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Thursday, November 6, 2014The
New rules aimed at quakesPage 3B
www.spring Town-epigr aph.ne T
Volume 51, Number 29
$1Springtown, Texas 76082
Volleyball team advances to Area Page 8A
Parker County
BURGER
Au
to R
ep
air
Sh
op
Flooring
Dentist
Pest Control
Pharmacy
Mexican Food
Hair Salon
Bake
ry
Waitstaff
Bar-
B-Q
Dental Office
Mechanic
Doctor
Builder/Developer
Meat StoreTaco
Car Dealership
Furniture Store
Electric Company
Manicure/Pedicure
Steak
Insurance Agency
Optometrist
ApartmentsInvestment Advisor
Funeral Home
Dry Cleaner
Real Estate Agency
Liquor Store
Printing Company A/C Heating Service
Resale Shop
Pet Groomers
Sweet Tea
Jewelry Store
Donuts
Catfish Antique StoreChiropractor
Ban
k
Snow Cone
Cup of Coffee
Medical Clinic Spa
Attorney
Computer Repair
Florist
Place of Worship
Sushi
Lunch Menu
Chicken Fried Steak
Salsa
Feed Store
Lawn & Landscape Service
Pizza
Event Venue
Salad
Pool Builder
Happy Hour
BEST of
Parker County
2014
Best of Parker County 2014
SPECIAL SECTION
by Natalie GeNtryRepublicans throughout the state
prevailed in almost all 2014 elections.The local races reflected similar re-
sults in Parker County.
RenoReno voters passed Proposition 1
– a one-fourth of one percent street maintenance sales tax – 57 percent (237 votes) to 43 percent (179 votes).
PoolvilleIn the only contested race for
Poolville Independent School District Trustees, Roger Smith beat Brandon Key 69 percent (235 votes) to 31 per-cent (105 votes).
In a close contest, Poolville resi-dents voted against Proposition 1, which would have allowed Emer-gency Services District (ESD) No. 8 to annex Poolville and a section of Weatherford’s extraterritorial jurisdic-tion north of the city, 51 percent (457 votes) to 49 percent (445 votes).
And, Proposition No. 2 – regard-ing accepting a proportionate share
of ESD No. 8’s debt – met the same fate as 57 percent (510 votes) voted against the proposition and 43 percent (389 votes) voted in favor.
Parker CountyWayne Hayes (R) was unopposed in
his run for Justice of the Peace, Pre-cinct 1, as was County Judge Mark Riley (R).
Other county officials who ran un-opposed include District Clerk Share-na Gilliland, County Clerk Jeane Brunson, and County Treasurer Jenny
Barnwell.
StateState level election results continue
to reflect the Republican state of mind in a clean sweep of the races.
Republican Greg Abbott defeated Wendy Davis in the run for Governor while Dan Patrick (R) beat Leticia Van de Putte (D) for Lt. Governor.
In the race for State Senator District 30, Republican Craig Estes (R) beat Libertarian Cory Lane, and incumbent State Representative for District 61,
Phil King (R) defeated Matthew Britt (D).
Texans approved overwhelmingly State Proposition 1 that earmarked ap-proximately $1.7 billion in Rainy Day Funds for highway construction, main-tenance, and rehabilitation projects.
NationalTexas voters also decide to continue
Republican representation in Congress as both U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R) and U.S. Representative for District 12, Kay Granger (R) were reelected.
Springtown named a Purple Heart City
by Natalie GeNtryThe third annual Run to Remember
took place on the frosty morning of Nov. 1.
The event honors the military men and women who have served, fought, and died to protect our country, so the opening ceremonies were the perfect time for Mayor Doug Hughes to pro-claim Springtown a Purple Heart City.
“The City of Springtown has great admiration and the utmost gratitude for all the men and women of the Armed Forces who have selflessly served their country and this city, and who have borne the brunt of the bat-tle,” Mayor Hughes said.
“Purple Heart recipients are an inte-gral part of our society,” he continued. “And it is important that we acknowl-edge them for their courage and show them the support they have earned.”
Rhonda McRae, Springtown War
Memorial Association secretary, not-ed that many of the attendees were military families who realized that compared to the hardships our troops endure, braving the cold morning was a tiny sacrifice to support the city as it honored Purple Heart recipients.
According to the Texas Military Or-der of the Purple Heart (MOPH) web-site, Springtown is now one of only 17 cities in the state designated with this honor.
Other Texas Purple Heart Cities: Abernathy, Grapevine, Kerrville, Harker Heights, Katy, Lubbock, Georgetown, Nacogdoches, Rosen-berg, South Padre Island, Petersburg, Tyler, Burleson, Killeen, Sugar Land, and Richmond.
Springtown is the only city in Park-er County – one of four Purple Heart Counties in Texas – to hold this dis-tinction.
Springtown Mayor Doug Hughes was joined by members of the Military Order of the Purple Heart (MOPH) Chapter 1513 Nov. 1 during the run to remember opening ceremony as Springtown was des-ignated a Purple Heart City: (l-r) MOPH 1513 Quartermaster Jon lunkwicz, MOPH 1513 Commander Mike Pierce, Mayor Doug Hughes, and MOPH Chaplain rupert Harrell. Photo by Natalie Gentry
Sound of Springtown 11th at state marching contest
Finals missed by 1 pointby Natalie GeNtry
The “Sound of Springtown” (SOS) finished in eleventh place in the University Interscholastic League (UIL) State Marching Contest Monday, Nov. 3.
Following a spirited send-off Sunday afternoon, SOS ar-rived at the Alamodome after a second place finish at the Area competition on Oct. 25.
The band missed the opportunity to perform in finals by one place, a single point.
“We missed finals by one point, but I couldn’t be more proud of their effort,” said Director of Bands for Spring-town Independent School District (SISD) Chris McLellan.
SOS was given 3, 7, and 13 rankings for music and 10 and 21 rankings for marching.
The 21 – clearly at odds with the other rankings – was a factor that kept the band from advancing to finals.
This is the fourth time the SHS band has qualified to perform at the state competition.
There are approximately 190 high schools in Spring-town’s 4A classification.
“Finishing as the eleventh highest-rated band is quite an honor,” said SISD Superintendent Mike Kelley. “We appreciate the hard work that earning such a designation required.”
Band directors include McLellan, Scot McPhetrige, Chris Mashburn, Megan Hibbetts, Robin Hidrogo, and Alexis Wells.
SHS Drum Majors (l-r) Michala rodriguez, lex-ie little, and Krystina Hickey stand in front of the alamodome in San antonio where Spring-town competed in the Uil State Marching Con-test Monday, Nov. 3. Photos courtesy SISD
Express yourselfSHS students personalize parking spots
by Natalie GeNtrySpringtown High School (SHS)
students have a new way to express themselves and help raise money for Project Celebration.
Beginning in September, seniors were given the opportunity to reserve parking spaces and submit designs to paint in the spaces.
According to guidelines, the four foot square design proposal must be approved by an SHS administrator prior to painting.
Depending on the location of the parking space, the price to reserve and decorate one ranges from $40-$100.
Revenue from the fundraising effort will be used to support the Student Council and Project Celebration.
After seniors were given a time to place reservations, spaces were of-fered on a first-come, first-serve basis, and sold through the SHS office dur-ing student lunch periods.
Students were encouraged to ex-press themselves through the artwork, and include their name somewhere in their design.
Inappropriate words, symbols, or pictures were obviously prohibited.
Campus administrators have desig-nated supervised “paint days” at the beginning of each term.
Non-reserved or general parking spaces are still available for students who did not wish to purchase and dec-orate a parking spot.
The standard parking permit must be purchased for $5, payable to SISD.
SHS students were given the opportunity to personalize a parking space as part of a fundraiser for Project Celebration. Photo by Natalie Gentry
the annual SiSD Pink Out took in more money than ever, spon-sor Cindy Haugen said. this year’s final tally was $6,750. “Sydney Johnson and Jill ray did an outstanding job this year,” Haugen said. a series of sales and events – like at an SHS varsity volleyball match where athletes threw pink balls into the stands – collected money, all of which went to the Joan Katz breast Center at baylor all Saints Medical Center in Fort Worth. Photo by Mark K. Campbell
SISD Pink Out
Election results: Parker County still seeing red
Thursday, November 6, 20142A
Drs. food drive contest extendedSeveral doctors are vying for bragging rights for collecting the
most boxed or canned goods for the needy this holiday season. And they have extended the deadline to Nov. 21.
In an event that began Oct. 27, a slew of doctors are compet-ing: Brian Barone of the Gieb Veterinary Clinic; Robert Moss, MOSS Rehabilitation Clinic; dentist Larry Murphy; Gene Mc-Daniel, Springtown Family Health Center; Felix Cano, Spring-town Family Dental; and James Wooten, Total Care Chiroprac-tic.
Monetary donations are also accepted; everything contributed goes to Springtown’s food pantry, Neighbor to Neighbors. Los-ing doctors will add $50 to their donations.
Bonus Bucks program starts Nov. 10
The 21st Annual Bonus Bucks campaign begins Nov. 10 and runs until Dec. 8.
At local businesses, consumers can pick up entry blanks which make them eligible for drawings Dec. 13 at 2 p.m. at the Tabernacle during Christmas on the Square. Entrants must be present to win.
Winners drawn will receive up to $300 in Bonus Bucks, mon-ey accepted by local merchants for purchases.
For more information, contact the Springtown Chamber of Commerce at 112 South Main Street or call 817-220-7828.
Cow patty Bingo fundraiser Nov. 15It’s $10 to take a chance on where a cow might drop a patty on
the Hinkle Elementary football field.A fundraiser for Springtown Project Celebration, the winner
receives 10 percent of all ticket sales.Gourmet popcorn is also available. Cow patty tickets and pop-
corn can be purchased from members of the SHS Class of 2015.
Out-of-School test dates set for Dec.
Test dates have been locked in for December for students who are away from their home districts.
For the administrations of the TAKS exit level tests, all reg-istration for out-of-school examinees is online only. TAKS ex-aminees (including former TAAS and TEAMS examinees) must register online at http://www.TexasAssessment.com/taksoos.
Those tests will be administered the week of December 1-5.On the day(s) of testing, examinees should arrive at Spring-
town High School at least 30 minutes before the designated test-ing time. Examinees must present picture identification, such as a driver’s license, DPS ID, military ID, school ID, or resident alien card to test. Examinees will not be able to take the test(s) without a picture ID. Contact the SHS campus test coordinator for further information regarding out-of-school testing.
