The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. [40], No. 71, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 30, 1948 Page: 1 of 8
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J
1
GUNS
Published TWICE-A-WEEK
TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS
id
10 PAGES TODAY
Tuesday, November 30, 1918
Whole Number 6752
5 CENTS PER COPY
CORM«
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miles
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of
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‘hone 656
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cost to the
LABLE
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terry
Many city officials now elected
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his
plane,
and
was
last
trum by member-.
F
$
4
authorized by a recent bond elec-
OW . ,.
Dad
noth-
buying aii proper
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Texas
at a
FI-ADS FOR
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to
of Commerce
Here From A&M
will
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Tibbett.
Returning Home
11
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TEXANS TO SPEAK AT
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were
Heturn
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it of
the
associate profes-
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.RA
HPC CHORUS TO SING ‘MESSIAH’
AT BAPTIST CHURCH TOMORROW
» Aiuiivuuri hiiu osii mr
tonio will join local Rotarians for
a banquet prepared by the Brady
High cafeteria staff.
ceremony,
the
set
committee composed of T. Wood
of Melvin. Eugene 122.7
been in San Antonio
with her brother-in-law and sister,
Other
letters
■ber of the Win-
irch.
•lx children. R.
A J. Deaver of
Deaver of Mer-
ciasses
one t
escorted
• ros-I
f the Highway
i
ve-
hill.
of-
p JL
• ■
rady Natl,
Jrge ti
N
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11
At
Shares
■iilfaippi. Mrs •
Duly», 1876. The
r /he was mar-
■ver Nov. 24. 18-
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P!
Texas
MERCURY T018
More Cold Wwther
Forecast But No 1
In Sight
Brady temperatures dropped to
second straight
and more cold
The Brady Standard
attit jUearf Crxas
Brady. McCulloch County, Texas
' I
group at Club
iy Thursday night,
id of Brady is presi-
• Wi(h9.j
disks, iLuQ
isawonder^
er crops iaq
regular tillage
it is furnished
5 pacing. Th ret J
from 18 to 221
available to gird
depth of penetrj
i now and set J
xible.extrajtroJ
hior i
i ind
JL^elie
lid », PPan,»
! ^aa^mber
i **Wre8.s
of
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! Another Liquor Raid
__ . • . m v-w • a __ 1
MRS. W. M NECESSARY DIES, TWO
BADLY HURT IN 3-CAR ACCIDENT
son and W. C. Bell and McCulloch (ss*ly,
Deputy Sheriff Henry Sharp in-
vestigated the accident. It was
Kquipmei
E. R. Nolen of Carlsbad. N. Mex.,
and E. E. Necessary of Fort
Worth, ten grandchildren and one
great-gr.u.dchild.
./_____ ' ’ „
Mrs. Natha Gillis of Barstow and
Mrs. E. L. Culpepper, Miss Re-
i becca Sorrells and Mrs. Jody Hen-1
dricks, all of Red Rock.
Pallbearers were George Reed,
Paul Lohn, Charley Miller, Ralph
Hall, Leon Barton and Bill Brown-
ing.
“window J
time after the main ■
l
Fire 6*11
HULLS
FARM BUREAU
MEET THURSDAY
Directors And Captains
To Plan Local Program, ’ loU*'"To arrive'i
Name Delegate
NEW 4 LASSES—
FFA, 4-H Stock
grass roots basis, however, I
. of Thursday’s
me«ting, which will start about
7 p. m., is to set up a local plan
of action for the McCulloch group.
■
Ing.
Funeral services were held Fri-
day morning from the Newlin re-
sidence. Burial was in Rest Haven
j Cemetery under the supervision
■ of Roy O. Wilkerson & Son.
Susan Jane is survived by her
parents; two brothers. Charles
Henry and James Clinton; and a
I sister, Dana Ann.
»
i
_ K.
tl
• ■ W ■ WF1
f - r*'
One person died and two others
I were seriously injured as a result
i of an auto accident on US 183
I nine miles north of Brady Satur-
I day afternoon. Two trucks and a
, passenger car were involved.
