The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 28, 1946 Page: 1 of 8
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I
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»
I
rrithers
«
I
E
VOL. XXXVIII, No. 17
(1
■■■
.... i
Mk$
beiieved under the
train
Ct
cx-
re-
TIIIS AFTERNOON—
Dun-
Morrow,
&
“Other transportation
seven
'to
reductions in passenger
try be.
g.) Billy Morrow, is slated
the |
Eldorado
last
*
Frost is frozen dew.
50
5C
25$
I
led.
50
Appearing
eating of
Oklahoma
and
New Draft Orders
FROM
For
«
rt
-
tta.
t
■fa:
t
1 J
r for wk*
I •
:vti
en
AT STINDT’S GIN—
Grasshopper Poison
cars
I on
trains
Fe to
taken
Jack T. Hollinger of El Reno,
Oklahoma, has been named mana*
ger
ers Cooperative Elevator and as-
sumed the position Monday.
The huge grain elevator is
for the
exercises is as
. i
■
* The WKutlrikii
is Amerkattay
Lrwi*—he’i «rue
ncrpt a k* iw
tpted
rvice
news,
>ma old,
•me bad,
which the col-
“WeU. sir, just
Lost
2
2
2
3
4
3
Pct.
714
667
f
I
Y ’st -
ike
>on,
*
S
NAME MANAGER
CO OP ELEVATOR
J. T. Hollinger Assumes
Duties Monday; Grain
Now Being Received
400
333
250
HerfolNw
IYwLNo
EiJi
I
26.—
Mrs. Hollinger accompanied her
husband to Brady and they are
now making their home here.
two J
was manager of an elevator and
feed plant at Abilene for the Tex-
as for 15 yars. His home was in
Abilene for 25 years.
The new manager was born and
gail countless
bver wonder
fae of baae-
fer scattered
! County re-
? The scien-
are told, is
*** ‘al IrMI
Lersonality
|John L.
Everything
im.
services were held at supply of coal is forthcoming.
1 The warning came from the Of-
fice of Defense
W.
Fly.
Leroy
organisation;
. i and safety;
and Jahn Dodson, Del Rio, ad-
_a, .*
are reoom-
ial Fonnda-
wtth
polio
us and pro-
Ithe individ- w
I” 2*2 by^ Edward Geeslin, the
. . . . which
which
may com-
Ibat grasshoppers has been set up
on [and is now in operation, according
wo I to R. F. McSwain, countv atrent.
lat a to-
i Brady,
rdhy af-
iw then
was ov-
ng toots
ie hearts
, “anoth-
Wtaa In DMrfct
Mrs. O. F. Barnett received
word Monday that her daughter,
"Twinkle” Barnett, freehaan stu-
dent tn Llano, has woe that
place In mask la the Dtotriotl*.
tomes, upward
J .3'1 miles per
Ms little rain-
■ into the sub-
«The raindrop
|wn below the
■ it picks up
whe updraft
It a second lay-
id This process
J hailstone is
apdraft, or be-
p wind cannot
!. The ordinary
up of two or
the larger ones
ght layers.
STORE CLOSED TUESDAY—
Roscoe L. Perry Dies
At Lufkin, Monday
Perry Bros, stores here i
elsewhere were closed Tuesday in sidings at the start of the strike
the company’s and several days would be
L. "
funeral
Jc
M330
NormanGrocery Store
I Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Haley laureate
of El Paso have purchased
Norman Cash Grocery on
' Commerce Street.
• ed here today.
; »-- -
captain in the Medi- [ changed to The Food Mart,
r on terminal | new owners said, and the
chase became effective on
fin cuwmR has authorised the
wpeadituie ef ah
tauproveaseata at
hwud Vteaaett,
JuMmCwmuM aw
Quantico, Va., where he
taining with the U. S.
Corps. He is only twenty
from Washington, D. C.,
he visits quite frequently.
The name of the store has been Following the processional, tha
the invocation was given by Rev. E.
pur- p. Neal, pastor of he First Meth-
Mon-1 odist Church. “Onward Christian
Soldiers” was sung by the junior
although | class and the congregation and
were read by W. L-
sueeees
Saturday
bg eoa-
begsseat
[well aa
rs. Ona
pur sen-
a novel
nee for
to hoar
United
.SSi
picroaeh-
ighta by
Absorbed The Brady Haterpftos
and The McCulloch County Star
May 2, 1910. and Heart, O’ Texas
News, November 2, 1942.
tautr BUM
■beat* that one man. bn said, an
ho to now M ing oat ef the ooua-
married for the tael
in peace time.
