The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 70, Ed. 1 Friday, November 29, 1946 Page: 2 of 10
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NOTICE
TAXIDERMIST
/
L-
I Will Be Closed
DEER HEADS
ifc. *.
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II
John Boot &
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ALSO MAKE RUGS
■ ’
AND FURS FROM
Ge
PELTS
—28 Years Experience—
Conrad Carlson
■
9
Taxidermist
K
2 Miles East of Brady
3
9
I
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c
PICKLES too
c
$
u
Picnic
HAMS
Select
MEAL 5 lbs. 35c
—Pound—
4^®
Pork
Lb.
PEAS ••••Dcl Monte •••• No-2 Can •••• 21c
CHOPS 590
I
SPINACH No-2 Ca"
120
■
490
VEAL CUTLETS Pou"d
J
SALT Morton’s
2 PKGS. 170
By Ted Resting
♦
370
Thero
29c
490
PEANUT BUTTER Quart .......... 490
180
CORN
19c
7P
HEINZ BABY FOODS '
Tomatoes
Wash ing—Greasing—Lubrication
lb. 15c
QUALITY
Phone 153
701 S. Blackburn
Phone 247
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?hi
MSYSTEM
I
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ORANGES 10 Pound Sack
Grapefruit Juice
46 Ounces 17c
I
I
For Complete Service On Your Car Or
Truck Visit Our Magnolia Station. Fill
Up During Week Days As We Are
Closed On Sundays.
Brady, Bradj
Dec. 2, Fror
• We Are Ready Again
To Mount Your
Shoe Shop
204 S. Blackburn St.
Del Monte
Cream Style
No. 2 Can ....
ARE FOUND AT
YOUR COMPLETE
Here From Pad
Mr. and Mn
spent Sunday it
Rectal, He
Colon
through
■northern
1
E. E. Cd
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday. November 28-
29-30.
PAT McSHAN
SERVICE STATION
Ground
VEAL 290
ir.g occurred in
lo hotel lobby.
.A
fflmLJiLji.il <
Heart’s Delight
Peaches
Melba Halves
or Sliced
No. 2Vi Can ....
CONCRETE
BLOCKS
l
i.
■"t
f
FOR FREE REMOVAL OF
DEAD
Unskinned Or Useless
ANIMALS
Phone Brady 203—Collect
BRADY RENDERING CO.
ii'
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SERVICE APPRECIATION
—Phone 397 Jack Wiffginton Free Delivery—
THIS IS A BRADY HOME OWNED & OPERATED STORE
as-, v a
3S_______
Fresh
^Piles Cun
• K
490
GRAPEFRUIT 10 Pound Sack .... 490
YAMS lb. 7c
SPUDS — 10 ,>oun‘l Mesh Bag........
LEMONS Dozen ......
BGLOGNA SAUSAGE Pound 390
CHUCK ROAST Pound
HOMINY N°2,/’Ca"
*
Yes, V. 'I
ing con
As fs
from 1
“(’or
OYSTERS
pint 890
I He
—*■-. iLTB MWh—MM
32 Ounce — Full Quart SOUR —Jar—
gn
L »
mon theory that all bass hiber-
nate by his experience in winter
LETS YOU TURN OUT BREAD
ata moments notice/
John Sloane Otto Kinman
Otto Kinman, Gen. Contractor
.nJ
■al
>
GOVERNO
DEER—Gove J
ford Jester,
Midland wit
blacktail deej
ed on the 1
near Fort Dal
BRADY TILE &
CONST. CO.
Blind, Bleeding
matter how loi
in a few days
tying, burning
detention frond
Fistula and otl
successfully trd
Colonic Treatm
examinJ
I
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L/CAN
ELP
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rv
/fowl American Junior Red Cross
< PAGE TWO ------------1
Bn^Anetw. Trip
Mrs. Clarence Cole. Mrs. Hu-
bert Stewart. Mrs. Ben Stewart
and Mrs. Fred Wilson were shop-
ping in San Angelo, Thursday.