' r \
| resident of the Pear Valley com-
munity for 25 years, died in Brady
Hospital Saturday night, about
five hours after the collision.
Her husband and H. T. Kings-
bury of Santa Anna were sev-
erely hurt. Mr. Kingsbury was
dismissed Monday night but Mr.
Necessary is still a patient in the
[O.
i
MELVIN BUYS
EDEN GAS CO
Jack Tetens
Purchase Authorized
By Bond Election
Purchase of part of the Eden
Brady’s proposed city charter will be air-
ed at a public hearing Thursday night at
7:30 p. m. in Brady High auditorium.
The meeting has a two-fold purpose: to
acquaint Brady citizens with provisions of
the charter and to give the commission bene-
I fit and advice from other persons before the
charter is submitted to the city council.
I which brought
j Oklahoma. am
I
pad Mrs V. W.
Rood; four bro-
pr of Seymour.
■Uager, By.
Pw Byar of Abi-
k*. Mrs. Henry
p Ben Garins of
kr Rasmussen of
M Mrs. Ellen
F 15 Rrandehild-
R-Krandchildren
One of the finest music produc-
ever composed-—Handel’s
County May Get 14 Miles
Of New F-M Roads In ’50
Placid and Doole may be tied i
roads by 1950, according to
announced Friday by the
Ml
MH
Of Ex-Brady From
Teacher Arc
I From Italy
L >'j|| be held at
fay at Fort Sam
Ctonio, for l’vt-
L was killed in
jin? World War
|.n the Fort Sam
| Cemetery.
| of Mr. and Mrs.
jndy. was a for-
M coach at Re-
agh of the Cen-
IColeman County
| the service. He
k in the Italian
Li died from the
jti of the enemy
Ltober 21, 1944
&tte t. —
fee early 1930's
kgned letters in
fck at I*
months which saw the local group
regain firm financial status. Mr.
Sheppard will discuss the place of
Jaycees in the community and na-
tion and what they can do to pro-
,n?lc Peace an<i prosperity.
The banquet will be prepared
and served by Rochelle Future
HomemakerR and proceeds will go
to the Rochelle FHA chapter to
further homemaking objectives.
Rotarians from San Saba,
manager hired by the council to
supervise the city’s administra-
tion and carry out duties and
An election will be called soon
to accept or reject the charter. An
informed electorate then is a nec-
‘ , so members of the charter
commission urge Bradyites to
accident. It ' was ’’tudy the charter digest printed on
McCulloch’s sixth traffic fatality 1'“^ , today’,. Standard
and to attend Thursday s meeting.
Members of the commission are
Otto Frederick, chairman; T. P.
Wood, secretary; and James P.
Anderson, W. E. Ferguson, R. J.
Gartman, Clyde Hall, Sr., R.
Mohler, G. H. Ricks, Hardin H.
Jones, J. Frank Roddie, Aubrey L.
Townsend, P. L. Ulstad, Ben. L.
White, C. B. Whitehead and F. R.
Wulff.
Public Hearing Thursday Night
On Proposed Charter For Brady
Members of the commission, who have
spent months of time since their election
last January studying Brady’s needs and
governmental systems of similar cities, urge
the active participation in the meeting of all
citizens interested in good government and
progress of Brady.
Primary purpose of the charter is to
---------------1 enable the City of Brady to rem-
1 edy the shortcomings of Texas
general law under which it is now
operated.
To replace these, the charter
sets up a home-rule government
incorporating accepted principles
of effective city administration.