Gifted/talented nominations sought
Nominations for the SISD gifted/talented program for grades 1 through 12 are now being accepted.
Teachers, counselors, parents, or other interested parties can nominate a student. Children in grades 6 through 12 may nomi-nate themselves.
Contact the Advanced Academics coordinator at the students’ campus for information. The screening process will run through October and November.
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Published weekly at 109 First Street, Spring-town, Texas by Azle Tri-Country Advertiser, Inc. Periodicals class postage paid at Springtown, Texas, 76082. Postmaster: Send address changes to P.O. Box 557, Springtown, Texas 76082
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Annual subscription rates: $36 Parker, Wise and Tarrant counties ($32.50 senior citizens 65 and older); $42.50 elsewhere in and outside Texas.
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109 East First Street - P.O. Box 557Springtown, Texas 76082
Phone: (817) 220-7217 - Fax: (817) 523-4457
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407 Old Springtown RoadSuite 116Springtown, TX 76082817-523-3196www.edwardjones.com
By Natalie GeNtryThe Springtown Independent
School District (SISD) recent-ly received three buses from American Bus Sales in Collins-ville, Oklahoma.
The district purchased the “lease return” buses as a contin-uation of the upgrade to the fleet.
The addition of these buses leaves the district with only two
buses without air-conditioning. SISD Superintendent Mike
Kelley and Transportation Di-rector Shane Strickland have worked to purchase nine buses in four years to ensure the safe-ty and comfort of students who ride district buses.
The newest buses are expect-ed to be placed on routes in the next two weeks.
SISD upgrading its bus fleet
New trio about to hit streets
three air-conditioned buses are slated to join the SiSD fleet in the next couple of weeks. Photo courtesy SISD
The Springtown School Dis-trict conducts annual physical fitness assessments of stu-dents in grades 3-12 who are enrolled in a course for which physical education credit is awarded.
Parents may submit a writ-ten request to the campus principal at the end of the year to obtain the results of their child’s physical fitness assess-ment.
SISD youth fitness tests
WRMC opens new Senior Behavioral Health Unit
By Natalie GeNtryWeatherford Regional Medi-
cal Center (WRMC) CEO Da-vid Orcutt spoke to the Spring-town Chamber of Commerce at the Oct. 23 luncheon outlining the recent growth of the medi-cal center.
“One of the newest additions to the hospital is the Senior Be-havioral Health Unit, a 12-bed, inpatient psychiatric care unit serving adults 65 years of age or older,” Orcutt said.
Services in the unit focus on the disease processes that are more common to geriatric pa-tients such as early onset Al-zheimer and Parkinson’s disease.
In addition, treatment is available for a variety of condi-tions including, but not limited to depression, psychosis, bipo-lar disorder, and anxiety.
These patients are volun-tarily seeking behavioral health
services and usually require a short inpatient stay.
The average stay in the unit is 7-10 days.
Treatment services include 24-hour monitoring and super-vision, diagnostic assessments and evaluations, one-on-one visits with a psychiatrist, sta-bilizing and managing medica-tions, group therapy, and man-aging secondary medical needs.
The unit is also designed to educate patients and families to better manage their conditions and ongoing recovery by de-veloping healthier coping skills and a safe and secure follow-up plan for post discharge care.
Referrals for admission are accepted from physicians, home health, social service agencies, and home/residence.
For more information or to make a referral, call 682-582-2900.
WrMC CeO David Orcutt addressed the Springtown Chamber of Commerce at the Oct. 23 luncheon. He dis-cussed the recent additions and to the medical center. Photo by Natalie Gentry
Members of the tabernacle Committee – (l-r) David Ward, lori Mayo, Oleta Parker, Denise taylor, and rob-ert Wilson – gathered Saturday Nov. 1 at the Spring-town Square to add “mercury” to the tabernacle fund thermometer. the addition reflects an increase from $47,500 to $65,000 toward the ultimate goal of $120,000.
Photo submitted by David Ward
Mercury Rising
Got a Hot tip?ContaCt us at springtown
Thursday, November 6, 2014 3A
NOVEMBER
1304 NW Parkway (Hwy 199)817-444-8529 ★ 817-456-0907
Monday - Friday 8:30 am - 6:00 pmSaturday - 9:00 am - 3:00 pm
family owned and operated for 14 years
State Inspection for Tarrant & Parker Counties
Automotive• Tune-ups
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So, here we are with the holidays upon us again. We at Motley Automotive hope that you and your family's wishes and prayers are answered and that all your travels are safe and joyful. We would like to give out a friendly reminder to get your vehicles checked and serviced before you head out on your holiday journeys. Motley Automotive just wanted to show off our newest members of our team and send out our holiday greetings to all our customers and friends. With that being said, "We wish you all a Happy Thanksgiving, a
Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year!" Thank you for 14 years of dedication and we are looking forward to serving Azle in the future years to come at 1304 NW Parkway (Highway 199 west of Azle). We're here Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and on the second and fourth Saturdays of each month from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Give us a call at 817-444-8529 or 817-444-1566 for an appointment or just to say "Hi!" Thanks again from the Motley Automotive crew – Mike and Alicia and family.
Happy Holidays from the Motley Automotive crew: (l-r) Seth Bathurst, Westley Brown, Angela Rothman, Mike Motley, Paislee Hampton, Alicia Motley, Justin Pettway, and Dylan Stahl.
Get your vehicle ready for upcoming holiday journeys
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Gieb Veterinary Clinic
724 E Hwy 199Springtown, Texas 76082
Dr. Brian Barone
www.giebvetclinic.com
Clinic / Emergency 817 - 523 - 7210
November SpecialHeartworm Checks
$20.00Regular $29.50
917 E. Highway 199 • Springtown, TX817-220-5339
www.tommymilesrealty.com [email protected]
Serving Azle, Springtown, Weatherford and other Parker
and Wise County cities. Home Builder on staff.
Rancho Nuevo owner Leonardo Delgadillo (left) presented a check to Tabernacle Committee member David Ward Oct. 30 for 15 percent of the restaurant’s October sales.
Photo by Natalie Gentryepi tabernacle rancho nuevo ng IMG_0607
Rancho Nuevo owner Leonardo Delgadillo (left) pre-sented a check to Tabernacle Committee member David Ward Oct. 30 for 15 percent of the restaurant’s October sales. Photo by Natalie Gentry
Tabernacle Check
Ashid Ali Gokal (left) and Sadiq “Sam” Rehman of the Springtown Kwik Stop cel-ebrated their ribbon cutting with members of the Springtown Chamber of Com-merce. The Kwik Stop is located at 432 West Highway 199. The convenience store features Taco Time Mexican Grill and Krispy Krunchy Chicken as well. Their phone number is 817-523-4422. Photo by Stephanie Cravotta
Students and teachers at Goshen Creek Elementary attended a Rachel’s Challenge assembly Oct. 31. The Rachel’s Challenge program is designed to help create a culture of kindness within schools. Photo by Natalie Gentry
Rachel’s Challenge At GCE
The Parker County Young Marines honored troops wounded or killed in action as well as provided encouragement at the Run to Remember on Nov. 1. Photo by Natalie Gentry
Remembering The Fallen
Can you dig it?
The Parker County Archaeo-logical Society is conducting a field school on Saturday Nov. 8 at 9 a.m.
This class is for anyone who wants to learn the basics of an archaeological dig.
Participants should meet at the Legends Museum at 839 North Main Street in Spring-town.
The group will then go to the site.
“We hope to create a greater interest in the prehistory of our area,” said Director Laurie Moseley.
Archaeological group to hold ‘field
school’ Nov. 8
Ribbon Cutting
Obituaries Thursday, November 6, 20144A
Savor el saboR
407 Old Springtown Rd • 817-523-7278Tuesday-Thursday & Sunday 4pm - 7pm
Springtown Location Only
Expires 11/30/14
Expires 11/30/14
Fajitas for Two$22.00
2 Drinks (non-alcoholic) & 2 SopapilllaTuesday 5 pm - close
$5.99 Enchilada DinnerWednesday 5 pm - close
Booths Available 1st Annual
Azle Holiday Market
www.404mainplace.comor come by location 404 W. Main St.
817-721-7185
Azle Holiday Market is on target to be a great opportunity for a variety of holiday items
for gift giving and decorating items.
Come join us for a wonderful & friendly shopping experience!
November 8th & 9th9 am-5 pm
1st Annual Azle Holiday Market
Admission: $2.00Parking: FreeFull Concessions
1-800-593-2747www.galbreaithpickard.com
James R. PlowmanNorma Plowman
817-594-2747 • Fax 817-596-7803
913 N. Elm St. Weatherford, TX 76086
Springtown Family Dental434 Hwy. 199 E.
817-523-5963
MEDICAL CARE FORTHE ENTIRE FAMILY
“Providing quality healthcare for Springtown& surrounding communities”
SPRINGTOWN FAMILY HEALTH CENTER
817-523-5402
Mon.-Thurs. 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Friday 8:00 a.m. – Noon
Chris Opella, MD
Dr. McDaniel is Board Certified in Family Practice and specializes in Pediatrics and Adult Medicine
Accepting All MajorHealth Plans
call for information
Gene McDaniel, D.O.
Dr. Opella is Board Certified in Family Practice and specializes in pediatrics, women’s health and adult medicine
308 W. Hwy. 199Springtown
Available by appointment ....Douglas Kyle, M.D.Board Certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology
Dr. Kyle specializes in Gynecologic evaluation and surgery including laparoscopic surgery, normal and high risk obstetrics, sonograms and infertility evaluation.
To schedule an appointment with Dr. Kyle, call 940-627-4216
Dr. Chris Opella, MDNow accepting new patients.
Walk-Ins Welcome.