Trains started running
Brady late Saturday
•24th polio
iio since the
1 brings up
: can we do
» paralysis?
■tically noth-
the National
utik I*ara-
d known a*
fe know the
not the
t it to com-
inm without
tool symp-
annual San Angelo Colt
Sunday.
In additon to the championship; SATURDAY MORNING—
of his division, Sun Gold was HQn,na|,;FO fllUc
named first among the Palo-
minos in the Pleasure Class of
1944 foals.
In the Thoroughbred Division, D.
Joker, owned by G. R. White of
Brady took second place in the
1944 foals and another entry of
White’s took third place among
the 1945 foals in the same divi-
sion. The entry of Olton 0. Dick-
erson of Brady, Sarge Shad, plac-
ed second among 1945 foals in the
Half-Breed Division.
a
and ^hoJ
4anM*ive eve? 1
in 1
V *4htch nZA
J tei noon. Evenj^ 1
that the railj^M
er. The shrill Jc]
,ent thrills of t •1
of citiucns, whft|j
er war was w I
•• • 1
Preaident
in ending
afternoon 1
mendation fie, J
of tha dail,^]
from indmtg U
newspaper ]
tinenta th«g J
and refr«|JexJ
his millions stutj
a Prasidsug]
Statea, aftag A
take U milk
rapidly aa^htil
■ent on thmpi|
labor bosau* |
*' *1
After thecal
broken Satu^
of the leiutoroM
than anythi^he I
re-election 4 Preu
and mem ben (
■ he said: “fk rails
hood will S|U all 1
dollars in h tread
■ sary to debt Prd
and memhmf (j
have voted It thol
hor legislate* We
Texans whewuld]
quite a suns se«
Communistic aor 1
out on iheirm fol
the Amer cssny d
Certain precauMWj
tn ended hy the
tion. Unnecessary ml’
crowds should be av£
strikes. Extreme fat#
lunged chilling n'akg
u®l an easy vieti’”- F
•r insecta should L
from food. Sanitation
First symptoms of
’’’•y be sorre minor
headache, unexpi
Cl)*d, even
any of Mu
should bo
BALLINGER. May 26.—A 51st
District Court jury has found
K°"|Carl Sofge. Richland Springs
I stock farmer, guilty on a charge
j of murder in the shooting of his
I brother. Clem, and assessed pun-
R-1 ishment at two years in the pen-
I itentiary.
of any council in Region 9, which I
includes Texas. Oklahoma and
New Mexico.
Camp Fawcett’s four weeks’
program will start June 2. The
deadline for registration for the
first week is May 39. Each suc-
ceeding week the deadline will ,
fall on the Wednesday preceding
the start of the coming week’s I
program at a supper Sunday,
night. Both Fawcett and Louis 1
Frrr can accommodate 125 boys at
a time.
Louis Farr’s opening date is
June 9 and the program will last
for three weeks. Registration
deadline for the first week is
June 5 with the same Wedneeday-
before-Sunday rule following for
the last two weeks.
Carr has asked that persona
who plan to attend the Brady mw-
sion ambo reaervatione at the
Brody Hotel at the earltoot date
Chairmen from nine districts in
26 West Texas counties are to
meet here Frday night at 6:30 o’- I, .,
clock at Hotel Brady for their for this
second quarterly Concho Valley
Boy Scout Council executive
board meeting and committee re-
port. according to an announce-
ment by Robert G. Carr, council
president.
Other council officers expected
to attend are Emmett Cox, trea-
surer; H. C. Grata. Scout com-
missioner; H. C. Ragsdale and R.
L. Baldwin, San Angelo; Sam
Walk, De£ Rio; and C. W. Bark-
. . _* » v’** presidents,
execu-
Fe freight train overturned
; of Brownwood
needs is a religious
more powerful than
bomb to overcome sin and its
«ults in the lives of
ON WEST COMMERCE— i“nd n.at’?n?- The power of
> xxrzx » o .Malcolm Haleys Buy., wii?do This’'
InW.G. Morrow Home g
Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Morrow
Transporation, will have
which announced that previously their two sons the first part of
enforced 25 per cent reductions in June.
passenger service would remain Dr. W. Grady Morrow, who
spent some time in the Hawaiian
Islands as
TJhe crew was not injured and
no one was beiieved under the
wreckage.