Basis of the government pro*
# 2 1, J > a city
council of four members and the
mayor which handies the legisla-
tive function of government, de-
Here is Dian's letter:
Desir Santa: A’onie
tree
■V e
7 i i
RINA—
r Rites
khell c
k for Mrs. R R
■fhell were held
By at the Win
Church with the
I officiating
led early Th u i s-
Ithe honb- of a
accident occurred about
m. Saturday in the Brady
Mountains when Palmer, driving
1 a truck-trailer unit, passed the
I Necessary pickup while both
hides were going north up a
According to investigating
ficers, when a 1941 Ford coach
driven south by F. C. Kingsbury
MRS. LORENA BALLOU—
‘7 Ex-Brady Resident
; Dies In New Mexico
31 The body of Mrs. Lorena Bal-
L,u to arrive in San Angelo
I Tuesday night from Albuquerque,
X - * * ’ * * YltJil---
A local program for the MeCul-1^^
loch Farm Bureau will lie planned hunerai srrvn.cn »■>•
meeting of directors and team I 9 o’clock Wednesday afternoon
captains of the „
Cafe in Brady Thursday night.
11. E. Wood of Brady is presi-
dent of the county’s recently-or-
. ganized Farm Bureau which now
,.01 '/? numbers about 150 McCulloch farm
families among its membership.
Delegates to tne state conven-
♦ b».n in 8an Antonio wil report on
results of that meeting, which saw
two resolutions of the McCulloch
bureau approved. Directom will
also select a delegate to the na-
tional Farm Bureau convention in
Atlantic City N. J., next week.
Since Farm Bureau is organized
on a l
I rimary purpose
banquet prepared by the Brady
W. W. Jackson of San Antonio,
a past district govemon of Rotary
International and former college
President, will be the main speak.
*•
* PERSONAL MENTION ♦
» + + ♦♦♦ — ♦♦♦♦♦*;
Here From A&M
Mr. and Mrs. John Denison and' . ..
children of College Station were |Pft letters for Santa when he ut Coleman October 30. She
holiday visitors with her parents, parachuted into Brady Monday model her green wool crepe dress,
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Tibbett. night. Those will be printed in which took area honors, at the
—. — j the Standard, too. If you haven’t ■ Angelo finals.
written that letter yet. do it soon, 1 Miss Tressie
Funeral services will be held at
' * 1 nt
San Angelo, with burial beside
the grave of her husband, A. E.
Ballou, who died in May, 1947.
Survivors include a son and sev-
eral daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Ballou were for-
mer residents of Brady, the for-
mer operating a grocery store on
the east side of the plaza
two score 1 2 *22* 2
moved to San Angelo.
. t' J 1
'Tir11 a^Mrs. J. H. Francks
were accompanied to Austin last
Thursday by Mr. and Mrs. George
Adkins and Mr. and Mrs. K. K.
Steffens where they attended the
annual Texas Universlty-Texas A
&M football game.
feu* Jg
h.octane enj
Watch M
leting
ision
fs training < IIKISTMAS SEASON—
First Methodist School Holidays To
hoyrneMm«! December 22
uwaviun. < The school holidays for
Ition clubwomen ' Christinas season have been
by the Board of Trustees of the
Brady Independent School Dis-
trict, Supt. W. E. Whitten has an-
nounced.
Holidays will commence at 4 p
m. Wednesday, Dec. 22, and will
continue until Monday. January 3.
by the
the | around the plaza and to the
,f Commerce. trum by member of
gh School bat.d,' patrol and local officers. He made (
ion of Douglas a brief talk, and then began pass-
including
college and assistant director of
the group.
Included in the program will be
the famous "Hallelujah Chorus”,
the best-known excerpt from Han-
del’s masterpiece.
Soloists with the chorus include
Robert Milam, tenor; Mrs. C. D.
Pederson, soprano; Marilyn Sey-
mour, contralto; and Gabriel
Fransee. basso. Mr. Fransee is an-
other assistant director.
The group is in its second year
under the direction of Dr. Grady
H. Harlan and its fine musical
productions have created a good
name for the chorus throughout
j of Melvin,
brought the
$30,000.
Mr. Tetens received all com-
pany property north of the Brady
Valley junction, serving Millers-
j view, Paint Rock and Doole. His
i movable assets, half the amount
of Melvin’s, made hi« vhai* enst.
$15,000.
In addition to establishment of
the municipal natural gas service,
Melvin’s bond election also auth-
orized improvements tc the city’s
water system.