New Location 308 W. Hwy 199
Now Giving Flu Shots$30 Cash or Credit Card
Still WaterS
Small Weddings • Day Meetings Retreats • Lodging
383 Country Rd. 3672, Springtown • 817-220-2681
Retreat Center
Dec. 6th Christmas Tour • Call for Details
www.stillwatersretreattexas.com
Our family serving your family since 1908
Full Service Funeral HomeCremation Services • Pre-Need Plans
Azle • Springtown • Mineral Wells • Weatherford 817-596-4811 • www.whitesfuneral.com
Front Row (L-R): Anita White, Bob White, Kari Drake and Mark ReynoldsBack Row (L-R): Jim Cleaver, Bruce Duncan, Richard Woodman and Jay Morrill
REDI - GOConvenient Store inside
Valero Gas Station
817-523-4629 • 320 E. Hwy 199 Spt
Convenient Store items including...Fresh Sandwiches & Hamburgers
Beer & Wine
Homemade Fresh Donuts Bakers Dozen $5.50
Bakers Dozen$3.99
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Betty Louise Barbee Perry1937-2014
Betty Louise Barbee Perry, 77, passed away peacefully, Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2014, in Azle.
Memorial services are scheduled for this Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014 at 11 a.m., in
Alexander’s Midway Chapel, Springtown and burial of cremated remains at a later date in Merkel Cemetery.
Betty was born June 29, 1937 in Merkel to A.J. and Sue Barbee. They both preceded her in death.
Survivors include children, Kenny Perry and Deborah Perry; siblings, Darla Moore, Beverly Martin and husband, Gene and Bobby Barbee and wife, Birdie; grandchildren, William, Angela, Brandy, Kenny Jr., Andy, Jordan, Luke, Bea, Spencer and Gabe; and 10 great-grandchildren all of whom will miss her dearly.
The Springtown Epigraph, Nov. 6, 2014 Edition
Mattie Frances Chilcutt1926-2014
Mattie Frances Chilcutt, 88, passed away Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014.
A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at White’s Funeral Home, 401 N. Main St., Springtown, 76082. Interment to follow at Springtown Cemetery. Visitation from 1
to 2 p.m. Thursday at White’s Funeral Home.
Mattie was born Feb. 14, 1926 in Springtown to Roscoe and Nina Pewitt. She worked as a beautician for over 30 years in the Springtown area. She will be greatly missed.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Roy Chilcutt and grandson, Bennie Aubrey Skinner, Jr.
Survivors include daughter, Sheila Ann Skinner; grandchildren, Rosetta Schmidt and Brandon Skinner; and great-grandchildren, Crystal Ann Schmidt, Ashlyn Kate Skinner, and Kimberly Lynn Brown.
The Springtown Epigraph, Nov. 6, 2014 Edition
Bobbie Lee Christian1935-2014
Bobbie Lee Christian, 78, of Springtown, passed away Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014 in a Fort Worth hospital.
No services are scheduled at
this time. Galbreaith Pickard is in charge of arrangements.
Bobbie was born Dec. 18, 1935 to Willie and Jessie Davis Hearon in Lindsay, Oklahoma. Bobbie loved to gamble. She was a cashier for Goodwill Industries in Weatherford.
Survivors include her daughter, Glenda Barnes and husband John Conway of Weatherford; son, Terry Ford of Springtown; sister, Barbara Johnson of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; five grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.
The Springtown Epigraph, Nov. 6, 2014 Edition
Got a Hot Tip? Email us @
The Brookshire’s ExtraPoint leaderboard for week nine of the contest shows Springtown High School still in sixth place. To help SHS win $20,000 text PORCUPINES to 43101 every day.
Extra Point Leaderboard
Tour of Homes returns – with a twistBy NaTalIE GENTRySaturday, Dec. 6 will fea-
ture Springtown’s Christ-mas Tour of Homes from 5:30-8:30 p.m.
This year’s tour will be located solely at the Still Waters Retreat Center at
383 County Road 3672 in Springtown.
The entire center will be decorated for the season and will feature hay rides, roast-ed chestnuts, characters in period costume, and carols performed by a church choir.
This new twist on a Springtown Christmas tradition will be a family friendly event.
Tickets for the tour are $10 apiece and can be pur-chased at the Chamber of Commerce office, 112 South
Main Street.The proceeds from
ticket sales benefit the Springtown Legends Museum.
The Springtown Tour of homes al-lows residents to celebrate the holi-days by sharing their homes with the community. This year, the Tour will be held exclu-sively at the Still Waters Retreat.Photo by Mark K. Campbell
Springto
wn
1. ____________________________
2. ____________________________
3. ____________________________
4. ____________________________
5. ____________________________
6. ____________________________
7. ____________________________
8. ____________________________
9. ____________________________
10. ____________________________
11. ____________________________
12. ____________________________
Tiebreaker: 10 Score ____________
Name __________________________
Address ________________________
City ___________________________
Phone _________________________
OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM
Official Rules:• There are 12 games listed in advertisements on this page. To enter, pick the winner and write the name of that team in the appropriate blank on the official entry form. Mail or deliver the form to the Springtown Epigraph on the north side of the square (P.O. Box 557) Springtown, TX 76082, by 5 p.m. Friday.• Entries will be tabulated weekly and the results published in that week’s issue of the Springtown Epigraph. Winners may pick up their checks at the office after Thursday. • The first place winner each week will receive $20, the second place winner $10 and the third place winner $5. The tiebreaker will be used to determine placings. In case of a tie, the money will be divided equally.• To pick the tiebreaker, predict the total number of points in the selected game and enter in the appropriate space on the official entry form.• All entries become the property of the Springtown Epigraph. Please write clearly and be sure to enter your pick in the correct blank. Go PoJo!!
No photocopies acceptable
1st Prize $20
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FOOTBALLCONTESTDeadline for entries 5 p.m. friday!Winners can pick up checks at the epigraph office after Thursday.
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It was a busy few days for many local residents. On Saturday, Nov. 1, participants of the 2014 Run to Remember (right) begin the chilly 5K run/walk/roll. The first place 5K winner was Danny Mitchell, second place went to Malorie Cul-well, and taking third was Keeley Johns. The youngest participant was Drew Vennel and the eldest participant was Milas Thompson. The travel award went to Cait Bai-ley. On Sunday, Nov. 2, the Sound of Springtown got a big send-off as they headed to San Antonio to compete in the state marching band contest (above) at the Al-amodome the next day.
A Busy Few Days
Right photo by Natalie Gentry; band pictures submitted.
Thursday, November 6, 2014 www.springtown-epigraph.net
SPORTS8A
by mark k. campbellA slow start in the Lady
Porcupines’ bi-district match against Alvarado Nov. 3 did not deter Springtown (22-16).
SHS rebounded from a 20-25 opening set loss to steam roll the Lady Indians in the next three games – 25-15, 25-19, 25-15 – in River Oaks at Cas-tleberry High School.
The victory propelled the Lady Porcupines to the Area round, set for Thursday, Nov. 6 at Bowie High School against Vernon.
The Lady Lions swept Gra-ham in Vernon’s bi-district con-test.
At Castleberry, senior leader
Ladies bi-district champs after Alvarado win
Vernon next for SHS
Playoff position locked in after romp of Lake Worth
Promising hoops season ahead for Porcupines, says SHS coach
Swanzys wins contest again
While an alvarado player waits for a ball in river Oaks during SHS’ bi-district playoff match, lady porcupines Sydney Farris (1), ekko Hurst (9), and Gabby Terry (3) keep an eye on it, too. Photo by Mark K. Campbell
Brooklyn Dauenhauer had a marvelous match. She killed a stunning 26 balls – Springtown had 45 total in the four sets – blocked a ball, and served an ace.
Kendyl Dean led SHS in digs with 10.
At the net, the Lady Porcu-pines shone with several get-ting blocks. Ashton Weaver led with 3.5 and Gabby Terry was right behind with 3. Kelly Boy-ett, Brittany Stroud, and Dauen-hauer all had a solo block.
Concerning the slow start, Coach Leighann Strickland said, “We were able to get a little offense working and that helped us pull away.”
James rike is entering his seventh season coaching the SHS boys hoops squad. Photo by Mark K. Campbell
Springtown is playoff-bound, thanks in large part to the defense that includes: (l-r) martine medina (63), Jesse Springfield (73), robert Dease (62), Damien Spraberry (28), Jarrod Nelson (3), and Fisher Drewry (19). after the season finale against castleberry at home, the porcupines will face Sanger in bi-district. Photo by Mark K. Campbell
VARSITY HOOPSDate Foe11/10 at Paradise (scrim)11/22 Stephenville11/24 at Peaster11/25 at Boyd12/2 Azle12/4 at Jacksboro12/9 Glen Rose12/11 at Poolville12/16 at Godley12/19 at Graham12/30 at Poolville1/2 Sanger1/6 at Venus1/9 Mineral Wells1/12 Krum1/20 *Lake Worth1/23 *at Decatur1/27 *at Castleberry1/30 *Bridgeport2/6 *at Lake Worth2/10 *Decatur2/13 *Castleberry2/17 *at Bridgeport*District 8-4A
Once again, the Swanzy fam-ily proved tough to beat in the weekly football contest.
This time, members of the family took the top two places.
Eddy Swanzy turned in a perfect 12-0 card and won the $20 first place cash.
Three prognosticators missed one game each, kicking in the tie-breaker of TCU 31, West Virginia 30 (61)
With her guess of 71 on the tie-breaker, Margaret Swan-zy took the $10 second place award.
Third place and $5 went to Clyde Bradshaw who predict-ed a score of 78.
Too far off on the tie-break-er was Wade Daniels with a guess of 83.
This week’s contest is the last for 2014. However, it will return next August.
by mark k. campbellJames Rike likes Springtown.After coaching stops in
Abilene, Athens, and Abilene again, he found his way here – where he will shortly begin his seventh year as the leader of the Porcupine hoops program.
Already, Rike told Spring-town Optimists Nov. 4, his squads are practicing at 6 a.m.
“Our outlook is good,” he said about the upcoming sea-son. “I’m proud of what we’ve done early.”
Part of that preseason con-ditioning is having Porcu-pines run the daunting stadium bleachers every Friday.
That’s the kind of effort that wins, he noted. “You’re only as good as your best leaders,” Rike said. He lauded a couple of “leaders” in attendance, Zach Burton and Dawson Meeks.
Rike said Burton could have already graduated and has been offered a chance to attend elite Cal Tech. Burton and Dawson, who has started since his soph-omore season, are the “meat of our team,” Rike said.
Springtown has been to the postseason the last two years and should return again.
Rike played his high school ball in the West Texas town of Haskell. From there, he walked on at Texas Tech before begin-ning his high school coaching career at Abilene Cooper.
From there, he traveled across the state to Athens in East Texas where he met his wife Julie.
