Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 214, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1956 Page: 2 of 8
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WASF
I—BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Thursday, June 21, 1956
'Ex
World Rivers
corner of his
him from
Bn
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
25 Mine entrance 44 Mephis-
1
I
Move Means Lost Job
22 Dinner course 40 Laundry
23 Succession
27 Abstract being 14 Fowls
0
sting System - Tram State Natssork.
affiliate Mutual
2
3
8
3
5
%
9
7
RCONPITlOStP
5
50
3
N
B
1"
37
W
Si
52
«
6
0
55
TWO BIG HITS
57
58
59
EO
ii
Ji
3 New Field Projects
NO. 2
jects.
The new well is Big D. Drilling
Pro
the odor.
In Stephens Jones Survey 282.
of 42.5 gravity oil and 5 per cent
HT&B Survey.
Atlantic City in 1947. Most of their
4
ITEMSTATE VMBATWB
24-64-inch choke with
But Dean and Jerry insist they
Now
1
i
II1
i
III
1
4
I
it
I
lr
SUNSET
TODAY & FRIDAY
to agree to keep
troubles was
@600090
their personal lives separate.
3.544 feet from the west.
J
CALLAHAN—M. L. Kinnebrew
if Martin and Lewis are through
In the regular field eight miles :
3
J
5
!T»
• ... • -
I
j tion 18, Block 8, SP Survey.
4
storring
At Dean's wedding reception a
155
EXTRA SPECIAL
EDDIE ARNOLD
nt MUT •
wmisku twwncti
in
1
X
PLUS 2 COLOR CARTOONS
2 COLOR CARTOONS
Tweety and Sylvester Cartoon —-News -
2 Color Cartoons
!
o w t i >
MO M »
F)
Bows
L LyrC
Cinemascope
Funeral Today For
Mrs Ftha Newsom
Police Inspector
To Receive Award
m
ga
America's Favorite Recording Star With A
Group of Outstanding Musicians—14 min-
utes of Hoppy Music!!
»
unit set mt 2
moouenoM 1
machines
43 Penetrate
ncl HJ
hall
ULI Lt
1 00
EiLG
21 Features
24 Witches
Drilling Co. of Cross Plains spot-
ted No. 24 J. W. Newton as a
COLEMAN—K. S. Richards of
Fort Worth announced locations
for two shallow cable tool /wild-
App
wall
cabi
you
a 1,200-foot rotary project in the
regular field three-fourths mile
north of Bangs. Site is 1,535 feet
from the north and 450 feet from
Make this easy test. Get Instant-
drying T-4-L at any drug store.
This powerful fungicide will give
relief IN ONE HOUR or your 4Se
back. Today at Peerless Drug Co.
-he
h.
Society .............
Sports
Editorial Department
26 River in
Arizona
29 Youths
30 Let it stand
31 Faculty
37 Users of
large nets
That
is bre
bill, c
crease
a few
Rules
house’
ted t
*
AM
ALLIED
ARTISTS
PICIURE
topheles
45 Columns
44 The dill
47 Essential being
50 Arabian gulf
51 For fear that
52 Devotees
54 Consumed
56 BrazUian
wallaba
Trickham. Both will be drilled on
the F. W. Taylor, Jr., lease in J.
S. Martin Survey 221 and are
slated for 1,800 feet.
KBWD-Mutual will broadcast
a “Sports & Music Show” Friday,
on the air at 1 p.m.
22143
2338
2445
water, pumping fro m24 perfora-
tions at 1,389-1.394 feet. Casing
was set at 1,423 feet, with hole
bottomed at 1,424.
Staked as a new project in the
regular field two miles west of
Bangs was R. G. Huffman of Cis-
co No. 1 R. L. Brooks Estate.
Slated for 1,500 feet with ro-
water fight got so strenous in a
Philadelphia hotel the manager
asked them to check out.
By
31st
PULI’
hot we
and an
ment,
scene 1
Those
the Pn
ing rise
room s
field-da
wb» mi
up the
sound
One
heard '
he evei
market
chance
courag
litical
be pla
the vol
clear
and I
the vo
“We feel the accomplishment is
significant,” State Health Com-
missioner Henry A. Holle said,
"since some 31 different diseases
can be spared through improperly
handled food and drink.”
