lawns, flower-gardens and
the profusion of shrubbery which
adorn Brady residence property.
Incidentally, Sauce himself, ex-
ceeded Reporterman's record, hav-
ing used 67,000 gallons of water
during July.
* * *
Sauce might add another point
of interest, and that is that Brady’s
remarkable and substantial growth
and expansion dates back to the se-
curing of an adequate and abundant
supply of cheap, pure and good
water.
* * *
THE ROCKDALE columnist had
I another item of interest in his
last week's colum, and which
may be added to the galaxy of
“Hoover Prosperity” yarns which
are now being told and re-told with
much gusto throuout Texas. Here
it is:
The following story is going the
“rounds” now. It tells of a tele-
phone conversation between Hoov-
er, at Washington, and Grover
Cleveland, former president, in
Heaven:
“Is this Grover?" he asked.
“Yes, this is Grover.”
"Thia is Herbert, you had a pan-
ic and some hard times when you
T e President, didn’t you?”
say I did, Herbert."
“And you had a lot of soup lines
didn’t you, Grover?”
“I say I did, Herbert."
“And say, Grover, can you re-
member what you did with those
soup bones?”
A S A CONCLUDING statement
for this issue. Sauce wishes to
call attention to the voiced opinion
of some home-spun sage that ani-
mals do not suffer from the heat
-s much as people do—possibly for
the reason that they cannot read
the thermometer. Which statement
embodies more than a grain of
truth. So, if you do not agree with
Fife.
1923—August 17, H.
wards, Claxton.
1922—August 12, Ed
Mit hell,
N. Ed-
Mitchell,
Fife.
1921—August 6, John Mayo,
Waldrip.
1920—September 1, Porforio Tre-
vino, Brady.
1919—September 4, C. M. Rasco,
Fife.
1918—August 15. M. Horn, Fre-
donia.
1917—August 14, Dario Rangel.
Fife.
LIST OF DONORS TO FIRST
BALE PREMIUM
The undersigned contributed the
sum set opposite their names for
the first bale of cotton raised and
ginned in McCulloch county, and
marketed at Brady.
Sturges & Co. . 1.00
Malone & Ragsdale - 1.00
Gordon Samuelson --------- 50
Brady Water & L. Wks. 1.00
Consumers Gas & Pwr. Co. 1.00
Dr. Faulkner _______ 1.00
S. W. Hughes & Co........1.00
Cobb Drug Co...............1.00
J. C. Penney Co. ............. 1.00
Crystal Ice Co. . —.........1.00
Cash and Carry Gro................1.00
W. B. Douglass .............1.00
H. C. Braly ______ 1.00
Hubert Adkins . ..................1.00
Leta Bennett 1.00
Moffatt Cash & Carry Gro. 1.00
Cecil Verner 1.00
Perry Brothers 1.00
Z. John 1.00
Brady Standard ______1.00
J. H. Criner 1.00
Ed Walker .50
Cash. .25
C. T. White 1.00
B. Simpson 1.00
W. D. Jordan .50
R. Wilensky .50
Townsend’s Variety Store .50
Rosenberg Brothers .........1.00
Benham’s 1.00
W. K. Gay .50
Brady National Bank .1.00
the foregoing paragraph, or with
any of the foregoing comment for
that matter, just keep cool. Re-
member, you are privileged to talk,
think and vote as you like—which
is the self-same privilege that
Sauce enjoys.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.—An
indicated cotton crop of 14,362,000
bales of 500 pounds gross weight
was forecast today for this year by
the department of agriculture, bas-
ing its forecast on the condition of
the crop August 1 which was 62.2
percent of normal.
The August 1 condition indicated
a yield of 155.3 pounds per acre,
compared with 155.0 last year and
155.1 pounds, the 1919-23 average
yield per acre.
Last year the August 1 condition
was 69.6 per cent of a normal, and
the 1919-28 average condition on
According to Mr. Richards, work
will be begun by him this week,'
with completion scheduled by Jan-
uary 1st.