This winter there will be two
Angiis class, three classes in I Texas. NationaJ
classifi-
•
Five Registrants
Become Delinquent
Five registrants have become,
, delinquent with the Local
tive S©rvic6 Board No. S9 by fail-
ure to perform some selective ser-
vice duty”, according to Wayne
Spiller, clerk.
Those becoming delinquent in
October and November were;
Reyes Oulterres Martinet. I^muel
Wilburn White. Cipriano R. Ga-
1l»do. Josa De Jesus Damlngues
and Joseph Cheater Jacoby.
accompany Miss Dodson to San
Angelo next Tuesday. The contest
is sponsored by the ladies auxil-
iary of the Texas Sheep and Goat
Raisers Association and the finals
will be held in conjunction with
I S&G RA s convention.
Is Trades Day Winners
Rain Getting Hard To Find
Judges had to call six names
• Saturday to find three Trades
Day winners.
Ainas Rolan was the third
choice for a $25 prize; Mrs. M.
L. Wootan was the second called
lor the $5o award.
But on the one time or
ing money. Mrs. P. Rockwell
was ready to pick up her $100
in merchandise certificates.
All of the winners are Brady
residents.
Standard Ready
To Publish All
Letters To Santa
Little Dian Cust?r already
knows what she wants for Christ-
mas. And she has done something
about it. The Melvin girl is the
first this year to tell Santa Claus
—through The Brady Standard—
what she'd like to find under the
tree Christmas morning.
• d
■ '' . i
1 i ‘*1
’■Jm
Nets About 138 Pints
Charlie Bumguardner, J. W..
Jackson and Rosie Airheart were
charged with possession of liquor
here Monday morning after an-
other raid made by Deputy Sheriff
Henry Sharp and Liquor Control
Board Inspector Gerald Black Sat-
urday afternoon.
Jackson and Bumguardner paid
fines totaling $1,131.80 in County
Court last week on seven other
liquor charges.
Confiscated In the latest raid
were 122 cans of beer. 41 pints
of whiskey. 26 pints of gin and
five quarts of wine.
Return From VMt
Mr and Mrs. Shiloh Gorman
and son returned Monday from
a holiday rlslt at Meridian with
her parents. Pr and Mrs W: W.
MrBlhanaon.
The
Thanksgiving Day pro-! 3.15 p
Show Set Jan. 18
McCulloch County's annual fat
timated at $132,000.
The Texas Highway
sion i -—---
lowing projects for this county:
i the end of F-M 503 at
Salt Gap, north about 6.2 miles and the proposed extension toward
to Doole. I" 12 2*~ ' ■• • •
US 87 near Melvin. as a primary highway.
Federal Inspection
Due Brady Unit
Company C. 142nd Infantry.
“ ‘ 1 Guard unit sta-1
I tinned al Brady, will undergo a
• federal inspection December 14,|
/ I
/ j
I ■itJAKS to SPEAK AT
/■•IIOJAYCEE BANQUETS
. sponsored by
S>are exP«ted
p Persons to-
other cit-
t ,:15, members
^hamlter of
_______ „W1„ ____
in/ Brownwood, Ballinger, San Ange-
1<nt fl the Un, °* ?*enard, Junction and San An-
’u2»"'bCT"i"
^ess this
’B recent
22 ) i written that letter yet. do it soon. Miss Tressie Shaver, Brady
Mrs. V. E. Sanderson, who has {and mail it to Santa Claus. The High homemaking instructor, will
last week j Brady Standard. Brady. Texas.
, I Copies of the Standard with the
Mr. and Mrs. Elton Holliday and letters will be sent by air mail
their new baby son, born at Nix to the North Pole so Santa will
Hospital, the day before Thanks- )»e prepared when he starts his
giving visited in Brady, Saturday,I trip through the Heart of Texas,
with her f------- .
I before going on to her home at j
Sweetwater.
M
I-j k v r
i *'
? 4 I
’ll.' ■'
by Myrtle
f in home inar-
Ft* Station
Lj. ■
Fw enjoyed a
F"e°n at noon.