The free courses have been part
of the department's health educa-
tion curriculum since 1938. Most
health departments over the na-
tion conduct similar schools, but
the movement originated in Texas.
Dr. Holle said school lunch room
workers, who annually serve 114
The anaconda is not a poison-
ous snake.
mm
sasra
UMMOMHU
DOWN
1 Mild oath
2 Singing voice
3 Tidy
4 Artificial
channel
5 Short jackets
• Mexican
blankets
7 Garrets
• Earn
• Exist
10 Eagerness
11 Masculine
appellation
E.P * '
Survey 350.
In the regular field three miles
D
SANFORD, NC. (UP) — When
Alderman Sam Davis moved to a
new home here, he moved him-
self right out of office. His home
is outside the sixth ward and by
law he must live in the ward from
which he was elected.
"Ue..
115
per week, 41.25 per month.
cireulation and Busmess
DIsplay Advertistg ...
Ciassified Advertising .
I
I
a
•A
• K
ACR088
1 Sacred river
of India
• World’s
mightiest
river
13 Ester of
oleic acid
14 Cylindrical
IS Stationary
part
14 Plays host to
1? Torrid
18 Symbol for
natrium
MINT
, TECHNICOLOR
E_-mns nwMHimn
feature" no. 2
* n
ja
>4
‘CF’TDrellel.
By W. Edmunds Claussen.
,nuiw. u--d Ci— meecn • hu $eee, »»
'Divorce' Stick?
By ALINE MOSBY
28 Otherwise
32 Redact
33 Street (ab.)
34 Polynesian
chestnut
35 Africa’s
longest river
36 Rupees (ab.)
38 Roman date
39 Asterisk
40 Scottish river
41 Italian city
42 Sea nymphs
45 New Guinea
port
48 Symbol for
nickel
49 Mariner’s
direction
50 Fourth
Arabian caliph
53 Handled
55 Eludes
57 Canopy
58 Most mature
59 Pilots
60 Leans
M GUSS TOMI
gspwmk
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odumendLDHNH
URUHkal i0mLID[E-
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H-EL[- -50LMHHH
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1 300-565*5155
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Anawer to Previous Puufo~ ! Miu Helen Burt, Format
11 — —— — Brownwood Resident, Visits
b
sills,
will
few
N
aga
den
si
2444
22689
2443
FRED SYLVIA HENRY
MacMurray- Sidney -Fonda
fell
Eamu"
T ~
HU.WWUMK
comme
cat five miles south of Putnam in to one of the best shows in town — pats of butter at the hapless wait-
Section 320. Block 5. SP Survey, one the public never sees. The ers.
JOEL McCREA
FELICIA FARR • JEFF MORROW
am waLuct FnilllHM suna.Mor Mecnua
19 Two (Boman) 12 Bird’s home
20 French river 21 Abaft
BLUFFVUE DRIVE-IN
Central Texas' Finest Drive-In
Bloomquist of Cisco No. 1 A. L.
Buchanan, wildcat four miles |
i northwest of Rising Star in Sec-1
tion 41, Block 2. ETRR Survey
was plugged at 3,200 feet.
No. 1 Taylor spots 150 feet from 70 pounds on tubing. Flow was they always went out on the stage
the south and 2,944 feet from the from 50 perforations at 2.656-2.- together to make their livelihood,
west lines. and No. 2 Taylor will I 661 feet and gas-oil ratio was j One way they worked out their
be 150 feet from the south and 11800-1. troubles was t ===- —-
I
I
cc
pest
kill
Supi
N<
subs
a br
to fo
tact
tive
SEE IT TODAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
FIRST SHOWING IN
BROWNWOOD
TONY MARTIN
in a new kind of virile, 4
violent, vengeful -Xe
role...as jUd
113
-x4
5 «.m""
Jem
‘g 9 "ud
4 •_067
1-9
h. -7
3 "THETRAILOETHE
—r
Drive-In
Box Office Opens 7:00
4
1p is
E A
M rervousness causea him to stun
• the cigar Jack Bamfort had given
2-22
Brown County has gained one (foot rotary project. Site is 590 [
new oil producer and drawn loca- feet from the north and 150 feet
■ Ar thro a now fielA nro. from the west lines of Block 10.
cats four miles southwest
IOHN IRELANt
"The Wild Dakotas” shows
owe at 9:50.