The accident tore up 900 feet
of track, destroyed a 92-foot
railroad bridge and badly dam-
aged telephone lines.
A sand-filled car left the rails
new owners.
re-| coming here from El Paso, call Scriptures
they resided in ■ Gentry, Church of Christ minia-
short ter. Rev. A. L. Byrd of the Cen-
. -
A
^M
I Albert Gary. Dee Hampton. Jr.
J. E. "
Gerald
more.
Owens,
was
one
I did more
L]p in the
k Truman
ress when
brother-
47 million
if neces-
k Truman
kj-psa who
jckling la-
iw a
idly
me of the
tr» thrown
abstracting
ife”!
CONCHO VALLEY COUNCIL TO HOLD)
QUAHTEHLT MEETING FRiMY NITE
SnM bnieials YtTSrSS-.-?*
Area to Discuss Camo shower8 and a new mad leading
4 I into camp. Louis Farr boasts a new
ActivitiesFor Summer : naint job inside the mess hail,
j butane gas for heating, concrete
' floors in the showers and ade-
quate screening. ij'
The same program is planned
summer which brought
an attendance record for the
Concho Valley Council in 1945.
Last year 1,112 boys attended the
summer schedule, more than 50 ’
per cent of the council registra-
tion and the highest percentage
sugar plantation and time. At Garfield Haley was in tral Baptist Church presented a
while Mrs. vocal solo “Hold Thou My Hand”
1 sy- and Rev. Harold R. Burkhart,
Christian Church pastor gave a
piano solo, “Du Bist de Ruh.”
Another hymn, “I Love To Tell
i the Story” was sung immediately
; following the sermon • and th«
benediction was given by W. E«
Whitten, Brady School superin-
tendent. Pianists for the services
were E. P. Richardson and Georga
Collins and Richardson also di-
rected the choir.
Commencement exercises will
I be held at 8 o’clock Friday night
Clen? Sofge was shot to death at, the h'£h school auditorium at
which time Dr. G. H. Ricks will
present diplomas to the 58 mem-
bers of the class.
The program for the com-
mencement exercises is as fol-
lows: Processional; invocation,
W. E. Whitten; choral music.
High School Chorus; salutatory,
; introduction. Roy
Educa-
’ Dr.
of
McMurry College. Abilene; pres-
i of class. J. P. Rudd,
presenta-
Dr. G.
Ballots Prepared For
| Jaycee Election June 7
Ballots for directors to guide
the Brady Junior Chamber of
Commerce for the ensuing year
will be cast by the Jaycees at a
membershin meeting to be held
Friday, June 7, at the First
Methodist Church.
A supper will be served in con-
junction wth the meeting, offic-
ials of the organization have an-
nounced.
Ballots have been prepared and '
nine directors will be selected
from the 18 nominated recently.
Those whose names appear on the
ballot are: George M. Adkins,
David Bratton, Tommy Brook, L.
O. Brown, George A. Carrithers,
Frank Corder, Egan Fowler, Ben
Davis Geeslin, Clyde Hall, Jr.,
George H. Johanson, H. E. More-
land, David Quinn, Bill Roberts,
Jr., Bob Shanks, Robert L.
Smith, Karl K. Steffens, S. P.
Tomlinson, Jr. and Sherrod
Smith.
'tricinns over Bell’s while
. . cum’s won their second
bon< s . 1 j.jjg sea8on fey taking
Ulstad 4-3. Duncum’s came from
It would bntt jouto
of millions 4 A mH
t*..
his p'wers axkledl
stroru he'd nw bM
then. The aiiw.sl
h«'j caused t be M
start of ^ab■ace; I
pesors he’s ausedl
and cold lecase ofl
the piilliona «f nJ
taw to wut anothj
or year Wwt theij
net suit, a xw ata
ryr home * be J
nksw-DTC"'#! mtm. 1
lam are maktoko
taf-tie him, httat
try be.
• • 4
You have ten it
times. but did you
how hailstones the
talk, which Ml
parts of M«C»lloc
cently, got that wi
tific explanatbn, x
this:
For normal hail
winds of froa !5 1
hour catches a larm!
drop and earn it u
wm temperatures.