F* was arrang-
Rn, county home
Fnt, in coopera-
r Extension Ser-
E__l_ _2 ....
came over the hill, Palmer swung posed by the chtTrter is
back into his lane, forcing the * *
Necessary truck into a ditch. The
pickup then skidded back onto the i
highway, colliding with the I ♦ L-rmining all policy, and a city
Kingsbury car. Palmer proceeded j ...
Mrs" W. M. Necessary, 69, a ! to Santa Anna, where he was ar- *
rested by the Coleman County i
sheriff. wishes of the council.
F. C. Kingsbury—a Texas A&M
student, his badly-injured brother, would Be appointed by the city
and J. P. Woods of Sabinal were manager. Many other features of
enroute to Brady for a wedding. Brady government now would be
Kingsbury's car and the Neces- completely overhauled,
sarys’ 1946 Ford pickup were
badly damaged.
Highway Patrolmen T. O. Eric-
Really Draftee
At Bus Station
This Morning
It was a little draftier than
usual this morning at the
Brady bus station. And it
wasn't all due‘to the 25-de-
gree weather.
Two young men—one from
Mason, one from Melvin—
boarded a bus for San Antonio
shortly after 8 a. m. They
were Selective Service Board
89’s first candidates for in-
duction under the new draft
law.
The draftees, who have al-
ready passed physical exami-
nations, will be inducted into
the army for 21 months of
service in America's new draft
army.
Alvin Nqlson, 24, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Nelson of
Melvin, and Travis Thompson,
25, son of Me. and Mrs. Pres-
ton Thompson of Mason, were
the fortunate (?) men.
this year.
Members of the family would
like to know the identity of those
who brought their parents to the
hospital, that they might thank
them personally.
Funeral services for Mis. Nec-
essary were held Sunday after-
noon from the Lohn Tabernacle
with Rev. W. P. Anderson, pastor
of the Rochelle Methodist Church,
conducting. Burial was in Lohn
i cemetery under the supervision of
Roy O. Wilkerson & Son.
Mrs. Lizzie Necessary was born
September 19, 1879, at Red Rock.
She married W. M. Necessary 51
years ago. They moved to Pear
Valley fmm Red Rock in 1923.
She was a member of the Lohn
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Necessary is survived by
her husband: five children, Mrs.
R. E. Gray of Bastrop; O. N. and x -< ....
S. Necessary, both of Anson; Mrs. | Ga*s“*(co*"s’bv''‘the’' city* of"Melvia,
authorized by a recent bond elec-
1 tion, was effected last week. Mel-
vin joined with Jack Tetens in
. . . . i buying aii proper 's of the cum-
Also surviving are four sisters, ‘ outsi^e of Eden.
.\’.. ♦k.> (’ 1111 o Tlriavo + mt.’ nnn 1 *
Melvin purchased all company
business in that city, including
meters and transmission facilities
from the gate at Eden to the City
Other movable assets
purchase price to
I Texas.
stock show for 4-H and FFA boys
will be staged January 18, Cham-
ber <’f Commerce officials have
announced. The show will be held I
at the Woodard Truck & Tractor
show room on the San Angelo ■
highway.
This winter there will lie two!
I classes in the Hereford fat class,
{ one ------- ------
lambs and one in hogs.
There will also be a -------- -------- >
cation show of breeding animals according to Capt. Jean Mi.Hams,
including beef and dairy cattle, | commanding.
sheep, goats and hogs. I The Brady company failed a
Classifications were outlined by, federal inspection last spring, be-
a committee composed of T. Wood fore Capt. Williams took over the
of Melvin. Eugene Edwards of rifle unit. It must pass the .om-
Lohn. and J. W. Holcomb. Rich-
ard Grote and Joe Ogden
Brady.
I ------------
THREE ARRESTED—
miles.
Reduction of the federal aid '
program by the 80th Congress has
depleted funis which will become
available for farm-to-market
roads in Texas, Mr. Greer said.
The three projects listed above are
considered the most necessary in
McCulloch, he added.