They returned to Abilene Cooper before Rike started seeking out a head coaching job. He knew and had played with a former SHS coach, Harper Stewart. Rike was sold.
“The Lord sent us here,” Rike said.
Expect the Porcupines to be defensive minded. Rike said Springtown’s magic number is 52: “We win 80 percent of our games when we hold our oppo-nent under 52 points.”
He considers his job impor-tant. “We’re turning teens out into the real world. We must empower them to be respon-sible for their own actions.”
by mark k. campbellA huge first half in Lake
Worth assured the Porcupine football team of not only a vic-tory but a playoff berth, too.
Springtown (6-3, 3-1) turned a 30-10 halftime lead into a 44-
10 victory over the Bullfrogs.With Kennedale dodging a
bullet against feisty Alvarado (30-27), SHS will end up sec-ond in 5-4A and face Sanger in bi-district.
At Lake Worth, the Porcu-
pines took the lead just 55 sec-onds into the game.
That’s when QB Austin Bau-man hit Mykeal Cummings for a 61-yard TD pass.
After a Frog field goal, Bau-man scored on a run then SHS
got a safety.Lake Worth scored in the
second quarter to get to within 16-10. But Springtown tallied all the rest of the game’s points, 28, four touchdowns.
Bauman, filling in admirable
since an injury to starter Kaleb Chesney, had a hand in three of those scores.
First he ran over from the 10 with 2:14 left in the half. Be-fore the horn, Dillon Spring-field scored with 40 seconds
left on a 9-yard jaunt.That 30-10 lead grew in the
third quarter when Brandon Santos caught an 8-yard TD pass from Bauman.
PLEASE SEE SHS, PAGE 9A.
Thursday, November 6, 2014 SPORTS 9A
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Springtown 44 Lake Worth 10
S’town 16 14 7 7 .......... 44Lake Worth 3 7 0 0 .......... 10
Scoring summary S – Mykeal Cummings 61 pass from Austin Bauman (Mateo Herrera kick) LW – Juan Becerra 19 FG S – Bauman 5 run (Herrera kick) S – Safety LW – Tim Woods 25 pass from Tray White (Becerra kick) S – Bauman 10 run (kick fail) S – Dillon Springfield 9 run (Herrera kick) S – Brandon Santos 8 pass from Bau-man (Herrera kick) S – Bauman 18 run (Herrera kick)
Team statistics S LWFirst downs 23 8Rushing yards 37-227 40-116Passing yards 254 53Caught-att.-int 13-25-0 3-12-1Punts, avg 2-26 3-27Fumbles-lost 2-2 2-1Penalties, yds 9-60 6-30
Individual statistics Rushing – Springtown: Dawson Hinkley, 9-84; Austin Bauman, 14-66; Dillon Springfield, 4-41; Ryan Snow, 5-10; Clayton Walker, 2-18; Team, 1-0; Fisher Drewry, 2-(-1). Lake Worth: Kelton Versey, 12-68; Mario Rios, 11-27; Tristan Zamarripa, 2-13; Tray White, 14-8; Bryce Merriman, 1-0. Passing – Springtown: Bauman, 13-25-0-254. Lake Worth: Rios, 2-2-0-27; White, 1-9-1-26; Versey, 0-1-0-0. Receiving – Springtown: Mykeal Cum-mings, 4-137; Jonathan Chavez, 2-28; Ricardo Reynoso, 1-28; Mateo Herrera, 2-25; Hinkley, 1-16; Brandon Santos, 1-8; Springfield, 1-7; Snow, 1-5. Interceptions – Springtown: Reynoso, 1-0. Sacks – Springtown: Chance Nelson, 3-28. Tackles – (Total Springtown only solo/as-sist) Chance Nelson, 9 (9/0); Jarrod Nelson, 5, (3/2); Drewry, 5 (2/3); Walker, 4, (2/2); Blake Sanders, 3 (3/0); Martine Medina, 3 (3/0); Robert Dease, 3 (3/0); Reynoso, 2 (2/0); Cummings, 2 (2/0); Dylan W addle, 2 (1/1); Jackson Walker, 2 (0/2); Jesse Springfield, 1 (1/0); Dillon Springfield, 1 (1/0); Garrett Mauldin, 1 (1/0); Mateo Herrera, 1 (1/0); Rhett Gum, 1 (1/0); Jared Green 1, (1/0); Gavin Edgecomb, 1 (1/0); Ben Anderson, 1 (1/0).
Next upCastleberry
The Lions have had a tough season. Already eliminated
from the playoffs, CHS got its lone victory of the season last week over Diamond Hill, 52-0. Excluding that game, Castle-berry has not scored more than 14 points in a game.
Springtown Middle SchoolVolleyball
The 8th A (10-1, 9-0) bashed Willkie 25-10, 25-10.
“This was a solid win with very few errors,” coach Ashley Watson noted.
She lauded the ef forts of Del -aney Jones for playing front row for the first time this season.
Addison Farris (5 assists, 4 kills), Charisma Jones (13 points), Khloe Smith (6 kills), and Maddie Owens (13 digs) were vital to the win.
The 8th B (10-0, 8-0) swept away Willkie in “one of the best games of the season,” Coach Wat-son said.
Top players: Erica Smith (8
2014 FootballAug. 29 – Decatur 49-21Sept. 5 – at Liberty Chr. 20-54Sept. 12 – WF Hirschi 51-29Sept. 26 – at Vernon 33-26Oct. 3 – Brownwood 7-30Oct. 10 – *at Kennedale 10-58Oct. 17 – *Dia. Hill 61-6Oct. 24 – *at Alvarado 27-24Oct. 31 – *at Lk. Worth 44-10Nov. 7 – *Castleberry*District 5-4A game
REGION IMae Simmons Park
LubbockOctober 31, 2014
VARSITY GIRLSRacer (159) Place, timeSharaia Stout 72, 13:26Harley Phares 94, 13:52Kristine Camacho 109, 14:01Rian Kinney 111, 14:03Brianna Escobar 115, 14:10Hanna Phares 133, 14:32Gabby Casanova 138, 15:00Teams (23): 19. Springtown, 483.
VARSITY BOYRacer (169) Place, timeAlan Tarango 85, 17:54
aces); Taylor Cox (13 points, 5 as -sists); Deven Triggs (3 kills); and Kira Strauss (13 digs).
Nadia Contreras was praised for her improvement.
Watson said, “Every player played hard and took care of busi -ness.”
FootballAfter blowing out Willkie, the
8th A won the North Texas Athletic League championship.
The A won big, 42-14. Coaches said top players were Sawyer Dre-wry, Christian Whitaker, JR Spoon, and Christian Morales.
The 8th B finished 5-4 after a 6-2 squeaker over Willkie.
Leading in the win were Bowden Bond, Bobby Greenwood, and Ryan Donovan.
The 8th C got edged 8-0 by Willkie.
Johnny Kipple, Gavin Mason, and Jacob Cardwell were top players.
The 7th A skunked Willkie 34-0 to finish 6-2-1 for the season.
Cooper Merriman, Austin Tuck-er, and Josh Mote led the team.
The 7th B lost a close one, 22-18, to Willkie.
SMS athletes shining in the game were Cage Teague, Alex Waite, and DJ Wright.
The 7th C, led by Jesus Najera, Adam Armstrong, and Cody Ru -pert, defeated Willkie 12-6.
Racing season ends in Lubbock
SHS tops Bullfrogs
FB BoxeS
JV football squad wins easily
The final points came when Bauman ran from the 18 early in the fourth quarter.
While one more district game awaits – Senior Night at home against Castleberry – all 5-4A playoffs berths are already set
Springtown is the No. 2 seed in the “Big School” – Div. I – bracket.
Coach Brian Hulett said this year’s group of seniors de-served to be lauded.
“I’m proud of a group of seniors who had to adapt to change and have learned new things,” he noted. “We have won several games that could have gone either way.”
Hulett said a victory over Castleberry would give the Por-cupines a 7-win regular season
n SHS, FROM PAGE 8A.
Juniors Harley Phares (125) and Kristine Camacho gained valuable experience at the regional cross country meet, coach Trent Davis said. Photo by Mark K. Campbell
The freshman volleyball Lady Porcupines won district. They are: (front, l-r) manager Emily Berlin, Hailee Plow-man, Erica Dostie, Karlee Eddy, Keely Finchum, Hannah Downes, Haylee Klein; (back) Lexy Burt, Riley Watson, Scottie Holmes, Kennedy Soone, Taylor Snow, Mekaila Diaz, and Adeli Gonzalez.
Dawson Hinkley led rush-ers. Photo by Mark K. Campbell
for only the second time since the late 1990’s.
“That is something our boys need to be proud of,” the coach said.
Hulett also had praise for Bauman as well as Chesney and Springfield, SHS’ trio of quarterbacks this season.
No one expected fireworks at the annual Region I cross country meet at Lubbock’s Mae Simmons Park on Halloween.
And none came. But all seven of the eight Springtown competitors at the elite meet were underclassmen.
The Lady Porcupine team was led by junior Sharaia Stout who ran the grueling two-mile route in 13 minutes, 26 seconds.
Two other juniors – Harley Phares and Kristine Camacho – followed Stout in.
Springtown’s lone boy run-ning, Alan Tarango, is a junior who ran three miles in 17:54.
Coach Trent Davis said, “I wanted the runners to use this year as a learning experience. I wanted them to see what it was like to run with the big boys and girls.”
The coach said he was very pleased with the progress of the two squads. “We made improvements that exceeded
my expectations. Now we will continue to work on getting our times faster,” Davis said.
That means getting “girls in the 12’s and boys into the 17’s,” he said.
The JV football team kept pace with the varsity in victo-ries, claiming its sixth victory.
The SHS JV (6-3) bashed lake Worth 41-6.
The game was actually tied at 6 after one period; the Porcu-pines score came when Austin
Chenault ran for a 20-ayrd TD.After that, the Frogs faded
and Springtown revved up.Chenault scored three more
touchdowns on runs of 2, 25, and 2 yards. He also ran over a 2-point conversion.
Hayden Quinn threw a TD
pass to Wriley Russell.The other SHS points came
from the defense when Russell snatched a 15-yard pick six in-terception.
“It was good to go out and physically dominate a football game,” coaches said.
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Support them by shopping at home - every chance you get.
Ace of Azle505 N. Stewart - Azle - 817-270-5600
Atex Trash ServiceATEXTRASH.COM - 817-344-8464
Azle Dental CareBrooke Porter, D.D.S.