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
iM a. us
mt—ns mn evening ezcept Saturday, sbs Bunday mornine at Browawood
T"“htarsa as sncona class matter Oct. 1a, 2900 at Brown«ooa Tasas, ander the
•aS at March 3, 1879.
Any arrSBacua reHleetion upon the character or reputation at any persop. nra
ae corporatlon, which may appear in the columna at The Brownwood Bulletan
will to ady corrected upon lie betne brought to the altonuow or the publisher.
5UBSCKIPI ION RATES •
BrovnerooS and adJotnang counties by wall: Site one year, ay earner. 300
day—food contamination, third day
—methods of controlling disease
spreaders, fourth day—laws gov-
erning the operation of foodhand-
ling establishments, fifth day-
personal hygiene.
Students who successfully com-
plete the classes are awarded “cer-
tificates of competency,” and when
80 percent of the employes of a
given food establishment win cer-
tificates the establishment is pre-
sented a “placard of approval.”
Of the 29 schools held to date
this year, four have been attended
exclusively by kitchen and dining
room personnel of state hospitals,
the department said.
southeast of Cross Cut, L&L
few years back, Jerry put om
Dean’s new suit and jumped in the
swimming pool. Martin just laugh-
ed.
An interview with Martin and
Lewis always was strenuous. When
a reporter would try to ask them
questions, Dean and Jerry would
pull out water guns and pelt each
other with fussilades of ink or per-
ui ue regular xesa engn mues i ------------------------------—----------------------— fume. If the interview took place
southeast of Santa Anna, Miller of Abilene has plugged at 2,202 making pictures together as they in a restaurant they would stuff
and Banks of Wichita Falls staked feet his No. 1 Mary Guyton, wild- claim, Hollywood will say goodbye | sugar cubes in their lips and throw
No 7 W E Haynes as a 1 990- ent fiva milae ennsth nt Putnam in tn ane nt the beet chnwa in town __ nate nt butter At the hanless wait-
‘TENNESSE PLAYBOY’
. . Dean and Jerry were two un-
_______ the regular field. Location is 850 knowns who never caught the
Daily potential was 48 barrels j feet from the east and 2,310 feet ( fancy of the public until they be-
’ m: — =‛ ==d 5 r-----1 from the north lines of Section 3,! came a team at the 500 club in
“THIS is the chance I’ve
waited for, Milo. This will bring
Chantry off the fence and line
him up on my side, or we’ll have
a new sheriff very shortly." Nor-
ring's face went dark, and then
he added. “Milo, you’ve been
having a lot of bad luck, lately.
It happens to any man once in
awhile, but it had better not
stay too long with him. Your
luck has been no good since the
drifter came. He's got to be put
out of the way. Have you got
a man who won't blunder on this
job?”
Hackett felt his blood sud-
denly leap, his scowl biting
deeper into his face. “I don’t
send anybody to do my chores.
I tried it once, and I'll do it
next time.”
“All right, but don’t make an-
other mistake."
(To Be Continued»
SCRATCH-ME-NOT
WITH ITCH-ME-NOT!
Apply ITCH-ME-NOT. In just 15
minutes, If you have to scratch your
itch, your 40c back at any drug store.
Usa Instant-drying ITCH-ME-NOT day
or night for eczema, ringworm, insect
bites, foot itch, other surface itches.
How at Peerless Drug.
THIS IS
'FAMILY DAY'
Two Big Features
Two Cartoons
EASTLAND — Wirkkala and
3 J
P, • s ‛u
Health Course
On Handling Of
Food Important
A U S T I N—Almost 4,000 Texas
foodhandlers so far this year have
won certification for having “satis-
factorily completed the public
Daily potential was 90 24 bar- their fights for years. They may
rels of 41 gravity oil, flowing get over this battle next week.”
odlanL1c-05[ 1
duc-umLILI-I I
Mi UK ill Jl icari
A paffofwafer set-ina freshiz
painted room will help remove
py.67
2
County Adds Producer, Hollywood Wonders:
Will Martin-Lewis
and accomplishment connected
with soil and water conservation.