Jhe proposed new projects, if
j finally authorized, will raise to
• 55.8 miles the amount of rural
roads built or planned in McCul-
. ...---- . t ...j federal farm-to
Culloch. Construction cost is es- market road program. Only 21.1
.2 _2 n ■ miles have been completed. Con-
7 j Commis-' struction is expected to start soon —-
minutes uesig'iaLed the fol- on the 26.5 mile I M road to Vo- >
ca. i NEW SCOUTMASTER—
County officials believe F-M 42 BoV ScOllt DriW
nonn woouv u.^ imiea <»iid the proposed extension toward J
F-M 503 connects with Calf Creek should lie redesignated I*HSSCS $700 Mark
McCulloch County’s annual Boy
| Scout finance drive has passed the
$7on mark, A. 11. Bird, scout exe-1
I cutive, has announced. Goal of the !
fund campaign is $1,000. Rochelle | hospital suffering from a broken
‘and Melvin have yet to complete neck and other injuries.
their portions of the drive. . Two other men suffered minor
Paul Holiday lias been chosen | cuts and bruises.
A sixth person, Tommy Palmer
3»a MONTHS OLD—
Funeral Friday For
Susan Jane Newlin
Susan Jane Newlin. 3 V2-month-'
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Brady, died in
morn- i
NEXT WEEK —
Brady Girl In Finals
Of ‘Sew If Contest
Mary Lee Dodson of Brady will
be one of 48 Texas finalists in
the “Sew It Yourself—With Wool’’
contest at San Angelo Tuesday.
Miss Dodson was one of the
2 ' .2 ‘ ' From IJS 283 about 14 miles
Brady by paved farm-to-market northeast of Brady east through
‘ Jans Placid to a road intersection
about a quarter of a mile east of
Highway Department. Extension i Placid. This is a distance of 2.8
I From the end of F-M 42 at the
of the roads is i Davis School west to a road ap-
subject to approval of the pro- I;r<’**m*tely 2.5 miles north of
jects by the US Public Roads Ad-1 ( a!f Creek. This h about 5.2
ministration. Also, McCulloch,
County must furnish all necessary
right-of-way at no cost to the
state.
Federal funds for the statewide
program announced Friday will
not be available until 1950. How-
ever, contracts will be let and]
construction begun next year on
many of the projects, D. C. Greer, finall authorizeil( wiH raise
state highway engineer stated. 1R miles thc‘
amount of rural I
A total of 14.2 miles of new L
F-M roads are planned for Me- ioch under the
I IS degrees for the
morning Tuesday
weather is predi< t«-«i.
The coldest and most windy
norther of the winter blew into
the Heart of Texas Saturday
night. Gusts of wind estimated in
excess of 40 miles per hour de-
stroyed two signs at Lane’s Auto
Supply store and did other minor
damage.
It was still fairly warm Sunday,
however. The minimum that day
was 29 degrees. By daylight Mon-
day the norther really had Me-)
Culloch in a firm u:ip. as the IS- k-
degree reading was reported at
' Brady's weather station.
| Monday and Tuesday afternoons clint Newlin of
to ne;;: -tP>. -but the her sleep early Thursday
is expected to drop'
20 again Wednesday morn-
______ .
Home From Trinity
Miss Mary Verner and Preston
Karrick, students at Trinity Uni-
versity, San Antonio, enjoyed a
Thanksgiving holiday viwt with
their respective parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Verner and Rev. and tjons ever composed—Handel’s
Mrs. C. P. Karrick. . "The Messiah”—will be presented
here tomorrow night by the How-
ard Payne College Chorus.
The concert will begin at 7:30
p. m. at the First Baptist Church,
according to Rev. M. B. Carroll,
fiastor. The public is invited, he
said. There will be no admission
charge but a free-will offering
will be taken.