912 Boyd Rd. - Azle - 817-444-1763
Azle Vision Source601 N.W. Parkway, Suite B - Azle - 817-444-1717
Cedar Village400 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-4196
Chicken Express502 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-0009
Cliff’s Goodyear Auto1088 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-220-5959
Eagle Crest Villa133 Denver Trail - Azle - 817-444-3249
Exxon TigermartCorner of Hwy. 199 & FM 51 - Springtown - 817-523-5560
Farmers Insurance -Rick Phillips
401 Old Springtown Rd. - Springtown - 817-220-4363
First Baptist Church Springtown500 N. Main - Springtown - 817-220-5229
Garrett’s Springtown Drug StoreNorth Side of the Square - Springtown - 817-220-7227
Gieb Veterinary Clinic724 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-523-7210
Highland FurnitureNorth Side of the Square - Springtown - 817-220-5570
Hilltop Family Church1227 Old Cottondale Rd. - Springtown -817-220-5570
Howell’s Cafe329 Hwy. 199 W. - Springtown - 817-220-7915
K-D-L Feed and Supply2597 W. Hwy 199 - Springtown - 817-523-3200
Moss Rehabilitation Center407 Old Springtown Rd., Ste. 114 - Springtown - 817-220-6677
Pinnacle Bank726 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-220-5504
ProMax Power Sports123 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-220-2453
Shinola’s Texas CafeOff Hwy. 199, Behind Springtown Florist - 817-523-0010
Springtown EpigraphOn the Square - Springtown - 817-220-7217
Springtown Family Dental434 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-523-5963
Springtown Family Health Center
499 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-5402
Springtown Sports & Fitness332 W. First St. - Springtown - 817-523-2966
Sutton Printing418 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-220-2101
The Lube Center324 Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-3151
Thursday, November 6, 201410A SPORTS
Bi-district champs!
The Lady Porcupines trounced Alvarado 3-1 to win bi-district!
Photos by Mark K. Campbell
Good luck,
ladies!
Next: Area Round – Springtown vs. Vernon at Bowie High School,
Thursday, Nov. 6 at 6:30 p.m.
The merchants on this page support our youth in all their activities.
Support them by shopping at home - every chance you get.
Ace of Azle505 N. Stewart - Azle - 817-270-5600
Atex Trash ServiceATEXTRASH.COM - 817-344-8464
Azle Dental CareBrooke Porter, D.D.S.
912 Boyd Rd. - Azle - 817-444-1763
Azle Vision Source601 N.W. Parkway, Suite B - Azle - 817-444-1717
Cedar Village400 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-4196
Chicken Express502 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-0009
Cliff’s Goodyear Auto1088 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-220-5959
Eagle Crest Villa133 Denver Trail - Azle - 817-444-3249
Exxon TigermartCorner of Hwy. 199 & FM 51 - Springtown - 817-523-5560
Farmers Insurance -Rick Phillips
401 Old Springtown Rd. - Springtown - 817-220-4363
First Baptist Church Springtown500 N. Main - Springtown - 817-220-5229
Garrett’s Springtown Drug StoreNorth Side of the Square - Springtown - 817-220-7227
Gieb Veterinary Clinic724 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-523-7210
Highland FurnitureNorth Side of the Square - Springtown - 817-220-5570
Hilltop Family Church1227 Old Cottondale Rd. - Springtown -817-220-5570
Howell’s Cafe329 Hwy. 199 W. - Springtown - 817-220-7915
K-D-L Feed and Supply2597 W. Hwy 199 - Springtown - 817-523-3200
Moss Rehabilitation Center407 Old Springtown Rd., Ste. 114 - Springtown - 817-220-6677
Pinnacle Bank726 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-220-5504
ProMax Power Sports123 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-220-2453
Shinola’s Texas CafeOff Hwy. 199, Behind Springtown Florist - 817-523-0010
Springtown EpigraphOn the Square - Springtown - 817-220-7217
Springtown Family Dental434 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-523-5963
Springtown Family Health Center
499 E. Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-5402
Springtown Sports & Fitness332 W. First St. - Springtown - 817-523-2966
Sutton Printing418 Hwy. 199 E. - Springtown - 817-220-2101
The Lube Center324 Hwy. 199 - Springtown - 817-523-3151
Great job, band!You again made
Springtown proud with your
performance at the state
marching band competition!
Photos by Mark K. Campbell
Congrats on an amazing
season!
Thursday, November 6, 2014 11A
12AThursday, November 6, 2014 www.springtown-epigraph.netOPINION
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The
About 4,000 Loyalists, mainly the types most able to survive, but few with the quasi-urban background of their eastern brethren,
went up through New York state to settle Kingston and Niagara and being better suited to the frontier struggle which faced them, formed the nucleus of what is now Ontario. Their provin-cial flag incorporates a union canton, showing their Loyalist heritage and their motto 'Ut incepit Fidelis sic per-manent' means Loyal she began loyal she remains.
“Others fled to either Florida (then British), Bermuda, Bahamas/Abaco/Eleuthera/Exuma, Turks & Caicos, Ja-maica, Dominica, St Lucia, the Miski-to Coast (later to British Honduras now Belize) and Sierra Leone. Those that arrived in Britain were in a piti-able situation, so much so that Lord North the Prime Minister, intended to arrange for them to be given passage
and land in Australia as free settlers, even to introduce them to potential Tahiti wives, but his government was defeated in a general election before this could take place.
“His successor the hard-nosed Lord Sydney had different ideas and decided, following a period of lock-ing up mere petty criminals, to send them instead, to both reduce the ‘self-induced’ overcrowding problem in HM prisons and (one must conclude) to conveniently have less independent settlers for a new colony.
“Most people in Vermont did not take part in the rebellion and wanted to remain independent or even part of Canada, but were threatened by Wash-ington and forced to join the USA, so 8,000 of its settlers moved just across the border into Canada, where they set up the eastern townships in order to escape the chaos, taxes and anarchy that had become rife in the new US.
“An indication of what life was like in the new USA is an armed uprising
took place in Massachusetts from 1786 to 1787 against crippling tax-ation which had caused most to fall deeply in debt and then as a consequence faced them with either imprisonment or their prop-erty confis-cated for the state to sell.
This popular rebellion led by Daniel Shays, was crushed when nearly all of its leaders were caught and sentenced to death, Daniel Shays died in dire poverty.
“In 1796 the British tried again to get compensation for the Loyalists by agreeing to withdraw from forts in
Ohio country, if the Americans would agree to act more effectively on Loy-alists claims. The British withdrew on schedule but the Loyalist claims were never settled, even though the British did all they could to pacify the Indians
“The final injustice was that the Loyalists were made to disappear and what force of arms could not erase, US historians have so diligently buried, so that their persecution remains ignored and forgotten.
“In 1812, while Britain was at the height of her struggle with a Napoleon led Europe, that Madison and his par-ty were aiding, Britain's very survival was at stake, so she naturally tried to impound this aid. In response the Anglophobic US War Hawks know-ing Britain was unlikely to be able to reinforce her meagre 5,000 man force in Canada and as the total population of Canada was only appoximately 500,000 against around 7,500,000 million in the USA, thought it was a good time to take advantage of Brit-
ain’s preoccupation.“So they claimed the British were
arming the Indians, (when the truth was they didn’t have enough arms for themselves), grossly inflated the num-ber of American sailors seized in error while boarding their ships to retrieve (poached) enlisted seamen and per-suaded Madison, despite the suffering already inflicted on the Loyalists, to declare war and try to annex Canada which would effectively steal their land again.
“America used its considerable skill of propaganda to try to get the Cana-dians to switch allegiance and join the USA, but the Loyalists knew the worthlessness of President Madison's pompous proclamations and promises and wisely remained deeply distrust-ing of the US and its brand of repub-licanism.”
The British point of view – American Loyalists, Part 5
HISTORICALHIGHLIGHTS
Laurie Moseley
Laurie Moseley is an author, archeologistand historian who lives in Springtown. He is the
director of Springtown’s Legends Museum.
A poem by any other name will still be unread
ON YOURMARK
Mark K. Campbell
Mark K. Campbell is the Epigraph editor and has destoryed an enormous amount of self-penned
poetry. You’re welcome.
I try.
Occasionally, I pick up a book of poetry and try to get through it.
But, like with classical mu-sic or jazz, I soon find my mind
wandering.Oh, certain pieces of high society art
have stuck with me through the years.I know lots of classical music –
well, bits of famous pieces – thanks to old Bugs Bunny cartoons I watched every Saturday morning as a kid.
(Did you know that commercial channels no longer show Saturday morning cartoons? Now it’s all juicer infomercials and those endless Ameri-can Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals tearjerkers set to mournful Sarah McLachlan ballads. [Even she turns the channel when they come on, McLachlan says.])
I know that it’s very hip to like jazz. I am knowledgeable enough to drop names like Miles Davis and Thelo-nious Monk, but I couldn’t make it through the former’s Kind of Blue, the “greatest jazz album of all time.”
(However, I should also mention I know “Take Five” by Dave Brubeck, but only because it became a Top 40 hit in 1961, reaching No. 25.)
Poetry is tough, too. As an English Literature minor, I’ve read a lot of
stuff. Just not much poetry.Oh, I can recite plenty of it, still en-
tombed in my webby memory forever more, parts of “The Raven” by Edgar Allen Poe and some Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost.
Poetry used to be the realm of the creative super writer, many pinned with the title of U.S. poet laureate. I’m sure you know our current one is Charles Wright. (Of course I Googled it!)
It all started back in 1937 with Jo-seph Auslander. Occasionally, there’s a name in poets laureate history that is recognizable: Robert Penn Warren (1944-45 and again in 1986-87 when the title was changed to Poet Laure-ate Consultant in Poetry); Frost (1958-59, owner of four Pulitzer Prizes! for poetry!), and James Dickey (1966-68 who I really only know for his novel Deliverance which I saw as a movie starring Burt Reynolds in a theater in downtown Dallas when I was a senior attending a National Beta Club func-tion in 1972 and was forever more traumatized by the words “squeal like a pig” which has very little to do with poetry yet still conjures up vivid, trou-bling images).
Poetry looks easy. Just like when reading a Stephen King book, one thinks, well, I could do that – until one tries. Like a Dr. Seuss book, simple
doesn’t mean easy.
