The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, April 20, 1945 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
j
I
Of
o
medical
ry Truman we can place
WE BUY-
goods
• EGGS
r
he ask-
F
forests,
i
L’ 1
SPECIALS
s
4 DOZEN SIZE
2 HEADS 290
250
Phone 157
K. C. BAKING POWDER
410
250
CARROTS 2 BURCHES FOR 150
•• .'fr ■ XvJ
150
TEXAS ORANGES 2 LBS. - -190
BRADY’S LEADING MARKET ...
J
RY-KRISP 12 OZ. BOX - - - 26/
I
/
80
tie daughter, Mary Barbara came
>u
ROK A
visited
■
CHEESE
i
1
Per Bar
50
Finlay
O. C. Utseys.
7
7
By GRAHAM HUNTtR
4i
<
■ive with a free hand.
*
A
’ J
)r
I
I
V
p.
2;
b
cc
11
JH
■
■
■mbr
n VLAFITIA F
cause you
bottle of -
SKAGGS DRUG STORE
• DEAD and Pulled
Wool, also Tags
•Wool Bags • Twine
•Marking Paint
• Drench
•Plain and Mineral
Supplement Salt
again.
Anyone having any item of
6 Ounce
Boxes
efore
I the
c the
ainst
nach
owel
5 OZ. GLASS JAR
240
50 Ounce
Jar ...
FENCE
?INE
DAYS
AN
ENCE
2 to
r all
her home with her mother
D. Martin at present.
I
feed sack pillow
blankets, comforts,
SWIFTS
PREMIUM
cases,
low
sheets,
heeled
| J
CHICKENS—TURKEYS
Needed Now and After VICTORY
\T
*
1
i an
de-
Ger-
Lg. Size
230
LET US HANDLE YOUR—
FIFE NEWS
By Mrs. A. M. Finlay
TOAST
WHEAT WAFERS LB. BOX -1»0
WINESAP
APPLES 2 POUNDS---270
No. 1—IDAHO
POTATOES 5 POUNDS---290
—From—
BRADY’S BIG
STORE
Coop
West of Passenger Depot
Fancy Grade “A”—
Roast
»
I
year
dur-
hero
rther
and
cial-
fe.
ably
oth-
aned
eat
fore,
for
vice
v.ucis
n»»ic
son.
hear
COMPLETE LINE OF—
Certified FIELD SEED
U4
7 bd*
i
,r
I
1
, --------O®O--------
FARMERS - RANCHERS
■7:;^
[I /
N. B. C.
SHREDDIES 12 OZ. BOX 2 FOR 250
POST TOASTIES 6
LETTUCE
oh
3S]
X 1 j
iwli
•ffi
frr
w Jr
"its
L
Gordon
sent
FLVIflt
Fest MMaf Caa^aay
Sbeossa, Tsass
This Institution Is Owned and Operated
- For and By The Producers -
Shoulder Flesh, lb 36c
Pikes Peak Flesh, lb. ~ 35c
Rump, lb 26c
Chuck, lb. 28c
Brisket, lb. 23c
1
1
and MOHAIR
HUTS
»jy tf thefirst
-
W fell?'
MUMS
Sow?/ 1 CAH'T RELY
Too catch hwabut X
VOHT XN ART TO
I W GLFWQLA
\ VOTAPVXUGS. "
JaH1
Ty •
J
p J
£
.<1
POSSUM FLATS... well worth the effoati____________
w CWWW yy, OUT. wr\ ■>.
WHHme m TOV.H TOR 1
> V\E SWS 1 CAH’T GWTW
w those light, twkver
\b\scuvxs asXT \s*
.
’nn vmww free to, k
Gufttncvn B\*cuvr*’ y
1 KHGM YOU TME
lo inot T>'<1 v i x »ikief kJ
INy wil walw 'NtAvTa
FRUITS
Brookfield Link Sausage, lb. 39c
Armour’s Star Sack QCx
SAUSAGE, Pound OUp
Country Style Pan Pork OQx
SAUSAGE, Pound VVp
Pork Ring SAUSAGE, lb. .. 33c
Summer CERVELAT, lb. .. 33c
DRIED BEEF 40Z. 220
ILBREATH’S
“SAVE A LITTLE ON EVERY PURCHASE*
f
* Jr
the house across the road from
the N. T. Gault home. We hope
spend some
■
■
I *
—oeo—
GILBREATH’S
Friday and Saturday
APRIL 20 - 21
Please
SHOP EARLY
Each Day!
•It is to your ad-
vantage to shop
early — as well as
ours!