Mr. Richards has just complet- RORAE Half
ed the school building at May, in Hockett Hal,
Brown county, a new $20,000
structure, and which he completed
in 53 working days. He will im- . , . .,
mediately transfer his crews of . At the last meeting of the Brady
workmen to Menard, and will push firemen, Gordon Samuelson was
building operations there in order chosen captain of Company No. 1
to assure completion well within while Charles Darley was elected
the specified contract period, head of No. 2 for the ensuing year.
| firemen who are attending the
1 convention are John Chambers,
_____i Adkins, Otis
Darley, Charles Darley and Mrs.
V. B. Deaton, mother of the or-1
ganization.
It is very probably that the
grand jury, which was recessed
! following a busy session at the May
term, will be reconvened during the
I special court term, as Judge Mil-
ler advised that if any parties
now held to await grand jury action
head of No. 2 for the ensuing year.
44th Gillespie County
Fair Aug. 22-23-24
In this weeks issue of this paper
will be found an announcement of
the Gillespie County Fair Asso-
ciation, Fredericksburg, with an in-
vitation to visit its forty-fifth
Annual Fair to be held on August
22-23-24. This is unquestionably
the oldest County Fair in Texas,
August 1 was 67.2 per cent. v Jaueou .Ju.vy ... ......
The indicated production was cal- the Association having held forty-
culated on the basis of the area in four successive fairs without fail,
cultivation July 1 this year less the
Rotary Club Reviews
Ideals-Ethics
The program of the Brady Ro-
tary club, which met at noon to-
day, with President Gordon Mc-
Call president, was in charge of
Rotarian M. J. Benefield, who call-
ed upon Bert Hughes, chairman of
the Induction committee, to present
the ideals and code of ethics of the
club for the benefit of new mem-
cultivation July 1 this year less the This year the Association offers
10 year average abandonment, or a varied program of entertainment
44,252,000 acres, 'with good fast running horse races
The producing acreage, condition daily in which a purse of $1500.00
August 1 and the indicated total I is offered for competition. Ball
games will be of special interest
to the visitors as the strong Fred-
ericksburg Giants will play teams
of the Hill Country League each
day. The first day the Giants will
play the leaders in the League, the
Llano Granitemen: the second day, „
the Comfort Bronchos and the third Wilson Jordan supplemented Mr.
day, Sunday, the Kerrville Tour- | Hughes talk by stating that Ro-
ists. This last game will be of tarians were chosen from among
special interest since it will count the leaders in every line; not nec-
in the league contest. Besides the essarily the greatest, but the most
ball games and races other free ) progressive—those whose influence
attractions are offered with dances I will carry farthest and accomplish
at night, while the Roy Gray the most.
Amusement Company will furnish| Secretary Earl Cantwell told of
carnival attractions both day and the organization of the local club,
night. j the obligations and duties of mem-
The first day of the Gillespie bership and stressed the atten-
County Fair has been designated dance feature, directing attention
as Hill Country and School Chil- to the chart upon which were re-
August 1 and the indicated total
production by states follow:
Ind’etd
State— Acreage
Virginia 88,000
N. Carolina 1,696,000
S. Carolina 2,145,000
Georgia
Florida
Missouri
Tennessee
Alabama
3,681,000
100,000
365,000
1.200,000
3.590,000
Cond. Prod
72 42,000
74 782,000
74 930,000
71 1,340,000
72 29,000
bers. Mr. Hughes briefly re-
viewed the history of the organiza-
tion, from its inception to its rap-
id spread into its present inter-
national form. He gave a resume
of its object and ideals, and also
its code of ethics. In conclusion,
he stated that the greatest thing
he got out of Rotary was the op-
portunity it gave for real fellow-1
ship, not alone with your fellow-
citizens, but wherever one went, ling the local coaches this season
---------------------------------wish to get their cases before the
Outlook for Fast Squad grand jury, he would call that body
is Bright, Although Back- together to consider the same
field Must he Molded By There are now held in the county
J811, four parties on felony charges.
Brady Mentors and who have been bound over by
----------------------:-------------Justice of the Peace W. B. Doug-
Only two more weeks until the lass to await grand jury action.