That’s not to say I haven’t had a go at writing poetry through the years.
In the inter-est of full dis-closure, the first thing I ever had print-ed – as a Leon-ard Middle School eighth grader in 1970
– was a poem about Frankenstein’s Monster.
However, my poetry winning streak ended at one.
Still, I have bits and pieces of ef-forts stashed hither and yon. They stay stashed because they are horrible.
Here’s an example, penned, it says on the rumbled piece of small lined notebook paper, on Sept. 3, 2003, not long before the singer Warren Zevon, most notable to mainstream mankind as the author of “Werewolves of Lon-don,” died.
I recall the romantic setting where I scribbled way – behind Arlington Fire Station No. 15 after supper. I felt
inspired, but it must’ve been Scott’s stomaching-challenging cooking be-cause this is what came out:
He led a good life right up to the end,Always “weird” – something he
never bothered to defend.He wrote and sang what he saw and
heard.And often pressed on beyond the ab-
surd.A hit in his youth among those off
the path,Yet not a giant success; he never
sweated the math.He roamed where he wanted and
few can say that.His lifework was everywhere, to be
exact.Pee-yew! Thankfully for humanity,
we caught a major accident and the poem crashed and burned, never re-turned to. My eighth grade poem was way better.
Amazingly, no one has yet con-tacted me to be the next Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry.
Still, I feel I’m not living life to its fullest by not consuming some poetry at least occasionally.
So, when I was at the Azle Memori-al Library and saw a “free book” rack, I stopped. What better way to expand one’s mind than to do it for free.
There, curiously untouched (and
maybe never opened), was a 1966 translation of Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko.
Bratsk Station and Other New Po-ems was issued as part of a series called “Books that Matter” by an Aus-tralian publisher.
You can tell it’s important right off the bat because the poems don’t rhyme. Back in ‘66, a rhyming app for phones was in its earliest stages.
I cracked the book open, determined to cram some culture in me no matter what. How fitting that, in early No-vember, I fell on page 203 and “Au-tumn”:
Inside me the season is autumn,the chill is in me, you can see
through me,and I am sad, but not altogether
cheerless,and filled with humility and good-
ness.But if I rage sometimes,then I am the one whose rage is
shedding my leaves ––Zzzzzzzz. Huh? What?! Sorry I
dozed off there.Maybe I could hang in there with it
more if Foghorn Leghorn was reading it...
The 2014 elections by the numbers
With a historic Re-publican wave of victories, this is how Texans vot-ed (based on exit polls):
In the governor’s race, Republican Greg Abbott won the women’s vote with 59 percent. Sixty-five percent of men voted for Abbott.
His rival, Democrat Wendy Davis, won the Hispanic vote with 57 percent. She also took the African-American vote by a whopping 93 to 7 percent.
Most voters in Texas are white, 65 percent of the electorate; 72 percent of them voted for Abbot.
The remainder of the Texas elector-ate: Latinos at 18 percent, African-Americans at 12 percent, and Asians at 2 percent.
Abbott won almost every county in the state.
Davis took a large swath of counties along the Rio Grande. The lone non-border counties won by Davis were Travis where she took 63 percent and Dallas County where she defeated Ab-bott 63 to 34 percent.
Thursday, November 6, 2014 OPINION 13A
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The Secretary of State’s Elections Division on Oct. 31 posted early voting turnouts for each of the
state’s 15 highest-population counties: Harris, Dallas, Tar-rant, Bexar, Travis, Collin, Denton, El Paso, Fort Bend, Hi-dalgo, Montgomery, William-son, Galveston, Nueces and Cameron.
Of the 8,978,313 regis-tered voters in those counties, 1,715,731 voted early in per-son or by mail. That’s a 19.11 percent cumulative early voting percentage. To compare with the last midterm election, in 2010, the cumulative early vot-ing total for those 15 counties was 1,731,589 ballots cast out of 8,339,034 registered voters, or 20.76 percent of the total.
After polls close at 7 p.m. on Election Day, Nov. 4, any-one with an Internet connec-tion will be able to access vote tabulations posted by the Of-fice of the Secretary of State’s at the website www.sos.state.
tx.us. Election results in races for statewide offices will be recapped in next week’s State Capital Highlights column.
Governor greets ToyotaGov. Rick Perry on Oct. 27
welcomed New York, N.Y.-based Toyota Motor North America Inc. to Plano, where its new headquarters will be built. The manufacturer’s relo-cation to Plano is supported by a $40 million investment from the business-luring Texas En-terprise Fund administered by the governor’s office.
The facility, to be completed in late 2016 or early 2017, will bring nearly 4,000 jobs and more than $300 million in capi-tal investment to North Texas, according to Perry’s Oct. 27 statement. Toyota Motor North America, combined with 21 on-site suppliers, already supports some 6,000 jobs in San Antonio, including 2,900 from its $2.3 billion manufacturing plant.
TxDOT ends gravel policyTexas Department of Trans-
p o r t a -tion in the sum-mer of 2013 an-nounced a plan to c o n v e r t 83 miles of “sig-nificantly damaged p a v e d roads” in the Ea-gle Ford S h a l e e n e r g y -producing
region to gravel surface as a temporary budget-cutting mea-sure.
In an Oct. 24 letter to the Leg-islative Budget Board, TxDOT announced the formal termina-tion of its “high-end unpaved road conversion policy” and requested access to $402 mil-lion in additional funding for Fiscal Year 2015 with half go-ing to safety projects across the state and the remainder toward
roadways affected by the state’s growing energy sector.
Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst praised TxDOT’s announce-ment, saying, “Texas families and businesses in both rural and urban areas deserve a compre-hensive first-rate transportation system and they’ll get it.”
Nurse recovers from EbolaTexas Department of State
Health Services Commissioner Dr. David Lakey on Oct. 28 expressed relief when Amber Vinson, a nurse with Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, was declared free of the Ebola virus last week. She was in isolation and receiving treat-ment at Emory University Hos-pital in Atlanta.
“We are so pleased that Am-ber Vinson has been declared free of Ebola. She is one of the health care workers who brave-ly provided care to the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the United States. Through excel-lent health care and her own courage, she beat the disease. Based on the clinical and lab
findings, people are not at risk of getting the disease from her, and she has been completely cleared. We wish her the best as she transitions back to a normal life, and we welcome her back home to Texas,” Lakey said in an official statement.
Summit focuses on bullying“Bullying remains one of
the most prevalent and widely discussed topics pertaining to school safety and security,” Texas Education Agency an-nounced during Texas Safe Schools Week, Oct. 19-25.
During the week, Texas School Safety Center at Tex-as State University in San Marcos and the Texas Edu-cation Agency spotlighted resources available to help school districts and charters address and combat bullying and cyber-bullying on cam-puses.
Also, Texas School Safety Center presented the 2nd An-nual Texas Bully Prevention Summit on Oct. 30 in San Marcos.
Drought conditions persistGov. Perry on Oct. 28 an-
nounced the renewal of the emergency disaster proclama-tion the governor originally had signed in July 2011, certifying that exceptional drought condi-tions posed a threat of immi-nent disaster in specified coun-ties in Texas.
This month, the proclamation applies to 98 of the state’s 254 counties. In contrast, the proc-lamation applied to 113 speci-fied counties last month.
The drought proclamation directs that “all necessary measures, both public and pri-vate” as authorized by state law “be implemented to meet that threat” and “all rules and regulations that may inhibit or prevent prompt response to this threat are suspended for the duration of the state of di-saster.”
Secretary of State posts early voting turnout numbers
STATE CAPITAL
HIGHLIGHTSEd Sterling
Veteran state reporter and legislative analyst Ed Sterling is member services
director for the Texas Press Associa-tion, whose 518 member newspapers
have combined circulation of 3.7 million.
Are you as tired as I of the negativity and hyperbole of the election season? Thank-
fully, we can soon move on to what’s next. Something that amazes me is how those who come in second (a much nicer term than “losers”) congratulate and commit to work with those whom they have spent the past months vilifying. I guess they are hoping that their controver-sial and accusatory statements will be forgotten and they will still have a place at the table.
I’m not much into making controversial statements. I am, however, into making state-ments and asking questions that cause people to pause and think. I made a couple of those in last week’s column, “What happens when wisdom meets energy?”
I think there are a couple of near-universal truths here:
1. Most young leaders think they are wiser than they really
are.2. Most older
leaders think they have less energy than they really have.
The first truth leads to the develop-ment of unhealthy and ineffective hab-its. The second truth is often a result of those habits and leads to frustration and regret.
I can imagine some young leaders bristling at the idea that I might be suggesting that they are re-ally don’t know what they are doing. I can also imagine some older leaders frustrated that I have just called them out, sug-gesting that they are not doing enough anymore.
Neither of those conclu-sions is true, but I hope I have sparked some contemplation on what it would be like if the wis-dom of experience could meet the energy of youth. So how
can wisdom meet energy?
Honestly, I can only think of one way for that to hap-pen effectively: an intentional mentor-ing relationship.
Two persons are necessary:
1. A young leader who realizes that, no matter how smart he or she is, there are some things that can only be learned through experience.
A smart person learns from his or her own experiences. A wise person learns from the experi-ence of others.
2. An older leader who real-izes that, no matter what limita-tions have come about through aging, there is an amazing new energy that comes through gen-erously investing in the next generation.
The only way this relation-ship can work is for both to ap-proach it with humility. Young
leaders need humility to allow someone to speak into their lives. Older leaders need hu-mility to value the wisdom that young leaders do have and to resist the temptation to “talk down” to them.
When I think of an effec-tive mentoring relationship, I think of Paul and Timothy. In 1 and 2 Timothy we see how Paul talked “to” Timothy. In Romans, 1 & 2 Corinthians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 & 2 Thessalonians, and Philemon, we see how Paul talked “about” Timothy.
Both matter.No matter where we are on
the age spectrum, we have much to learn and much to share. What is the next step for you in the quest to connect wis-dom and energy?
How can wisdom meet energy?
LIFE MATTERSGerry Lewis
Azle resident Dr. Gerry Lewis is direc-tor of missions for the Harvest Baptist
Association, which is headquartered in Decatur. He writes a blog at
www.drgerrylewis.com.
Join the community : Subscribe to the Epigraph! Call 817-220-7217 and keep up with your hometown news!