LE GRANDE
GREEK BEANS 2
b-
BROWN’S KRISPY
CRACKERS 1 POUND BOX —190
have had any misgivings as to
his plans for our future. May he
be able physically, mentally and
spiritually to carry on as he has
so nobly planned.
Mrs. Elbert Jones left Monday
for her home at Arlington, Texas
after spending several days with
rvsr" r=?THl! BRADY STANDARD AND HEART O’ TEXAS NEWS. BRADY.
HE?" K&L ' '
relatives here and near Angelo.
Mr. and Mr». A. E. Jordan took
her to Brownwood where she
caught a bus.
Lewis Jordan and a friend, Al-
fred Morrison of Tarleton, spent
Saturday night and Sunday in the
A. E. Jordan home. Mrs. Elbert
Jones and Mrs. M. Jordan were
also Sunday visitors in the Jor-
don home.
Visitors in the honje of Mr. and
Mrs. A. A. Jordan Sunday after-
noon were Mmes. W. H. Wake-
field, Dueward Caffey, L. W. Tur-
/ //A
/
'I
■w
z J
nell, Elbert Jones, M. Jordan, Mr.
and Mrs. A. L. Shafer, Bettie
Fern, Helen Haywood and Mr.
and Mrs. A. E. Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. McNatt had
a letter from their son, William
Vernon, saying that he has been
wounded in Germany and was
then in a Paris Hospital. The
shrapnel had been removed from
his hip and he says that he is be-
ing well cared for.
Today a letter came to me from
TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 194B
in that vicinity that these boys
were looking for. James Wilson
and Buster Carothers. We do hope
that the five of them with any
other, hometown boys who may
chance to be near, may have a
real get-together. That is the first
time Doyle has met anyone that
he knew in the States since he
went overseas to New Guinea a-
bout two years ago. Boys, it is,
good to know that you have seen
each other and here is hoping that
you will soon all be home again.
We are anxiously awaiting your
return.
Mrs. Lowell Smith’s mothtr,
Mrs. Mary Anderson, is still im- j Vick
proving after a severe heart at-
tack last Tuesday. We trust that1
FDR la Dead
The news of the President’s
tragic death came as a bolt to
Capitol Hill, as it did, of course,
to the whole world. People look-
ed at each other in bewilderment
and silence. At 6:20 Thursday ev-
ening the flag on the Capitol was
lowered to .half mast to remain so
until the interment was complet-
ed.
Four times elected President of
his country, he has a place all his
own in our American annals. The
greatest personality in the great-
est nation on earth, he died as vic-
tory is assured but as his ideals of
a just and durable peace remain
*?!*•« -"'.j
1 7 r f 'J
, 11 LA
to be achieved-
Today the whole world looks to
the United States for guidance in
winning the wars against aggres-
sion and tyranny and for recovery
from this awful travail.' Franklin
D. Roosevelt was the leader of
this abriter of the world’s des-
tinies. To millions around the
world he symbolized America.
In Mr. Roosevelt could be found
all the finer human traits and
qualities. Now he is the war’s
greatest casualty. The Command-
Anyone naving any item of us- ... ...
ed clothing that you can spare is * ie^ *^e an<^
now urged by the State Extension t"?<e he£?’ _r x .
Service to turn it in as soon as , Mrs. E. L. West is back at
possible, clean and washable and wlt^ her daughter, Mrs. A-
P. Rice and Mr. Rice.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Johnson
Van Camp’s — New Orleans (Stvie)
RED KIDNEY BEANS
♦ PLACID NEWS «
♦ By Mrs. Margaret Jordan 4
*♦♦♦♦♦ -
Great Grief Upon Death of Our
President; Meet In Philippines
Placid, Texas, April 16.—The
weather added its bit to the gloom
of the past week-end here. Sunday
was cloudy and misty with quite
a lowering in temperature.
The great grief that we feel at
the passing of our late President
comes at a time when the nation
is anxiously awaiting and pray-
er-in-Chief has fallen.
It was Roosevelt who foresaw
Hitler’s sinister designs and gave
the warning. It was Roosevelt
who demanded a two-ocean Navy
which began a building program
that perhaps saved America. It
was Roosevelt who traded 50 des-
troyers to Britain even as that
nation staggered under the blows
of a ruthless enemy only 22 miles
away. It was Roosevelt who cab-
led Hitler on the eve of his
march into Poland and plead for
peaceful arbitration in lieu of
war. It was Franklin Roosevelt
who wouldn’t compromise with e-
vil and demanded complete vic-
tory to be crowned by an enforced
peace through international co-
operation.