FT
H. L. LOBSTEIN, M.D.
resumes practice
OFFICE: 1319 AUSTIN
Corner Coggin & Austin
Office Phons 4405 Res. 4409
health course in sanitary prepara-
tion and handling of food as pre-
scribed by this department," the
State Department of Health has
announced | Sity ordinances have been pass-
Of the 3,864 embossed certificates einAbilenetE1.Paso, Big Spring.
handed out by the department’s MidlandandWest University Place
three public health instructors. 463 inHarris Sounty, which make at-
-three new feld pro- from the west lines 10,/'"
jects. P. Young Survey •“ Most of their associates figure nddcompbetetmentss-hcoursdr within the city. other cities are
The new well is Big D. Drilling Two miles northeast of Silver , the two will star as singles but I instruction covering all phases of j contemplating similar ordinances.
Co., et al. of Cross Plains No. 3 | Valley. William W..Davis.of Abi- | eventually drift back together | sanitary food production. prepara- i
[don; and- service.
the west lines of Section 23,
HT&B Survey.
ui Ju)
(51 31533010
Utex Exploration Co., Inc., of co-workers think the two will
Abilene completed No. 1 G. F. “sooner or later realize their big
Cook as a regular field producer success comes as a team."
seven miles northwest of Valera
i in Section 32, Block 1, GH&H One of their employers says.
Survey. "leok. I’ve been going through
Texas Winners Of
Goodyears Soil
Awards Announced
.gprctaltThe uletin. - ito. 1 w."f.Wrigii,Ewa and-a-derkleme HkakedMgaL.m Jamesoatagain:
ners anationaisoi ranseX miles southwest or Voss Plains _3,180-footrotary-project.ini
tary tools, it spots 150 feet from
the north and 450 fet from the I through a
east line. of Juan Hernandez 285won aa5ingand pert on ttonsni want to change thetr NBC/TV and
3 315-18 feet. Gas-oil ratio was; Hal Wallis movie contracts to al-
1024-1 low them to perform separately.
Completed in the regular field Their associates agree they would
six miles northeast of Novice was have success as singles. Martin
Bridwell Oil Co. of Abilene No. 2 ( already has been offered the
1,300-foot combination tool pro- -nuw- --- — . .p.im. cam..
ject. Site is 600 feet from the Joe Hudson, Section 101, GH&H movie version of "Paiama Game"
south and 2,210 feet from the Survey. and Jerry.hassreceived..permist
No. 1 C. A. Baker, et ux, will be through a 14-64-inch choke with But, even Martin admits, “we’ll
*-— I ’ ..... 58O pounds on casing and 240 on make less money as singles."
TODAY & FRIDAY Box Office Opens st 4:45 P.M.
million lunches to Texas school
children, “are always among the
most faithful patrons of the
courses.”
Instructors, working out of the
Division of Health Education. are
assigned to specific cities or towns ’
on request of local health officials.
Working in concert with county
sanitarians, they cover the whole
range of sanitary foodhandling.
instruction, said the department,
"is tailored to interest anyone en-
gaged in any way with food—from
housewives and dairymen to candy
wrappers and barbecue chefs.”
Consisting of five 2-hour sessions
of lectures, demonstrations, and
films, the schools cover:
First day — bacteriology, second
—
RA Gordon MacRAE • Shirley JONES
S Cameron Mitchell • Gene Lockhart
Plugged at 1,800 feet was Ne- j boys backstage often were funnier Somehow Hollywood movie sets
Tex Oil Corp. of Abilene No. 2' than the antics they put on film.. won't be the same without Dean
_ - = ... . --------i and Jerry. But, as their pals say.
JOMNGROMFIELD -JUUELONDON ।
CIENRY AIMIN I
PLUS I
Cartoon I
•04000000000/8
A
tion awards program have been
named here by Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co., sponsor of the com-
petition. For purpose of the con-
test Texas is divided into three
geographic units and winners in
each unit receive the grand award.