IrcMcand drops J
freeae level, »her
mor? moisture,
catches it again ar
er of ice is foone
continue* until th
thrown out of the
comes so heavy tl
hailstone is made]
three layers.
may have six • I
• *1
Reporting rfj
case in Saa
"utbreak on
toe question,
J® prevest k
The answer L.
,nlf. according 1
FenndatUa ftd
iyain. Very M
bunt the disutoi
cause—s virtoj
cure. We k«*»|
lflunicabto^ ttojj
"••y harbour 31
Presenttog atfl
to«s of the CM
• •
Caa 70
Buried At Pear Valley ?e.“nLonJs planaed
Funeral l_.
behind o score all of their four 4:00 o’clock today for Mrs. La-’
runs in the first of the seventh Verne Marshall Cleghorn, 33, at
canto to edge out the favored Pear Valley with Moore Eubanks,
front-rank team. Church of Christ minister, offic-
Loop standings as of Tuesday
were;
Kiliomyelitia
discomfort:
* stated that he’had
an, up** "tomseb. If
UM/aPP^r, • physidsn
^jc,l imiwMtotoly. Ex-
cart s*ay prevent
ldeforn»-*fcta|
sou'TOK
ANUELO SHOW
Gotch«r*to Palomino la
JodffodBcat; Diekeraon,
White Entries Place
a happy reunion with
•s^rfenior Class Told It Is First To Graduate Into Atomic Age
annual San Angelo Colt Show — ______________________
■’i'T^£Av.M°RNiNG-m k.1 .• » r\ •< i kN a* iHIGH SCHOOL
AUDITORIUM
FILLED
Rev. M. B. Carroll Gives
Baccalaureate Sermon
Sunday Morning; Class
Get Diplomas Friday
CITY ATTONNEY INVESTIGATIMi
ALLEGE! SHORTAGE OF FUEL Ml
S3.000 Gallon. SaMjSS-., S
Short At Municipal ^borough’s well near Santa
Water & Light Plant ' His statement continued that he
had delivered all the oil which
I had been placed on hia truck and
it was his opinion that it had
left and that I delivered the entire
,, | amount to the Light Plant. Mr.
shortage was said by city of- (Crow signd for the oil this mora-
ls to ba between 13,500 and ing, but he did not measure it.
No one but myself knows that I
made a full delivery of a truck
load.”
Stewart told members of the
council that he thought his loads
of fuel oil checked out as billed,
but stated that ho would make up
for this shortage and that ho
would bo willing to allow two
tooda of oil each month to apply
aa credit agalnet ooeh shortage
until fnU amount has boon ^aO.
^^y ^ttorney Adidas aato Uris _
I the hearts
Lns to see
. Am”, jvith
in _
k|e to break!
I man-hours
1 is nothing
L million of
L go hungry
ack of coal;
|ons who’ll
six months
dream of a
imobile or a
rolized have
>t for this
The sooner
ral, rope and
ill our coun-
Hampshire Gilts To
Eight McCulloch Boys
Hampshire gilts were given to
eight 4-H and Future Farmers
members Saturday morning by
club members who had raised the
pigs from gilts presented to them
last year by the Sears, Roebuck
Foundation with the understand-
ing that one gilt' from each lit-
ter be given another boy in or-
der to give all an opportunity to
raise the stock.
Those who received pigs after a
drawing held at the office of
County Agent R. F. McSwain
were: Ronnie Rayan, Cecil Wigin-
ton, Bobby C. Coalson, Darrell
Garner, Jerry Mac Betsill, Elbert
Shipman, J. A. Martin and Arlie
Elliott.
Big problem to be up for dis-
cussion is the continuation of the
camping program for Scouts at
Camps Louis Farr and Fawcett,
bv Evans J. Adkins, chairman of The camping eommttee chairman.
Henry Batjer, San Angelo, is te
make his report along with other
committeeman including C.
Barker, finance; Sterling
Crystal City, training:
Wren, San Angelo, <
B. L. Hughes, health
operated in conjunction with the
the wreck, said it house is now being built for the I,
uire four days to clear purpose.^
and rebuild track
league is still wide open. In furnished by the government and
Thursday night’s contests. Ereck-
son-Ulstad took City Electric, 4-3.
and Bell’s Chicks won over Rod-
die’s by scoring one run in an
tra inning by a 10-9 count.
