Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 184, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 18, 1965 Page: 8 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
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I
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Tuesdey, May 18, 1965
8
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WATER
HIGH
BOOKLET
HELPFUL
(Staff Photo
Poverty Looks Good To Mountain Folks
FC
Lovelace.
New Booklet Aids
Parents, Children
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today because newspapers have more to
offer. Statistically, they carry more news
" 1
5 52
There is hardly an American home that
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
11909
Brew
Diol 642 8265
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FROM
4
MEMORIAL DAY
। off Monday was awards day at
BHS. Students who were out-
standing in various fields and
Quay will enter East Elementary
School in the fall. Principal of East,
Bill Maness, looks on. Mrs. Wilkins,
a first grade teacher at Woodland
Heights Elementary, was a guest at
East Friday afternoon, presenting the
books to the first grade parents.
chosen a student committee for
1965-66 to help plan activities
and schedule for the foreign ex-
change student who will enroll at
Brownwood High School next
year. The students serving on
the committee are Jimmy Piper,
chairman: David Henley. Ste-
phen Storm. Roy Spence. Judy
Mrs. Austin Wilkins, loft, presents to
Mrs. Jodie Embrey the little booklet
she illustrated and which was written
and compiled by the elementary ad-
ministrative and supervisory staff and
first grade teachers to Mrs. Jodie
Embrey and her daughter. Quay.
doesn't receive at least one daily newspaper
regularly. People depend on their newt-
Bi
T<
Water in a small lake behind Lake-
view Drive inches close to houses on
the street as heavy rains over the
weekend brought the lake level close
to the back doors. No flooding was re-
in greater depth as well as more advertis-
ing than ever before.
H(
that
told
up t
weni
He
man
base
1
Bi
How
tear
the
tear
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set .
reco
mee
the
sam
ran
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the
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thre
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lay
2 54
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appearance of America's first daily more
than 180 years ago...and it’s still growing.
Last year daily newspaper circulation
reached a record 60,412,266-an increase
of more than 1,500,000 over 1963—the
greatest single increase in almost 20 years!
More people are buying newspapers
L
You
Soni
chu
sac
wei
a
tot
at
cam
Con
mac
figh
one of the routines used during
the football season.
drum majors and twirlers were
elected Wednesday to serve dur-
ing 1965-66
Senior band drum major is
Carolyn Rowe and twirlers are
course, they discovered the
house was no longer empty.
Somehow, a bird had manag-
ed to fly in and the bits of
wood, shavings and scraps of
insulation material was just
what she needed to construct
a home within a home
Now she awaits her young,
heedless of the activity around.
Earl Q. Wilson and his help-
ers respecting the wish of the
little bird to build her nest,
have left her completely alone
and the bird doesn't object to
their presence.
The Hollands have agreed to
let the bird remain until her
little ones are hatched and big
enough to fly away.
T -
-
i
z
0 58
SIGN OF QUALITY
Free Estimates
House Panel
Okays Bills
For Debate
AUSTIN (API—Bills to create
The American people buy this many daily newspapers every day. Newspaper circulation
has been climbing steadily ever since the
n
N
AM Ui - wa MAVS MORE"
Roberson Rant-Alls
we Rent Qualty Merchandisa at
Reasonable Rates
On the Circle
place in all elementary schools
last week.
It was noted that in present
ing the booklet to the mother,
she was not the only one to be
pleased The first grader by her
side appeared equally fascinated
and before the summer draws
to a close, the pages of the
booklet will probably be worn
thin from turning.
ported in the area. The picture was
taken from the back lawn of the L. K.
Simmons residence at 4010 Oakdale
Dr.
a"
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n
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DAV|S FLORAL CO.
709 FISK
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up <
the 7
so th
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East
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West
the I
Th
West
the 1
Wl
othe
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of th
ning
Dalit
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innin
Bo
slam
El P
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face
a ho:
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pitch
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one,
attac
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with
Tu
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CALL
W. H. DEAN
645-9989
P.O. Box 233
Brownwood, Texes
fkt
dene
1 ... ..
"4 K
By TERESA TURNER
Senior. -wja High school
COMING EVENTS
land Heights Elementary School
How to help the child prepare Sonja Neff. Margauritte Homer
for school during the summer and Sherry Thompson.
months has been explained and I Junior band drum major is
illustrated The first day of Nancy Baugh and twirlers are
school, which many parents have Barbara Jones and Boots Walk:
dreaded for years, has been giv- er Miss Neff. Miss Homer and
en a new approach through this Miss Walker were twirlers this
booklet. year.
Each mother was presented The girls were selected by Me-
this gift in connection with the Murry College band majorettes
pre-school roundup which took in Abilene.
4
NESTER
Because of bar obvious shyness to cameras, the
mother bird wasn't home when this photograph was
taken of a naw bird nast built in a kitchan cabinet
of the Lonnie Holland home now under construction
in the hills overlooking Brownwood Country Club.
The nest is made of scraps of wood, shaving and in-
sulation material.
When the school bells ring this
fall first grade mothers will have
a much clearer insight as to
what to expect, and children en-
tering school will be much more
prepared to cope with the big
change, all because of a little
book
The elementary administrative
and supervisory staff under the
direction of Thomas Tope, su-
perintendent of schools, and the
first grade teachers got togeth-
er and compiled a booklet en-
titled “Are You Ready 6-Year-
Old For The First Grade "
In a most unusual fashion
with the alphabet as a guide,
all the little do's and don’ts are
related Each page has at least
five small illustrations made by
Mrs. Austin Wilkins fof Wood-
-.v
new state senior colleges at students of BHS found that
Odessa and Texarkana were ap- their hard work throughout this
proved for House debate Mon- year and previous years paid
day night by the House State -------------------------------
Affairs Commitee.