Outstanding soil conservation dis-
tricts in the state for the year
ending March 31. are: Upper Clear
Fork No. 121, from Unit One: Mar-
ion-Cass No. 433, from Unit Two,
and Nueces-Frio-Sabinal No. 221,
from Unit Three.
Winners of individual honors are:
Earnest Marth, of Roscoe, out-
standing conservation farmer,
and Alvin Smith, also of Roscoe,
winner of governing body member
award. representing Upper Clear
Fork No. 121 district.
David Key. of Jefferson, out-
standing conservation farmer, and
H. T. Allen. Rt. 1. Atlanta, govern-
ing body member award. repre-
senting Marion-Cass No. 433 dis-
trict.
W. J. Nelson, Reagan Wells Rt.
Uvalde, outstanding conservation
farmer, and Wrather Holmgreen,
Rocksprings Rt., Uvalde, governing
body member award, representing
Nueces-Fio-Sabinal No. 221 dis-
trict.
Part of the grand award is a
bronze plaque for each of the
three champion districts and each
of the six individual winners. The
six individual winners also will be
guests of the sponsor on a vaca-
tion trip to Wigwam resort and
Goodyear Farms, Litchfield Park,
Thomas F. O'Neil, board
chairman of the Mutual Broad-
casting System and RKO Tele-
radio Picture, Inc., has been
named Radio-TV-Films Chair-
man of the United Community
Campaigns of America.
Mr. O’Neil will head the na-
tional promotion activities in the
broadcasting and motion picture
fields in behalf of the annual
campaign by 2,000 local United
Funds and Community Chests
throughout the country. The
campaign. national chairman Wil-
liam M. Allen announced, will be
initiated this year at Labor Day
and extend through the Thanks-
giving holiday.
mouth to the other, that was all.
“Sit down. Sit down. Milo.”
be invited calmly.
Milo Hackett waved the invi-
tation roughly aside. “You know
what they did? Took the horses!
You told me to go up there to
the pasture. Well, I was too late.
They’d set an ambush.”
“I know,” Norring said mildly.
“Shorty stopped by to tell me
Tayhern was shot I’m sorry—
Doc’s still out of town."
Hackett was not much inter-
ested in his wounded crewman.
He was scowling darkly. Long
before he reached Cashtown he
had made up his mind he wasn’t
going to tell about the fire on
Rafter C. Let Steve suspect if
he wanted, he'd never toll him
for sure. He said sourly.
“I rode after that bunch as far
as Rafter C. They'd been raided
too and the old fellow, Rickety,
was hurt. There wasn't a sound
horse on the spread."
“Go on,” Norring said, impa-
tiently now.
"Emmett Cash's got them all.
He was shoving them along the
trail to Yates's place when I lit
out for Cashtown."
Hackett read relief in Nor-
ring’s face. It was almost as
though they’d won a victory.
-1- e -g •
THURSDAY
4:00 Hits and Encores
5:00 Standby with Bob and Ray MBS
5:45 Lea Paul and Mary Ford MBS
5:50 All Star Sports Time MBS
5:55 Fire Star Newscast MB8
• :M Home Edition of the News
6:15 Dinner Dato
6:30 Gabriel Heattor MBS •
6:45 Spotlight on a Star
7:00 Seven O'clock News TSN
7:05 Music in the Air
8:00 Eight O’clock News
8 05 Music in the Air .