'Thursday night’s games
{suited in a 6-3 win by the Elec-
I 4 * 4b B Mb A lx 4% 1 1 •• • I* • 1 . T | |
game of i
Ereckson-
“The discovery and invention of
the atomic bomb gives an insight
i into the nature of the final con-
flagration at the end of this age”,
Rev. M. B. Carroll, pastor of tha
First Baptist Church here told 58
members of the Brady High
School graduating class at bac-
calaureate services held Sunday
. .. „ uni. coming in the high school audi-
of the Farmers and Ranch- torjum
Using as his sermon theme,
. , . | “The Atomic Bomb and tha
huge KTa»n elevator is Bible”, Rev. Carroll told the class
ready to receive all kinds of grain that it was the firgt in Brad u
the new managr said. graduate into the atomic age. Ths
Hollinger has been manager of class was challenged to see that
!an elevator in El Reno for the all material things will some day
r two yea,rs- He, previously be dissolved and each of the grad-
uates challenged to live with a
spiritual experience based upon
soberness and God’s righteousness.
Spiritual qualities as found in
, . ..v ------------ ^,... the Christian experience were pic-
' reared at Talpa in Coleman Coun- tured by the speaker as the only
1 ty. [things about today’s world which
Cooperative officials have an- wj|i not eventually be consumed
1 nounced that a feed plant will be jn final judgment
I operated in conjunction with the The atomi{. bom ‘
[local elevator and that a ware-,to as th„ cljmax of
•ctive power. “Now, what man
is a religious experience
the atomic
re-
individuals
the
Gospel of Jesus Christ is all that
, he said.
The high school auditorium was
completely filled for the hacca-
service in which all
’he the churches of the city cooper-
W. ated by dispensing with regular
they announc- , services so that each congregation
| could attend the school exercises.
Following the processional, the
Nation s Railroads Near Normal
After Settlement of 2-Day Strike1 $
4 H A NG0VER’l23 OFF TRACK—
IQ QI?I?NT E A D Train Cars Wreck
15 5H/E1N r U K Near Brownwood
jp I? W D A V Q1 BROWNWOOD, May
1. 1-/ ▼▼ U r\. 1 O Twenty-three cars of a 39-car
Moll rk:a...~4^i Brownwood to Fort Worth Santa
Service Disrupted pe freight train overturned 12 ■
as Embargo on AU But miles northeast
First Class During the this morning.
2-Day Old Strike
An investigation into a pur-
ported shortage of 83,000 gallons
—Ak_ ' • M _ - ___
Light Works is being made by
City Attorney Evans J. Adkins
following presentation of log
aheet ^records to the City Council
- - ------- plant’s
be|k«Pt «war superintendent, which revealed
onj8,* MUST, the shortage.
Appearing before a recent
njteting °f the council, Geeslin
* 1 log sheets
which showed a shortage of 83,000
gallons which had occurred since
June 9, 1948. Approximate cost of
ficteia
18,700.
A on one delivery which
was made by Robert Stewart, dri-
ver for the dealer, Mrs. C. J. Wil-
liamson, allegedly showed a 969-
galloa shortage from the 32 bar-
rels Itotad on the delivery receipt,
Goototoi held the council.
OtoWMt was present at ths
talMl pivaviikw *
•WOfta statement which ssld in
MMtame that since Juno 9, UMS,
iJtoerod aU the oil which
'• 1
*
Church of Christ minister, offic-
iating. Interment followed in the
Pear Valley Cemetery under di-1
rection of Roy 0. Wilkerson
Son.
Mrs. Cleghorn, who had been
500; ill for the past seven months,
died at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Marshall at
Pear Valley, at noon Monday.
A native of Dallas County,
Mrs. Cleghorn had lived most of
her life in McCulloch. She had
resided at Conroe for the last
four years.
Survivors include her husband,
James Cleghorn and two sons,
Clovis and John Tom Cleghorn;
her parents, three brothers and
two sisters.
5 WINS, 2 LOSSES—
City Electric Brady
Softball Loop Leader
City Electric and Ereckson-Ul-
stad are battling it out for league ,
leadership in the Brady softball
loop race with the rert of the
teams well scattered out behind
them. Ereckson-Ulstad led over
the week-end but dropped a game
to Duncum’s Monday night while i Bait Mixer III Use
the Electricians were taking1 , . . .