Brady high school Bulldogs will Since the term of J. Edward
start training for the approaching Johnson, who was appointed as-
season, and at this time followers sistant prosecutor for a period of
of the sport in Brady and this sec- one year, has expired the work
tion are wondering just how the of prosecuting the cases’ to be tried
locals will shape up when the first during the special term, and as
game gets under way. As a mat- well as the presenting of evidence
ter of fact, Coaches R. L. Williams before the grand jury upon which
and Theo Powell are quite opti-new indictments are' sought will
mistic over the prospects for a all devolve upon the shoulders of
winning combination this fall, and District Attorney Walter U Early
the two Brady mentors a-going LIST OF PETIT JURORS
to start in with the determination FOR FIRST WELL
of cleaning up on the contenders
of this district. , The list of persons drawn by the
Training will get started at Rich- Jury C Commissioners of the district
ards Park on Monday August 25, count of Met ulloch county at the
at which time the eight lettermen
from last year’s squad arc expect-
ed to report, in addition to several
youngsters who could not quite I
make the grade last season. How-
ever, next Monday Coach Williams
will have some of his backfield as-
pirants out tossing the ball and
otherwise getting used to carrying
the pigskin.
The greatest problem confront-)
May term of court to serve as Petit
Jurors during the first week of
the August special term, are as fol-
lows:
C. H. Arnspiger, Brady
L. H. Bell. Brady
J. C. Benson. Brady
Boyd Commander, Brady
Houston Braly, Brady
Lon Abernathy, Brady
J. A. Harkrider, Nine
Louisiana, 2,013,000
Mississippi 4,202,000
Texas 16,835,000
64 153,000
61 464,000
62 1,201,000
54 632,000
Oklahoma
Arkansas
Arizona
New Mex.
California
3,803,000
60 1,626,000
61 4,496,000
3,920,000
209,000 92
60 1,072,000
46 1,106,000
119,000 89
268,000 92
Other states 18,000 70
Lower Calif. 100,000 —
Lower California. Old
162,000
97,000
224,000
6,000
53,000
Lower California, Old Mexico, dren’s Dav by the Association and corded the number of absences at
not included in United States to- , ... 44 -........
will be the molding of an entire
new backfield. Through gradua-
tion, the Bulldogs lost their back-
field stars last year, and only-
one man who lettered in the back-
field last season is eligible to com-
pete in conference games, A cap-
I able leader and field general must
be found, and this is Williams' aim
in starting ball carrying practice
next week. Somebody must be de-
veloped to take the places of Pool,
Terry, Strickland, Welch in ball
toting, and Bauers in the line.
ball
F. W Otte. Camp San Saba
V. A. Pate, Camp San Saba
Louie Birk, Voca
Bert Williams, Voca
R. D. Wood, Voca
Will Hampton. Brady
R. H. Berquist, Rochelle
Maurice Jones, Brady
Dan Junell, Brady
Henry King, Brady
F. A. Knox, Brady
H. R. Kyzar, Brady
George Langford, Brady
F. W. Lazalier, Brady
Fred Leavenworth, Brady
C. C. Ledbetter, Brady
W. R. Malone, Brady
M. I. Marshall, Brady
J. W. Marshall, Brady
A. S. Meers, Brady
Leo Moore. Brady
A. W. Moseley. Brady
H. B. Murphy, Brady
C. McDavid, Brady,
C. M. Owens, Brady
J. W. Storms, Rochelle
The hardest place to fill will
be Pool’s. This young man, who
played every minute of every con-
test last season, was everything
one could wish of a triple threat-
er. He could punt, pass, and call
' signals and carry the ball with
every child of scholastic age will a meeting. Incidentally, he advis-
be admitted free to the grounds, ed that any Rotarians who might
The Gillespie County Fair is not- find it necessary to be out of town,
ed for its wonderful exhibitions of might make up their attendance
livestock, agriculture and the var-at some neighboring club, and that
ious departments in the ladies’the records kept by him enabled , . - , AMA . ... ,
classes and according to those in him to advise any Rotarian desir- the best of them. And it will be
Robert Tabor, who has been ad-'charge of these promise to com- ing the information of the meeting
vertising manager on Ray Nichols' pare favorably with any ever ex-date of Rotary clubs thruout this
paper, the Daily Record at Vernon, hibited there.' section. The , men returning this!
Texas, was here the past week-end ---------------------1 The letter men returning this.
for a visit with his parents, Mr. CORRECTION
and Mrs. J. W. Taber. Robert is In last Tuesday’s Standard was
enthusiastic over the newspaper contained an item chronicling the
profession and is making an out-destruction of a Chevrolet Six se-
standing success in his line of en-dan on Sunday, August 3rd, the
deavor. ■ fire occurring on the Mason high-
----| way, just on the other side of the
1.00 San Saba river. In the article, it
1:001 was stated that the car was the
tals.