8:20 Crime Fighters MBS h
9:00 Official Detective MS
9:30 Say It with Music
10 M Ten O Clock News
18: 15 Night Watch
10:55 Eleventh Hour News
11:00 Evening Prayer
FRIDAY
8:00 Mornmg Prayer
6:01 Wake Up A Live
« 01 Voice of Agriculture
6:30 Willie Wired Hand News
6:40 Hickman Hoedown
6:50 Star for the Day
5:00 BUl Monroe
7:15 Breakfast Melodies
5:35 Party Line
7:30 News—Porter Randall TSN
7:45 AU Star Jubilee
8:00 Eight O’clock News
8:05 Your Community and Mine
8:15 Coffee Caravan
a.35 Fashion Forecast
• 9:00 Five Star Newscast MBS
9:15 Howdy Housewives
9:30 Five Star Newscast MBS
8:35 Guest Time MBS
10:00 Five Star Newscast MBS
10:05 Story Time MBS
10:30 Queen for a Day MBS
11:00 Five Star Newscast MB8
11:05 Eleventh Hour Melodies
13:00 Cedric Footer MBS
12:15 Noon Time Tunes
13:30 Noon Edition of the News
12:45 Luncheon Melodies
13:55 Baseball Warmup MBS
1:00 Sports and Music Show
3:40 Baseball Scoreboard MBS
3:45 News
3:50 All-Sports Quiz MBS
4:00 Hits and Encores
6:00 Standby with Bob and Ray MBS
8:45 Here s Hollywood MBS
8:50 All Star Sports Time MBS
5:55 Five Star Newscast MBS
Funeral services for Mrs. Cla-
born Newsom of 1000 Ave. C
were to be held 3:30 p.m. today
in Austin Ave. Church of Christ
with Herbert L. Newman, mini-
ster. officiating. Burial will be
in Clear Creek Cemetery. She
died 7:15 a.m. Wednesday in her
home.
Mrs. Newsom, the former Etha
Counts, was born Oct. 7, 1893 in
Brown County.
Surviving are her husband;
two sons, S-Sgt. Joe H. Newsom
of Goodfellow AFB. Ssn Angelo,
and M-Sgt. H. C. Newsom, who is
with the U. S. Air Force in
France; her daughters, Mrs.
Doris Chandler of Aledo, Mrs.
Martha Chandler of Brownwood,
and Mrs. Norma Pollard. Fort
Worth; a brother. Ralph Counts
of Tinnie, New Mexico; two sis-
ters, Mrs. Cora Wooten of Cona-
ws. Okla., and Mrs. Viola House
of Pueblo, Colo., and eight grand-
children.
Minneapolis Police Inspector
Charles Wetherille is to receive
the "Outstandingg Detective
Award" from KBWD-Mutual’s
"Official Detective” tonight. 9-
9 30 o’clock. The reason: for his
leadership on detailed police
work that netted a robber gang
operating in a tri-state area with
5 great success.
EAWDrive-In.
[in IM
—
Arizona, late in 1956.
.The,award s are based upon d is- 1R- L. Griggs', wildcat four miles I _______________ .
trict accomplishment in organiza- south of Baird in Thomas Asher Other actors oa their movie sets “Don't worry — they’ll be back.”
tion, education, planning, publicity Survey 528. had to put up with Dean and ----------—--------
Plugged at 2,011 feet was Ajax ! Jerry throwing wastebaskets full j Soapn water.will clean of your
Oil Development Co., et al, of of water at everybody and each feet—but they WWi t Clear uj>
California No. 1 Yost, wildcat five other. One Martin and Lewis ATHLETES FOOT!
| miles southwest of Clyde in Sec-
TODAY & FRIDAY Box Office Opens 4:45 P.M.
A paramount CHAMMOH
MoUucht M« BY popular MMAN»<
In a shot he’d sure have ruined
the barn and bunkhouse too."
"Who was it. Rickety?" Jean
asked. “Milo Hackett?"
“I ain’t dead sure. I only saw
the back of him moving around
in the brush. I reckon my bul-
let missed him, ’cause I heard
his . horse crossing the bridge
later."
“We’ll leave at dawn. I’ll have
to take Jean with us, but I don’t
know what to do about Rickety."
Jean was standing watching
the dying flames, her eyes wide
as they took in the destruction.
She threw her head back
against hs chest standing that
way with the fiery glow lighting
her hair. She had stopped cry-
ing and he knew she was finished
with that lor good. But the hurt
was still there.
His arms drew her in. This
time the old, dead fires stayed in
the past and Janet didn’t haunt
him.
Jean was not like any woman
he had ever known. She went
deeper into him. She would not
be washed out by time or by any
amount of riding, or by misery.