Bell’s Chicks to forge back into I, A mixer for bait with
the top slot. [farmers and ranchers may
The Electricians are now < __ _
top with five wins against two I to r/r" McSwain?'county'argent
„ losses while the Pontiac Free [ Located at the Stindt’s Gin,
lol of | Wheelers are close behind with the mixer has been put up by the
— —2 county agent to aid local farm-
The games during the last week ers in their figlrt again damage
, 80-
fu*1 at th« Brady Water and bcen mis’rau*e<1 at the p,ant-
In regard to the purported
shortage of 959 gallons on the
one load which was spot checked
his statement said, “The load I
delivered to the city on the morn-
ing of May 6, 1946, came from
R. S. Starling. My truck lacks «-
bout four gallons of holding 32-
barrels. I know that it was full
when I made delivery and 11
To Have Little Effect
New draft procedures, which ler. Big Wells,
call for the re-classification and'and Jack Hodges, council
eventual induction into the armed Itive.
forces of men Kt ween the ages Bi;
of 26 and 29 Inclusive, will have
little effect on mew in McCulloch
County, according to a statement
l. z.___:
McCulloch County Board No. One.
Going through the records, the
local board han fouad only one
man among all the registrants
who might be eligible for induc-
tion at present AU others an
B or exempt in other ways,
i said.
board can’t be
Won
City Electric .... 5
Ereckson-Ulstad ... 4
Roddie’s _ „ ...2
Duncum’s .... 2
Bell’s 2
Texas Theatre 1
Brady Standard
3irart ®' ffiexas Jx'etos
Published TWICE-A-WEEK, TUESDAY and FRIDAY!
8 PAGES TODAY Brady, McCulloch County, Texaa, Tuesday^May 28, 1946 Whole Number 6490 ~
to derail. The locomotive i
in nine cars at the front of the train
Brady late Saturday afternoon, and seven cars at the rear re-
following the settling of the rail- mained on the track.
road strike, and Bradyites re- It was the second train out of
ceived some mail Sunday. Mean- Brownwood after the strike set-
*’----" -----7~• train mov-
ing'first.
Brownwood-Fort Worth
now are routed via canta
Temple. Passengers were
by automobile from Comanche to
Brownwood.
A. B. Clement, Temple, direct-
- at r
road strike, and Bradyites
time, newspapers and fourth class a PassenKt‘r
mail were gradually arriving and
being distributed at the local post
office. There was a backlog of
fourth class mail, since none was
received Friday or Saturday. The
embargo on mail other than first
service would remain
in effect because of the coal sit-
uation. The ODT also said: islands as a <
restric- cal Corps, is now on terminal
tions, such as an embargo on rail- leave. He has been with his wife
road freight shipments or further and son in Atlanta. Ga., and they day. ~
reductions in passenger service, are due to arrive here next week. The
will be necesary unless the coal Dr. Morrow ancl family
situation improves rapidly."
Railroad workers were report- has signed up for a year’s
ing back to their jobs and trains tract on
started running again on hastily will
improvished schedules, Sunday.
Many complicating problems a-
rose, however, to retard an im-
mediate return to pre-strike stan-
dards. These complications includ-
ed:
1. Delays in officially notifying
striking workers of the end of the
strike and ordering them to re-
port for work.
2. Thousands of freight <
and : were left stranded in yards and
honor of one of the company’s and several days would be re-
founders, Roscoe L. Perry of quired to unscramble the traffic
Lufkin whose funeral services'
were conducted on that date fol-
lowing his death at noon Mon-; anj freight shipments had '
, .. (accumulated during
Ace G. Doran, manager of the
local store, said that Mr.
was one of five brothers
founded the chain of variety i
stores and at the time of his
death was chairman of the board
for the company.
The nation’s railroads, released
from government control, are
very near normal freight and
passenger operations now- after
one of the most hectic week-ends
^i*8_COUn^?l ^as ever experienced on a curve, causing the remainder
to derail. The locomotive and j
past
1 are ’
give four wins and two setbacks.
have lien much closer than in by the insects. The poison,
the earlier stages of play and the ^’Um fluosilicate, and the bran is
the farmer is asked to furnish
the cotton seed hulls for the
mixing base. A 25-cent per hun- dagg/^iac^'Tn* Thuraday in^ activitJ
mad.P°Und g C argC W* atornoon. was lifted after settle- would reqi'i
’ ment of the railroad strike. the wreckage
THIS \FTERNOON Even as the roads made their and bridge.