Movie Manemail: [email protected]
NightcrawlerNocturnal nastiness
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Rene Russo, Bill Paxton, Riz AhmedDirected by: Dan GilroyRated R for: language, graphic gore and violence
... on a scale of 1-107
Thursday, November 6, 2014Movie Man14A
“Gritty” movies have been around for a while. From the film noir pictures of the 1940’s and early ‘50’s to the realistic crime movies of the 1970’s, there’s a history of dark, macho movies that evolved into a genre. To-day, movies that look a certain way are deemed to be a throw-back to those “gritty films of the ‘70’s” – like Dog Day After-noon (1975) or Serpico (1973.)
And this week’s movie, Nightcrawler, is another mod-ern movie that is a mirroring of that era’s style.
Now, having said all that in this introduction, let’s go off in a different direction.
About the film (kinda)Another genre off–the-beaten
path folks can venture down in theaters is the weirdo movie, the indecipherable, the movie that doesn’t spell everything out, that leaves things unattend-ed to or flat-out mysterious.
Nightcrawler stars Jake Gyl-lenhaal and he once had the lead in of those queer classics. But, before we get to that one – that itself is a freak of nature even in that huh? genre – here’s a couple of movies that have defied traditional conclusions.
Naturally, there are short or basically unheard of films that dare to be non-conformist for non-conformist’s sake. Howev-er, occasionally a mainstream movie comes along that is left open to interpretation.
Perhaps the most famous is 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). Even today, it’s either beloved or detested, for its creeping pace as well as its curious, sensory-altering ending that thousands have taken a crack at solving. Even today, the film remains an enigma with plenty of guesses but no definitive answers.
Another movie, far less pop-ular but a film school regular and a bona fide “cult classic” is Mulholland Dr. (2001). Made by the wonderfully weird Da-vid Lynch, the movie is seen by many as incoherent. It’s not, but, like many of its ilk, Mul-
Nightcrawler like an old school 70’s crime dramaholland Dr. requires multiple viewings.
Is it a dream? If so, when does the dream begin? Or end? What’s with the little (literally) old couple? And that dumpster scene? Lynch, in a DVD extra, gave viewers some “things to watch for” to help them crack the movie. (One hint comes before the opening credits; an-other is a red lamp.) The clues likely caused more confusion than before, which is very Lyn-chian.
Then there’s Donnie Darko (2001) starring Gyllenhaal. It had the great misfortune of coming out just a month after 9/11 – and there’s a plane crash in it. The film disappeared from theaters but found a gigantic home audience.
The movie is very strange and, to boot, contains two fan-tastic music montages (to Tears for Fears’ “Head Over Heels” and Gary Jules’ “Mad World” [originally a Tears for Fears song (done very differently by the duo)]).
The picture is a mishmash of many genres, including time travel sci-fi, horror, mystery, and family drama. For years, fans de-bated Donnie Darko’s meaning.
Then, came a first: Direc-tor Richard Kelly released a special edition that explained everything. Fans were beside themselves that the creative ge-nius had dared to explain him-self. It was unheard of. Kelly not only dashed scores of long-pondered theories but raised the ire of so many.
Well, to get back to Night-walker, there’s not much of a weird movie connection, bar-ring the strangeness of Gyllen-haal’s character – it’s no Don-nie Darko, but his Louis Bloom is pretty bizarre.
The plotBloom is a strange fellow, a
thief who barely gets by stealing and reselling metal in seedy Los Angeles. A recluse who lives on the Internet for hours on end, he fancies himself a businessman,
thanks to the many “education-al” cyber-sites he has visited.
Late one night, he comes upon an accident and watches Joe Loder (Fort Worth’s Bill Paxton) jump out and film the carnage. After seeing the foot-age the next day on TV, Gyllen-haal is sure he can do the job.
With a cheap video camera, he manages to slowly build a reputation selling grisly foot-age to Nina (Rene Russo), the news director to the lowest rated TV station in town. Gyl-lenhaal eventually hires an “in-tern,” Rick (Riz Ahmed), and the duo becomes the top noc-turnal crime chasers – night-crawlers – in town.
Soon, Gyllenhaal has a fast car and, with his calm yet slightly menacing demeanor, he has Russo in a desperate sit-uation – she needs what he has.
But, in his quest to be first and goriest, Gyllenhaal begins bending the rules, first moving a bloody body so he can get a better shot, then beating even the police to a triple homicide where he films not only the bodies but the killers’ escape.
He decides to rig a meeting where the killers and the cops converge in a situation where he can film what will surely be a massacre. But will he get caught?
What worksGyllenhaal is seriously
weird. Every scene he’s in, he’s uncomfortable to watch. Yet
only once, does the violence he sometimes references actually surface, then only briefly.
Russo is also good. She’s quickly put into a compromis-ing situation – which Gyllen-haal, in a business and personal sense – quickly exploits. The scene where they go out on a “date” is full-bore unsettling, with Gyllenhaal’s bug eyes and skull-like grin and Russo’s sad knowledge that she knows where this relationship is going amping things up.
The film is an homage to those grainy ‘70’s movies, all the way down to the curi-ous resemblance Ahmed has to John Cazale from Dog Day Afternoon to the way the film
literally looks to the anti-hero plot where justice isn’t exactly served to the “city being a char-acter.”
Best sceneThe sequence where Gyllen-
haal has orchestrated the two killers arriving in a late-night Chinese restaurant and the ar-rival of two sets of cops steadi-ly builds tension.
Soon, the dread is thick: Four cops are in the diner and so are the killers as well as innocent customers – all the while Gyl-lenhaal and Ahmed are in posi-tion to film the entire encounter.
What doesn’t workWhat Gyllenhaal does to
Paxton to aid in the former’s ascension to top nightcrawler status is kinda dumb and really stretches belief.
The graphicness of the foot-age that runs on TV would sim-ply not be done, even today. The gore is too great.
Surely, in this techno age, Gyllenhaal would be easier to catch breaking laws on emer-gency scenes – which, in real life, no true nightcrawlers could ever get as close as they do in this movie.
The film has an anti-climac-tic chase and then another end-ing after that. It’s like watching
a Hobbit movie – it won’t end.
The ratingThere is a ton of bad lan-
guage here and enough gore to merit the R.
Summing upCertainly, Nightcrawler is an
adult, old school crime drama that won’t be for everyone. It’s rough and creates an uneasy atmosphere. But, for the right audience, it’ll be a hit. And no special director’s cut will be needed to explain what’s going on onscreen.
Next upInterstellar.
*Rates are subject to change and exclude applicable taxes and fees. Prior to Internet installation, computer is required to have a Network Interface Card (NIC) installed. Customer will be charged a $35 fee if an additional installation visit is required. For optimum performance, the following minimum configuration is recommended for your computer: Windows XP/Mac 10.3 or later version, Processor running at 300 MHz or faster with 1 GB of RAM and 500 MB of available disk space. Internet speeds are not guaranteed and actual Internet downstream and upstream speeds will vary. Internet speed can be affected by the configuration of your computer (CPU speed, RAM, etc.), Internet/network congestion, customer network configuration (wiring, use of routers or other equipment, etc.) and the speed of Web site servers you access. Uninterrupted use of these services is not guaranteed. Phone service not required.
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Up To 5 Meg/2 Meg .....$39.95Up To 10 Meg/2 Meg ...$69.95
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Box Office Opens: Sun - Fri 12 pm · Sat Only 9:30 am
Weatherford Cinema 10 strongly enforces the National M.P.A.A. Rating System. NO ONE UNDER 17 will be admitted into an “R” rated movie without being accompanied by their parent. There are no exceptions to this policy and I.D. WILL BE CHECKED.
817.341.3232
purchase tickets onlinewww.citylightstheaters.com
1000 Cinema Drive in Hudson Oaks1 mile West of Lakeshore Drive, off of Fort Worth Highway
For times & info.
FRI. 11/07 - THUR. 11/13
Nightcrawler R
Gone Girl R
Fury R
Interstellar PG-13
Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day PG
The Book of Life PG
Big Hero 6 2D/3D PG
The Judge R
St. Vincent PG-13
Ouija PG-13
www.plazacinema4.comCHECK OUR WEBSITE FOR MOVIE TIMES!
Small Town Feel wiTh an UpTown look!
Plaza Cinema IV920 W. Thompson, Decatur
Friday 11/07- Thursday 11/13
Movies are subject to changes!
Penguins of Madagascar - Coming Nov. 26 PG
Tickets on Sale for Hunger Games:MockingJay Part 1For the 8:00 pm show on Nov. 20, 2014. Nov. 1- Food Can Drive. Bring in 2 cans, get a small bag of popcorn
BaCK TO SCHOOl HOURS Box office opens 2:30 Mon.-Thur. 11:30 Fri.
Big Hero 6 Nov.6 PG
Ouija PG-13
St. Vincent PG-13
Intersteller PG-13
Dumb and Dumber To - Coming Nov. 14 PG-13
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www.texasmoviebistro.com3980 Boat Club Rd · Lake Worth
$5 MATINEES, ALL MOVIES BEFORE 6PMMILITARY, SENIORS & STUDENT DISCOUNTS
$4 TUESDAYS, ALL MOVIES1, ALL DAYWITH 2 FOR 1 PIZZAS
817-238-8300
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ND = NO DISCOUNTS OR PASSES *3D TIMES IN bOLD 1SONY RELEASES UNAVAILAbLE, NOTE ND
The Book of Life PGFri- Thur: 11:30 am, 2:00, 4:30, 6:45, 9:10
St. Vincent PG-13Fri- Thur: 11:45 am, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:10
Nightcrawler RFri- Thur: 12:30, 3:30, 7:15, 10:00
Ouija PG-13Fri- Thur: 11:15 am, 2:20, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40
Fury RFri-Thur: 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15
Big Hero 6 3D PGMon - Sat: 11:00 AM, 9:40Sun: 11:45 AM, 10:10
Big Hero 6 PGMon - Sat: 1:40, 4:20, 7:00Sun: 2:20, 5:00, 7:40
Interstellar PG-13Fri - Thur: 12:00, 12:30, 3:45, 4:30, 7:45, 9:00
Azle Arts Association’s
Celebrating our 100th Production:Performing for Azle and the Surrounding Communities since 1998 and
1012 S.E. PkwyAzle PoPcorn Players
The
proudly present
The Farndale Avenue Housing Estates Townswomen’s Guild Dramatic Society’s
production of A Christmas Carol
FRIDAY & SAtuRDAYNov 14 & 15 ........... 7:30 pmNov 21 & 22 ........... 7:30 pm
SuNDAYNov 16 .................... 2:30 pmNov 23 .................... 2:30 pm
Show Dates and Times:
ADMISSIONAdults $12.00
Students & Seniors $10.00Sunday Matinees $8.00
Directed by:
Monica Goth
By: David
McGillivray and
Walter Zerlin Jr.