They visited with their sister. Mrs.
Clarence Hanson, who recently
moved to San Angelo from Chris-
toval.
liTTn jllel
?■
Carrie Gail Miller is ill at her
home with strep throat, having
been confined for the past week.
TRU/TSAND VEGETABLES <
■
J
Pure Pork SAUSAGE Pound
•4
in
ADMIRATION'S exceptional
goodness never varies from
package to package. It is
personally "Cup-Tested"—
by taste—to keep it always
the same fine blend of rich,
fragrant coffee. The per-
sonally "Cup-Tested"
ADMIRATION way is the
only way to assure that ■
constant perfection in
coffee.
L,
when they get stiff with the cold, i
Try toughening them up in cold I_____ ____
elements before setting out and angling. He does not know wheth-
even cut down gloves, with tips of — -•••• •**
fingers and palms cut out, are
surprising in the warth that they
give.
Mr. Lucas disproves the
Jim Harkrid
I
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X**-- r.
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HI
er any of them are completely
dormant at that time of the year,
i but he does know that they are
■still moving around and feeding
com- at least a little.
Heart’s Delight w
FRUIT COCKTAIL Xo Ca" 390
• I
THE BRADY STANDARD AND HEART O’ TEXAS NEWS, BRADY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1946
♦^9 ♦.
I
__ , •
Mun is the most powerful and the North
enemy of the grouse.‘many .. —
fishing, it’s a sheer joy to be out1
on a northern lake, and to be;
alive. Now is when the loons are
calling, when a strange beauty
and peace settles down on the
North.
Sometimes, especially as winter j
approaches more closely, it can
be cold, dreery, rainy. But is the
J
The legend of the 1917 American Junior Red Cross poster, "You Can Help," means youth can help
in international programs of service. .
During the past year and a half, the school children of the I mted States of America ha^e sent
more than $2,000,000 worth of supplies to children abroad through the American Junior Red Cross.
They have given large sums to the American Junior Red Cross National Children’s 1 und. have sent
many correspondence albums, and have packed hundreds of thousands of gift boxes. 1 he gift box
goaf for the fall of 1916 is 1.000.000 gift boxes. 117 „ . » « •
The poster painted bv Rico Tomaso will be distributed during the Annual Enrollment for Service
Campaign, whioh enlists members for such service. ________________________________
///«*•“- •-
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* ‘ Wi
| _______________ _______
Quick acting... easy to use-keeps for weeks
on your pantry shelf
IF YOU BAKE AT HOME —you can
make all the delicious bread you want to,
any time you want to with wonderful New
Fleischmann’s Fast Rising Dry Yeast. No
more being “caught short” with no yeast in
the house ... no spoiled batch because yeast
weakened. New Fleischmann’s Fast Rising
keeps fresh on your pantry shelf for weeks.
Keep a supply handy. At your grocer’s.
R.-. i
' * X.
I? *"-y
Hb-W? *y
\«4
Mr BBh/
Ito the presence of man.
wf 48
I' 'I
r hd
is indecision about
grouse.
conif- j
the for-1
hey have|
brush, in
in or-
fields.
irdly. immigrant
never witness a
pieblan farm
is far too shy. too
too independent.
Ruggedness is a native char-
• of the bird. A friend1
told me of shooting a cock i
that was fat and in excellent |
condition. When he examined the
bird, he found he had only one |
i leg. The missing leg had evident-
I ly been shot off years before. The
| wound had healed perfectly. How |
the cock managed to survive un-,
der this great handicap, and had j
even prospered. waxed fat, is i
and will remain a mystery.
When he is foraging, he will
tight almost any animal or any
bird that disputes the ground.