FDR is dead but his ideals will
live on and on, and inspire men
and women throughout the cen-
turies.
Mrs. Roosevelt in her hour of
grief may gain consolation in the
knowledge that countless hearts
are bowed down over her bereave-
ment. In his death the President
will reinforce the unity among
Nations which he struggled to
achieve in his lifetime.
POW Bulletin Tells
Of Official Visits I
The latest Prisoner of War Bul-
letin April publication filed this
week in the McCulloch County Li-
brary, tells of the Camp visits
made by the International Red
Cross officials.
“It is exceptional for a camp in
Germany to go three months
without being visited either by
the Protecting Power, the Inter-
national Red Cross, or the YMCA. I
During 1944, the principal camps I
for Americans were visited by a I
neutral representative at least ev- I
ery two months ’■ said a para I
graph in the bulletin?. '*
The bulletin also contains
article on the problems of
livering relief supplies in <
many. .
-- + + + + + 4
Frequent Showers Siow Forming
But Are Fine On Small Grain
Fife, Texas, April 16.—With
the weather being freakish all the
week, high winds, rain, hail etc.,
we were treated to what seemed
to your correspondent as almost
an April blizzard Sunday, and
how happy we were this morning
to see our garden and fruit un-
hurt. •
•• frequent showers slow
•Kn plowing to some extent but
it surely is causing the small
grain to grow rapidly. Some
patches are beginning to show
heads and we are all hoping for a
bounteous grain crop.
Gordon Mitchell of Lyford, ar-
rived here this week to visit rel-
atives before reporting for in-
duction in the Army. He was ac-
companied home by his mother,
Mrs. Ollie Mitchell, who has been
the guest of her son, E- A. Mit-
chell and family. Aunt Ollie came
especially to see her new great-
grandson, Billy (Seabee) Mitchell,
the young son of Mr. and Mrs.
Aubrey Mitchell.
Tom Bradley, Sr., who under-
went surgery Thursday at the
Brady Hospital, is reported as
doing fine and we sincerely hope
to see him home in a few days.
Mrs. Bill Crew arrived home
Sunday from Eagle Pass after a
visit with her husband Bill Crew,
a border patrolman. Mrs. Crew is
making
Mrs. H.
BPALMOLIVE xl*
,’ie Beauty Plan
SUPER SUDS
floods O’Sods For Dishes and Duds
CRYSTAL WHITE
CARD F0R easier
sett's uwnr WASHDAYS
•--------- PAGE THREE
drove up to bring Mrs. Roxie Culp
from Killeen, who bad come ap I
for a few days’ visit. Mrs. Culp’a
late husband was a relative of
Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, who is
head of the WACs.
George Parker of Brady, spokw
to the Church of Christ Congrp>
gation here Sunday.
W. M. U- met Monday in tho
IG. M. Vick home.
Mrs. Joe Vick is not so well
lately. Her son, Willie, took her
to Brady for medical attention
j Thursday.
Mrs. Ed Long and Miss LilHe
visited Mrs. Geo. Vick
Thursday.
I H HL. Mr. and Mrs. H. Richardson and
she will soon be her cheerful self 8on ^ave moved from Milburn to
1 ofroin fho hmiun J
-J fcUXGHTCH EVEW1 BfNKYHG HOUR, 'X
■_£\'k‘Vr **TV' fVOUA! )
< sTrTfc) r I ym cwh-x wn guwxou* 1
> >1 ywwiuro.—i , /
*** ~ ~
i ■=*-;~ 5?______
home from the Brady Hospital
Saturday. This is Barbara’s first
__ visit with her brothers, James
Mmes. Harroll Watkins and W. Kent and Tommy.
Mrs. O. E. Rice visited home
folks at Rochelle over the week-
end.
Mrs. S- F. Tedder, who has been
spending several days with her
daughter, Mrs. H. D. Martin, has
returned to her own home.
Mrs. Gordon Tedder left Moi. •
day for Ft. Benning, Ga., to visit
with her .husband, Pfc. C
Tedder, Who expects to be
overseas at an early date.
Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
spent Sunday in the home of the
O. C. Utseys.
A nice crowd gathered despite
the inclement weather Sunday
night for the regular sing-song.