. —=-- « Tomorrow night’s program will
Mrs. C. A. Tu^utn I be the second appearance uf the
tion, Mrs. Roy Carlson of Brad) Howarcj Payne choristers in
and J. A. Carter ot RichlandlBrady Their ^entatior .of “The
Springs returned to their r£>RP*J- Messiah” will be conducted by
tive homes Sunday from Brady Wall, associate profes-
Hospital. • z »«r of voice at the Brownwood tha mate
OVER 3,000 PERSONS GATHER
TO GREET SANTA MONDAY NIGHT
A crowd estimated at more than ■ aii plane.
3,000 persons gathered on the | Shortly before 8 o’clock, the
Brady plaza Monday night to roar of an airplane signaled the
greet Santa Claus, and to usher in approach of Old St. Nick, and
the Christmas season in the Heart shouts of joy rang from the niob
o’ Texas area,
planned and s
Boy Scouts are invited to attend i njght. ..
th? troop’s meetings Tuesday. ]ess driving and passing with in-
I nights at the Scout lodge. sufficient clearance.
About 30 McCulloch Scouts at-1 —= >—-
! tended a ‘ ’
| grain at Camo Sol Mayer
j week, Chief Bird added.
■ ■■■ ■ —————
brief talk, and then began pass- j
‘ *s, including
propri'ate*to the occasion, and J. E. candy and whistles, to the child- MftDTIJED flDADQ
Herrington, county superintendent ren. The gifts were presented by HWx I lit.il IfVIVl V
and president of the Brady Cham- the .Brady Ch%)nber < f Commerc ■
Ler of Commerce, led the children Rrady merchants’ show windows
in the singing of Bells , unveiled at about 7:50 p. in.
and the large crowd
•iu»ppe.t> ... lie I
I attraction was over.
my
and bring me a rubber
doll, a red wagon, a pair of
gloves, a stove, anti bring
mother something, please.
Thank you. Dian Custer.
McCunoch boys and girls top six girls in the area judging
for Santa when he ut Coleman October 30. She V.22L
into Brady
i some
years ago. They 'later] warmed ap
(temperature
|near 22
ing.
Early reports on the norther,]
’ t snow to Kansas,
and the Texas Pan-
handle. predicted rain for West]
But that mast have been
thinking The best the
weatherman can do now is “cool-
er and partly cloudy "
N. Mex., where she had died this
ivpjiuiii
Bureau will lie planned ;
F-M 42 closer to Calf Creek | miles,
is also in the books.
Construction of the
the US Public Roads Ad-1 Calf Creek.
Hospital, the day before Thanks- be prepared
fattier, heed Steward,: uii Li.iistmas Eve.
_ _ M A V. zxhzxvwn nt ---————
1 fore Capt. Williams took over the
Ing inspection or Brady will lose
the TNG company.
Two additional training meet-
F*1VC nIpri flip
group in preparation for the in-
I sped ion. in addition to regular
. meetings Mondays. December 6|
{and 13, the company will alto
meet Thursdays. December 4 and |
11. Capt. Williams said.
He urges all McCulloch guards-
men to attend the special sessions
because good attendance Is neces-
sary if the unit is to continue with
federal recognition.
Sharp and Liquor Control
scoutmaster for Troop 33, Chief a sixth person, Tommy Palmer
Bird said. He will be assisted by of Abilene, trtick driver allegedly
Jim Schafer and Ed Burrow. respOn3jhie for the collision, was
Boys not already members of the | arrested in Coleman Saturday
i Boy Scouts are invited to^ attend i night. He is charged with reck-
The affair was ] of children. Santa parachuted from |
ponsored
Trade Extension 'Jommitte
“of’ Br’ady Brady Cham!
The Bradv
ul’ under the «
Howard Fr>'’ Playe(1 several numbers ap-; ing out gift package
fhu z^pnainn Anri .T. K. * panriv nn.l whittling t<
Herrington, county superintendent
1 er of Commerce, led the children
in the singing of “Jingle Bells" |
prior to the arrival of Santa via
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Smith, L. B. The Brady Standard and Heart O' Texas News (Brady, Tex.), Vol. [40], No. 71, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 30, 1948, newspaper, November 30, 1948; Brady, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1357621/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting FM Buck Richards Library.