Grouse have been seen to chase
big cock pheasants; a small hen |
grouse r»ut two gray squirrels
| which disputed the hens right to
eat Wintergreen berries on their
premises. The wings of grouse
are strong—they are used as a
weapon that will hurt most small
I animals or cripple birds of their
j own size.
He always will be independ-1
ent. He will never go on relief. I
The only Government aid he lias I
iaccepted is the law establishing
legal hunting seasons and legal
kills a day and that because he
has no choice.
He is as American as pumpkin
Pie.
< a
< 1
4au]
a
j 1
angler any different than the duck "
hunter who will sit in his blind,
shivering, hour after hour? And
one can be as warm as he wants,
simply by bundling up in enough
clothes.
Some answer that they cannot
cast when hampered by a lot of,
heavy clothes and here we see I
that they are trying to heave the j
lure inste«*d of casting by the flip I
of the wrist. The one thing that
may give trouble is the hands
fenc
rd-'. 1
I Inlike
■ j pheasant
■ g>ou«e <
0R I chickens. He
■ proud and
I T;'— '
act> i istie
K once
been unable to secure accomoda-
tions a couple of months before.
Many of them even offer cabins
at bargain rates.
One cannot guess what fall
weather is going to be, but nor-
mally, it by far the best time of
W STORE
DUNCAN COFFEE COMPATT
HOUSTON, TtXAS^
the
American grouse. Instinctively,
the ruffed grouse knows what to
do and when to do it. This is one
of the individualistic traits which
has enabled him to survive under
conditions that wirald be impos-
sible Tor any other game bird.
The ruffed grouse has more
courage in the way of natural
resources than many of our up-
land birds. This is the tribute
paid by Harry Botsford. outdoor
man and writer. These naturally
shy and extremely w ild birds that make
have never become accustomed
( BARGED—Wiley R. Tom-
linson. Menard County ranch-
er, is shown as he left the
San Angelo courthouse after
being charged with* murder
in the fatal shooting of
Harold B. Opp, former West
Texas ranchman. Opp’s shoot-
a San Ange-
(AP Photo).
L---------------- IT " ~T' 71
4'=-
KB
wifil
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502 N. Bridge
—
From now on until the near
freeze-up is by fat the best bass|
fishing of the year. The very i
Lett begins when th<> maples
around the shore have turned to
their amazing, unbelievable fall
colors, and after the fir^. hard
frost. The sight of them is so
beautiful that it is almost enough
a man stop fishing to en-i
joy it—almost; nothing short of
a bullet would stop a real ang-
ler’s fishing when the bass are act- L
ling the way they do now.
I No mosquitoes, no knats; no
nothing t<> bother one. No sudden
storms, even as such as one gets I
during the hott< r weather. Jason
Lucas, angling authority on fresh
water fishing, states that this is I
when most of the really big ones]
are caught, caught by the v^ry
few who fish now. These fish of
the esocidae family feed all win-
ter and catching them through
the ice is a common
sport.
Then too, all over the North
country, are resorts standing
empty, when would-be guests had
7
V
.the whole year, the pleasantest in
’t1*? country. There are
inurnv days when, outside of good
I relentless l„
I Yet there are times when a hen
I grouse will deliberately gamble
I her life with man in a gallant
I I and memorable display of cour-
I age.
I The ruffed grouse is rugged.
I inventive and shrewd. With the
I advance and spread of civillza-
I tion. forest, favorite types of cov-
I er and natural food have, one by
I one. been thinned out or cleared
I away. Men have invented more |
I deadly weapons and ammunition.
I Dogs have been especially train-
I ed for the hunting of grouse.
I There is danger and famine to be
avoided at all times.
Yet. the grouse have managed
to survive. They even prosper.
Their favorite habitat is a mixed
woods of hardwoods and
trees, but where
been felled
live in the
rows, to forage
raid buckwheat
the 1
. you’ll
ating with
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Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 70, Ed. 1 Friday, November 29, 1946, newspaper, November 29, 1946; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357412/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.