E. M. Allgood of Port Arthur
were the week-end guests of their
aunt, Mrs. S. P. Allen.
a tough assignment to fill the
shoes of the remainder of the back- •
field stars.
F. V. Waddill, Rochelle
J. L. White, Rochelle
W. C. Willson. Rochelle
Baze & Bagwell
E. L. Jones
Broad Mercantile
Broad-Windrow............
Brady Lumber Co. .......
Curtis Norman Co. ____
Piggly-Wiggly ..... .........
W. I. Myers
Hampton & Maxwell
Dr. O. C. Jackson
Mr. F. M. Newman
Griffiths Carnes -...........
Commercial National Bank
Cox Drug Co.__________
F. &M. State Bank ........
G. 0. Darley ______...........
Cash .................—...______
H. C. Samuel ... _________
A. E. Crane _________________
TOTAL ................
1.00 property of and was being driven
1.00 by G. D. McMorries of Melvin. Mr.
1.00 McMorries was in Brady yesterday
100 and advised The Standard that this
1.00 part of the account was in error;
.501 that while he was in the car at
1.00 the time, it did not belong to him,
. .50 but was the property of and was
1.00 being driven by A. B. Middleton of
1.00 Ballinger. The Staruard regrets
-1.00 the error made in the car owner-
—1.00 ship, and which resulted from un-
-1.00 intentional misinformation, and is
.50 glad to make this note of correc-
......50 tion.
.50---
1.00 As a preventative of colds, work-
------ers in Japanese rice fields wear
$44.75 stockings made of human hair.
COTTON PICKERS ARE
WANTED
According to Carl Blesig,
secretary of the Brady Cham-
ber of Commerce, quite a
number of requests for cotton
pickers have come to his of-
fice from the section south
of San Antonio, particularly
at Kenedy, Odem and other
communities in that immedi-
ate part. Cotton is said to av-
erage a half bale to the acre,
or better, and picking is paid
for at 75c per 100. In some
instances transportation is
furnished, with the under-
standing that such cost be
paid back out of the pro-
ceeds of picking. Last week
several trucks from Kenedy
carried back quite a number
of pickers from the Brady
section.
' fall for duty on the football squad
will be Captain Frank Tuell, Sid-
ney Johnson, Travis Calliham, Jim- LIST OF PETIT JURORS FOR
my Hardin, Bill Gay Kennerly, Wil- SECOND WEEK
bur Squires, Elton Murphy and
Crit Bryson, all of whom played
in the line except the latter, who
played halfback. Not all these men
are going to see service in the for-
ward wall this fall, because some of
them are going to be converted in-
| to ball carrying demons, Johnson,
last year’s end, is going to fill the
shoes of Bauers at tackle, while
Kennerly, and possibly Hardin will
be shifted to the backfield. The
former is quite adept at passing
| and his punting is everything that
one could desire.
The backfield this fall will like-
ly be built around Bryson, who
this season is expected to be one
of the best halfbacks in this dis-
| trict. Kennerly or Hardin one may |
| play fullback, but who will assist |
Bryson remains a mystery this
early in the season. Harkrider will
A. V. Yeager, Rochelle
Walter Young, Rochelle
Howard Patterson. Brady
O. D. Pence, Brady
Joe Ranne, Brady
G. A. Rudolph. Brady
Charles Samuelson, Brady
Edd Sayles, Brady
II. C. Samuel, Brady
J. N. Shaver. Brady
L. A. Shuler, Brady
J. W. Simpson, Brady
II. G. Skelton, Brady
Tom Terry, Brady
J. R. Boyd, Rochelle
M. S. Burk, Rochelle
A. A. Jordan, Placid
O. V. Pointer, Milburn
W. A. Browning, Lohn
H. E. Cleghorn, Lohn
E. Damron, Lohn
J. L. Jones, Lohn
L. W. Amarine, Waldrip
(Continued on Page 8)
(Continued on Page 8)
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The Brady Standard (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 42, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1930, newspaper, August 12, 1930; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1626928/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.