Our
WASHINGTON
Letter
A. Finlay, accompanied by Mr.
and Mrs. W. B. Watkins of Pear
Valley, left Wednesday for Den-
ver, Colo., to visit Pfc. Harroll
Watkins, who is a patient in a
Denver Hospital receiving treat-
ment for wounds suffered on Lu-
The community hopes to
good reports of Harroll’s
convalescence and that he will
soon be able to return home or
nearer home.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Tedder
were delighted to receive word
their son, Charles, was at the Mc-
Closkey Hospital in Temple after
having been in England for sev-
eral weeks. They, in company
with their daughter, Mrs. Elmond
Marshall and son, Billie Tedder,
left at for Temple. Young
been in the hospital in
vitn an ulcerated stomach
and was sent to England for
a civilian’s car, his
and bruises He is in a, cast now
hl7 “limbs again and his many
frieqds and relatives are looking
forward to this happv event also.
Mrs. Floyd Tedder of San An-
came in Saturday to visit
W parents, Mrs. and Mrs. Reid
Stewart of Lohn and Sunday
was the guest of the W. W. Ted-
ders. Other visitors in the Tedder
home included Mmes. M. L. Ted-
der, Paul Moore, H. D- Martin,
Bill Crew and Richard Ruff.
Mrs. James Finlay, Jr., and lit-
T»TT NEGLECT
YOUR GUMS
Do your gums itch, buru or
ing for an end to the war in Eur-
ope.
We, as a people can take com-
fort and courage in the fact that
in our new leader, President Har-
ry Truman we can place our con-
fidence and know that with out'
co-operation and that of other
United Nations we can go for-
I ward without hesitation into the
I future culmination of the war and
with the same outlook for the
peace as we have always felt.
I • s . aw a • ■ *
Senate today was very inspiring ippines- He said he was fine and shoes, (tied tightly together) yard visited the Orville Beakleys Mon-
— J I A._ _____a ■ . - a * . * «• — - ' * rinxr
visit with two other Placid boys, leave them here at the post office
Horace Carothers, Jr., and T. J. r“J — --1”
Powell, Jr. It is very nice and a |
bit unusual that three boys from | tination.
so small a place as I”
meet so far from home
boys are so badly
There are
Fancy Grade “A”—
■ ■ —LOIN, lb 42c
-ROUND, lb 40c
d —CLUB RIB, lb 34c
—CHUCK, lb 28c
f £
Tedder ‘ ,
India wi1
treatment when he was struck by
a civilian’s car, his leg broken,
shoulder crushed and other cuts
and bruises He is in a cast now
but hopes to soon be able to use
h!s limbs sirain and his many
frieqds snd relatives are looking
Floyd Tedder ot San An-
., ^.-3 L-
parents, Mrs. and
j of Lohn c
the guest of the W. W.
home included Mmes. M. L. Ted-
der, Paul Moore, H. D- Martin,
Bill Crew and Richard Ruff.
President Truman’s address to the Doyle Squiers who is in the Phil-
and helpful to anyone who may he was very happy because of
Horace Carothers, Jr., and T. J.
I a
ING CRH STOP GeORGS FROH
FLOUR! ~
Woy.QH Bff?! I'M STILL T
PRERMXHG ABOUT THOSS
DCE-LIC/OUS GLRDWLR B\SCUVTS
NOU BAKFV LAST
HIGHT, V«AR» j
1
We were glad to see so many vis-
itors.
Among the visitors we noted
Bill Norwood, Gaston and Garnet
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Reeves,
Jesse Marshall and brother, Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Bray and per-
haps others whose names we fail-
ed to get but who were very wel-
come. Come again next singing
night .snd we hope for better
weather.
These has been a box placed at
Mrs. Pearce’s store, also the
school house, where clothing may
be placed for overseas. We ere
sure everyone will be interested
in this great work. We are in-
formed wearable cothing, shoes,
bed linens, infants’ clothing, bed
clothes and in fact all things we
all wear. Some one has said “We
would not care to be in their
shoes but they would like to be in
ours,” so give with a free hand.
We understand the votes for
school trustees resulted in a tie
between W. A. Finlay, incumbent,
and J. D. Patterson. We have not
heard which one will Qualify.
Mrs. Gordon Nesi snd baby are
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
*
or feed sacks. You may ■ daY afternoon.
and Mrs. Orvile Beakley will see
that they reach their proper des-,
Um SULPHO (Dulphrate «olucioft).W
Placid should Friday evening we, with Mr. and i drinking water or feed. Helps control
me when our Mrs. Elbert Jones were visiting disease, repel* pamitea. Try $1.00 bo*
scattered. | Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Beakley when! tie onlv 69? at
two other Placid boys' Mrs. Grover Beakley of Winchell I SKAGGS DRUG STORE
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, April 20, 1945, newspaper, April 20, 1945; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357245/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.