This he knew as he drew her to
him. Her arms were pulling him
closer in return.
She kept her face buried
against his chest so he could
barely see her expression. But
her eyes were closed. The frag-
rance of her hair was in his
nostrils.
"In the morning we’U ride,"
he promised simply.
She looked at him with a pe-
culiar smile. “Me too, Frank?”
“You too. There just ain’t any
place where I can hide you."
tubing. Flow was from 64 per- j Their friends say eventually “they
forations at 3,550-58 feet. Gas-oil will make reunion pictures like
ratio was 525-1. Betty Hutton had farewell tours.”
One miles west of Coleman in Most show business teams stick
the Johnie Mamie (Gardner) together as a matter of finances.
Field, H. A- Birdwell and Son The Andrews sisters parted two
Drilling Co., et al, of Coleman 1 years ago and tried “singles.”
finaled No. 1 Mildred Woodward They weren't as happy with the
M-G-M Bring the Bold Bwt-SHw to th» Scrun^
THB STORY OF A mDTAT
TEEN-ABE MURDER 1 • E%aaande 1
""GLENN FORD-DOROTHY McGUIRE-ARTMUR KEIWNEIY ’
IOHN HOOIAK- MW JURADO ~ tma turns IMW WMNINOEL •
XXVIII
an hour later they were to-
(ether again and haa covered
seven ot the miles on the return.
Looking across the flats toward
headquarters they saw a red in
the sky, a red that signified the
glow of fire. Scalding anger bit
into Frank then as he saw Drury
lay a quirt to his tired horse.
Drury was thinking now that
Rickety, asleep on his bunk,
would be unable to escape the
dames. And if the ranch waa on
dre it wasn't by accident, Nor-
ring had struck, and in a way
Frank wouldn’t have believed.
A mile further they were able
to see the flames lacing skyward.
The fire had already burned it-
self pretty low. It had been con-
fined, Frank saw, to the main
building, the log house; and
Frank felt a swift relief tor
Rickety. Had there been a wind
no building on the flat would
have been spared.
Frank turned to Swenson and
the kid riding with him behind
the herd. “The old night pas-
ture,” he said and motioned with
his arm. “Alex, stay with them
till we relieve you”
Swenson nodded too and helped
the kid swing the string around.
Rickety had drawn the blank-
ets from his bunk and sat hud-
dled in these in the captain’s
chair beside the window. The
rifle they had left with him was
lined out across the window sill.
Tod Drury was remarkably
changed since relieved of his
worry. Truculence shown in his
craggy brown face and the hard
casing with which he cloaked
himself by habit was back.
"Don’t you know enough to stay
in bed?”
“And let Rafter burn to the
ground?" Rickety snorted. He set
his raw and battered features to-
ward Tod. “Bad enough he got
his chance at the log house be-
fore I heard him. If I hadn't got
11 2
as a producer in Howell Survey! arrangement as they had figured,
of154. ; and the girls are back together
Dally potential was 15.8 barrels - now in Las Vegas.
of 40 gravity oil and 75 per cent I Bud Abott and Lou Costello
water, flowing through a 34-inch have battled down the years, as
choke with packer on casing and many business partners do. But
cooe +*a l
aA t
-
- LAI® Ot ’
gDo"EAOEAM
NORRING was in his house on
B Street behind the bank when
Hackett came to him. His first
reaction was one of shock as he
took in Hackett's condition. None
of this showed on his face, as
immobile and bland as ever.
Miss Helen Burt of Tulsa. Okla,
former Brownwood resident, has
been a guest this week of Miss
Ciao Richey, 2010 Couto. Sha
will leave tonight for a visit in
Beaumont before returning to
Tulsa.
Miss Burt, a resident of Tulsa
the past 12 years, is a former
society editor of The Bulletin and
waa a hostess for the USO here
during World War II. She is home
economics instructor at Holy
Family School in Tulsa.
172-
PLUS
w M umI n 1000 WATTS DArTIE
K K W I] SM WATrs NIGHT
■I • 11 • 1380 oh TOUR DIAL.
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 214, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1956, newspaper, June 21, 1956; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1482636/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.