Both bills carry - provision
that the central coordinating
board for higher education must
approve the schools before they
can ask a legislative appropria-
' tion.
One would make Odessa Jun-
ior College into Permian State
College. The other would make
Texarkana State College from
Texarkana Junior College.
The Senate passed on voice
vote earlier Monday similar bills
to elevate junior colleges at
Odessa and Texarkana to the
state's 23rd and 24th state-sup-
ported senior institutions.
The measures go to the House
muuulmrmunamumuumumamumwumsuasrun
Bird Finds
Odd Place
For Home
One night it was just a cabi- |
net in a house under construe- . I
tion. The workmen had laid I
aside their tools, locked up and I
had gone home. I
Early the next morning when "
they arrived once more on the
job building the future home
of Mr and Mrs. Lonnie Hol-
land overlooking the golf
60,000,000 TIMES A DAY
FLORAL Br
; ARRANGEMENTS
ti. ■ —- ha -...........- e
L—□
(,3%9k
I
U.S. government is trying to Quillen wrote Scretary Or
collect 11,717.52 from a Tennes- ville L. Freeman "If w cannot
Santa Anna's
Front Selected
SANTA ANNA (BBC) - San-
ta Anna Mountaineer band
IN MEMORY see mountaineer who says he is solve this small problem of $1.-
"One measure of friendship so hard up that poverty looks 717 52, then we had better forget
consists not only in the num- good to him. about winning any war against
ber of things friends can dis- The money represents timber poverty.”
cuss, but in the number of things that the hill man cut — on his Quillen got the poverty angle
they no longer need mention." own farm, he says. The govern- from a 1 .. ISbriousl hand-
These words express the feel- ment.claims it was ob national written but forecerun, that the
ings of friendship shared by the forest land, . __ i _<
students of Brownwood High Rep James H. Quillen, R-1 mountaineer, Wilford Metcalf of
School toward James Baker, a Tenn.. has taken up the case Del Rio, Tenn, wrote him.
true and devoted friend. I with the Department of Agricul- It said, in part: "I read in the
---------- r ।
Um The Classified Adi
Andrews. Margaret Blagg, Bet-1 ‘ By J.W. DAVIS ture. which runs the Forest
ty Jones, Jenifer Locker and Sue WASHINGTON (AP) — The Service.
HOW DAILY NEWSPAPER CIRCULATION
HAS GROWN IN THE POST-WAR PERIOD
"------1-----------------1--------1-----------------
STUFF
FOR RENT
In keepinz with a growing
Brownwood we have expand
ed our rental equipment to
include these end many
more Rertal items.
SICKROOM SUPPLIES
Houpita1 Bees
Wheei Chairs
Crutches
Walkers
Comodes
Sen »«• Tby
GARDEN A YARD
Hedge Trimmers
Lawn Mowers
Weed Cufters
Post Hole Auger
Fertilizer Spreader
Wheel Barrews
Wire SIrelchers
Tillers
Piows
Moes, Rakes, BBC
PAINTERS EQUIPMENT
Paint Spravers
Extension Ladders
Extensien Planks
Paint Brushes
-- FORD TRACTOE --
WHO tellowing amachments PM
•••• «eu». shreecer, oreder
tandem "Iler.
m-- ——.
I " •
[
CALL
645-2631
5
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o
Ve
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allied
FENCE 3
paper that Congress was and
the President was fighting pov-
erty. That's good and I am for
it, but tell the President if he
has any poverty left over from
some other place to please send
it down here It's better than us
mountain folks has been used
to.”
G. Wilson Horde, assistant
U.S. attorney at Knoxville,
wrote Metcalf on April 28 that
he had » days to meet the gov-
lernment claim.
I
ll________
1946 1949
J___L
1952 1M
CAPTAINS TO S.MU — The department received letter
six Brownwood High School sweaters, jackets, medals or cer-
Drill Team Captains have been tificates according to the honor,
practicing snappy drill routines One rather unusual honor was
for the coming drill teem school bestowed on Jimmy Thoma-
to be held August 1-6 on the son He was recognized not only
Southern Methodist University for perfect attendance in his
Campus in Dallas The six cap- three years of high school, but
tains are Pat Bell, Pam Holley, throughout all 12 years of school. 1
Mona Kay Wilson, Annette Mor- Congratulations to Jimmy Tho-
ris. Shy Milner and Ann Kirk mason on an effort that paid off 1
The girls have learned routines 1 FOREIGN EXCHANGE—The
which each girl made up plus American Field Service has
QUICK FLASHES
SENIOR THANKS - Senior
members of the a cappella
choir thanked Miss Dorothy Mc-
Intosh for five years of choir
and friendship Monday as they
presented her with a small
watch on a chain to wear around
her neck.
Monday was the seniors' last
day in choir as the rest of the
choir members must prepare
the graduation music. It has al-
ways been a tradition at Brown-
wood High that outgoing seniors
not hear the graduation music
before graduation night.
STUDENT AWARDS — The
J_____! J papers. Could you get along without yours?
im mi iM
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Gage, Larry. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 184, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 18, 1965, newspaper, May 18, 1965; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1489836/m1/8/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.