‘ * iirst efforts to unscramble the
AlrS. .fames C lejjnorn snarl caused by the two-day strike, rIRSi
pattern.
3. A heavy backlog of mail, ex-
I pivas «nu 1 _
■ accumulated during the
p [period and offices handling such
who' sh’Pmento were expected to be
j swamped today with these ship-
ments delayed at their origin.
4. Many travelers had changed
their travel plans. As a result,
most of the trains which were
sent out immediately after the
end of the strike were lightly load-
ed.
6. Many of the trains Thich
started Saturday night and Sun-
day did not move out vn schedule,
complicating dispatching routine.
At least two days will be required
to get all transcontinental trips
back to pre-strike standards.
The embargo on freight and ex-
press was lifted Saturday by the
ODT. On Saturday, the ODT had
removed priorities for air traffic,
and the order giving mail prefer-
ence over passengers on the few
trains that were operating. Postal
restrictions on all mail except ;
first class mater weighing not
more than two pounds and air ,
mail also had been removed short-
ly after the strike settlement.
service, are due to arrive here next week.
• — — - •• r are ]
turning to the islands where he Garfield home as
con- : the border city for only a
Processional;
E. Whitten; choral
R VW. WW..WB ... W.W.. . -w.-w «.
engage in private practice; the ginning business, v,
with a physician there. 1 Haley taught in the school
The Morrows other son, Lt. (j. stem.
g.) Billy Morrow, is slated to J ----------------------
complete his basic training in the Mail Given 2 YeaFS
Naval Air Corps at Kingsville the1
first part of the month, and he and For Killing Brother
his brother will meet for
first time in two years here. He |
has a short leave here before f“
ing on to Pensacola. Fla., where
he will receive his advanced
training.
Mrs. Morrow’s sister, Mrs.
I J. Gatling of Dallas, who is now
[visiting here, is to remain for the
reunion. , jon the streets of
Oct. 22.
Sofge testified at his trial that
series of threats were made
him by Clem and;
in ;"l believe with all my heart that
Marine if I hadn’t got in the first shot I 1
[ Patsy Lehrer;
[ Huffman: class address.
I tion For a Time Like This.”
| Harold G. Cooke, president
; entation of class. J. P.
I high school principals;
tion of diplomas. Dr. G. H.
'Ricks: honor awards. W. E Whit-
ten. Rotary award. * nVn L.
—-----; and valedictory. Mary
tents. Verner.
Members of the class are: Earl
j Behrens. Harold Byler. Floyd
Lee liacus. Jack Edmiston, Wal-
I ter Fleeson. Jackie Gartman. Joe
Herrington. Roy Huffman.
Kirklin. Wayne Larre-
Orvll Mitchel. Randolph
James Peterson. Cecil
Rives, Charles Samuelson. Char-
[ les Taylor. Morris Underwood,
Jack White. Cecil Williams.
Margaret Ann Carson. Wanda
| Faye Clark. Anna Lee Crosland,
Jacquelyn Darley. Joyce Finlay,
Anita Gage. Ouita Hampton.
Minnetta Hendrix. Mary Hernan-
des. Fay Huff. Treva Irish. Nslda
Jeffreys. Beverly Jordon. Enn
Larremore. Wanda June Law-
rence. Patsy Lehrer. Bobbie. Me-
Christial, Juanita May. La veil*
Milburn. Virginia Anne Millar.
Betty Sue Nowlin. Jeanette Ram-
sey, Mercedes Rubio. Lnpe Salin-
as. Betty Jo Sansom. Betty Rae
Schmidt. Lynda Sheffield, pa-
rtite Sheppard. Rosalie Spears,
Lois Swaney. Betty Jean Taylor.
Patricia Todd. Margaret Tolbert.
Mary Verner. Marguerite Wil-
liams, Joel Mae Wood, and De I ma
Faya Word.
Pfc. W. T. Riley, formerly of
strike! *'alf Creek, writes his friends, a
James and Billy Bingham from against
is "
miles wouldn’t be here today.”
where ------------------
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Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 17, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 28, 1946, newspaper, May 28, 1946; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357359/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.