L-R: Standing: Rita Davis, Rozanne Gann, Carol Braden, Gwen Gibbons, Barry Ingle and Scott Nurmela. Seated: Terry Randolph
A comedy
Cornelius PhotograPhy
FAMILY PHOTO SESSIONSBY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Call 214-596-8081 · www.BobbyCornelius.ws
Saturday- Sunday, Nov. 29 & 30 12p.m. - 7p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 8 · 12p.m. - 7p.m.
PRESENTING THE 3rd ANNUAL
1680 Mary Dr. Weatherford 76085
BRING THE KIDS OF ALL AGES
TO SEE SANTA!$15 - Photo with Santa
FREE Admission, Hot Chocolate &
Wagon Rides
&
CommunityWednesday, November 5, 2014
Acceptingnew pAtients
*Digital X-Rays
*Cable TV in all treatment rooms
*Prompt emergency care
*Zero interest financing
No Insurance?New Patient Special
$25 exam & X-rayswith coupon
Forever Teeth DDS
Dr. Tran Dang & Staff
Ask about our uninsured patient discount plan up to 50% off regular fees.
Forever TeethCosmetiC & General Dentistry
www.ForeverTeethDDS.com112 industrial ave · azle · 817-270-3700 LongLiveParkerCounty.com
Azle Food Hubs
Each $5.00 bag (cash only) contains 15-20 pieces of fruit and vegetables. The sale is open to all community members.
The mission of this sale is to make fresh produce affordable and accessible to all.
Made Possible With Funding Through Centers For Disease Control And Prevention
PARKER COUNTY
Our business supports yourhealth and well-being!
www.longliveparkercounty.com
Azle Lion’s Club
412 Commerce St. · Azle2ND SATURDAY of Every Month
PARKER COUNTY
OPEN 9 AM TO 11 AM or UNTIL WE SELL OUT!
Azle Christian Church
117 Church St. · Azle4TH SATURDAY of Every Month
1515 South East Pkwy • Suite A, Azle (Next to Exxon Gas Station)
817-349-9440
HUGE stocked
selection of wine
and spirits
• Specialty Beers• Beers Kegs• Excellent Service• Lowest Prices in the Area• Convenient Location
AZLELIQUORSc/o J&H Exxon Gas Station
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Low Prices Everyday!
First United Methodist Church200 Church Street • Azle
Early Registration until Nov. 22, 2014
Basketball & Cheerleading $70/childAfter November 22, 2014
Basketball & Cheerleading $75/child
Registration Deadline is November 22, 2014
Please make checks payable to First United Methodist Church-Azle
Evaluations & Orientations:Everyone must attend one basketball
evaluation or cheerleading orientation. They will take place at the Family Life Center, 200 Church Street, as follows:
. . . . . . . . . . Friday, November 21st
5 pm - 8 pmSaturday, November 22nd
9 am - 1 pm
League Schedule:Practices Begin - Monday, December 29, 2014First Game - Saturday, January 17, 2015Awards Celebration - Saturday, March 7, 2015
For More Information:Kyle Fonville 817-229-6804Church Office 817-444-3323
Emily Isom [email protected]
EvEry Child Plays. EvEry Child lEarns. EvEry Child is a WinnEr!
Upward Promotes Character and Fun for Every Child.
Basketball & Cheerleading
Play with a Purpose
AzleNews.net • Springtown-Epigraph.net • AzleNews.net • Springtown-Epigraph.net AzleN
ews.n
et • S
pring
town-
Epigr
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et • A
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For the best
coverage of all your hometown news and sports on the web
by mark k. campbellAzle Manor is the home for
10 military veterans.B.J. Clark served in the Unit-
ed States Navy from 1945-47.He worked as a machinist
during World War II.In Azle, he used those skills
to open Clark’s Precision Ma-chine & Tool.
Prominent in community ser-
vice for decades, the B.J. Clark Building is named in his honor.
John Duran served in the Air Force from 1959-1964.
After retiring from full ser-vice, he remained a reserve and served 21 more years as a Se-nior Master Sergeant.
Jerry Robinson made two tours in Vietnam as a member of the Air Force from 1955-
1985.He retired as a Chief Master
Sergeant.Carl Noah grew up and at-
tended Azle schools.After enlisting in the Navy in
1955, he worked for two years in San Diego as an airplane me-chanic.
Using those skills in civil-ian life, he worked at General
Dynamics (now Lockheed-Martin) installing ejection seats into military planes until his re-tirement in 1999.
Fred Greener served in Naval Air from 1951-54.
Veterans Day 95 years old Recognition date originally called Armistice Day
by mark k. campbellWhen the “war to end all
wars” – WWI – finally came to an official end in June 1918, fighting had already stopped seven months before.
That was because a tempo-rary cessation of battle, an ar-mistice, had been signed back in November.
Since that cease-fire was be-gun on the “11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month,” November 11 was the day cho-sen by President Woodrow Wil-son to honor those who fought in the Great War.
Christened Armistice Day in November 1919, every No-vember 11 Americans acknowl-edged the great debt owed to so many.
Originally, businesses were to close briefly at 11 a.m. every November 11 as Armistice Day was recognized with parades and public meetings.
Already commemorated by 27 states, the day was officially sanctioned nationally on June 4, 1926 when Congress passed a resolution.
Twelve years later, on May 13, 1938, Armistice Day be-came an American legal holi-day, “a day dedicated to the cause of world peace” and re-membering the sacrifices of
WWI vets.But more wars were fought.With the coming of World
War II and the Korean War, Armistice Day was renamed Veterans Day on June 1, 1954; several veterans’ organizations pushed for the change.
November 11 became a day to honor veterans of all wars and conflicts.
In June 1968, the Uniform Holiday Bill was passed.
Veterans Day – with Wash-ington’s Birthday, Memorial Day, and Columbus Day – was moved to varying Mondays to give federal workers three-day holidays.
The date change was not wel-comed.
First tried October 25, 1971, there was confusion throughout the country.
In fact, many states did not honor the change at all and kept November 11 as the day they acknowledged as Veterans Day.
President Gerald Ford, see-ing the unpopularity of the Uniform Holiday Bill, signed a new law.
He saw that Americans placed importance on Novem-ber 11, historically and patrioti-cally.
So Ford, on September 25, 1975, moved Veterans Day of-
ficially back to November 11, a move that many state legisla-tures and service organizations supported.
Today, Veterans Day is hon-ored every November 11, re-
gardless of the day on which it falls, honoring veterans for their patriotism, love of coun-try, and willingness to sacri-fice and serve for the common good.
Veterans live together at Azle Manor
PLEASE SEE aZle, PAGE 2B.
azle manor residents who served our country include (clockwise from left) b.J. clark, James young, and John Duran.
Wednesday, November 5, 20142B COMMUNITY
Now in Aledo and Willow Park
AledoBraces.com
Making a difference, one smile at a time.
Steak Dinner & Fundraiser
Saturday, November 8, 20146:00 - 9:00 PM 6901 S. FM 730
Azle, Texas
Come and meet the volunteers of the Silver Creek Volunteer Fire Department for a
fundraising dinner and let us show you all the improvements we have made. CareFlite and
AirEvac will be making an appearance. Donations are welcome and greatly
appreciated.
SILVER CREEK FIRE DEPARTMENT
n AZLE, FROM PAGE ONE.
He was an expert typist who worked in the personnel de-partment during the Korean War.
James Young served in the Air Force from 1941-45, fight-ing in Africa during WWII.
He arrived in Africa on the Japanese cruise liner Empress of Japan that had been taken by the Allies.
Morris Burcham was a mem-ber of the Air Force reserve while in high school.
When he graduated in 1955, he joined the Air Force and served 3 years, 8 months as a mechanic; he retired as a First Airman.
David Utter and Charlie Ford both served in the Air Force.
Vaunie Foster, who changed her birth certificate so she could serve in England as a member of the Royal Air Force from 1947-51, was a key punch operator.
She retired from the military in 1955 and moved to America.
Azle Manor home to veterans
Other Azle Manor residents who
fought for their countries include
(clockwise from above) England’s
Vaunie Foster who served in the RAF before moving to America in 1995;
Sailor Carl Noah, a native of Azle; Jer-
ry Robinson who served two tours
in Vietnam; and Fred Greener who served during the
Korean War.
Wednesday, November 5, 2014 3BCOMMUNITY
Lake Report
Conservation Current Current Level Level StatusLake Bridgeport 836.00 812.20 -23.80Eagle Mountain Lake 649.10 638.56 -10.54Richland-Chambers Res. 315.00 305.05 -9.95Cedar Creek Lake 322.00 316.29 -5.71Lake Arlington 550.00 540.02 -9.98Lake Benbrook 694.00 685.47 -8.53Lake Worth 594.00 590.34 -3.66*Data provided by USGS Nov. 4
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The following individuals who list addresses in the Azle and/or Springtown areas were arrested by various law en-forcement agencies and booked into the Parker County Jail be-tween Oct. 19-23.
• Parker County Sheriff’s dep-uties arrested a 17-year-old Azle man Oct. 19 and issued him a citation for public intoxication.
• A 31-year-old Springtown man was arrested Oct. 19 by Parker County Sheriff’s depu-ties for a Hamilton County war-rant for non-payment of child support.
• Parker County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a 46-year-old Springtown man Oct. 19 on a commitment order for a prior charge of possession of mari-juana, less than two ounces.
• A 26-year-old Springtown man was arrested Oct. 20 by Parker County Sheriff’s depu-ties for a Tarrant County war-rant for being in contempt of
court for non-payment of child support.
• Springtown police arrested a 49-year-old Springtown man Oct. 20 and charged him with driving without a license with previous convictions.
• A 64-year-old Poolville man was arrested Oct. 22 by Weatherford police for a parole violation. No further informa-tion was available.
• Parker County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a 26-year-old Springtown man Oct. 22 for a warrant for theft of property by check, $20-$500.
• A 40-year-old Azle man was arrested Oct. 22 by Azle police and charged with theft of property, $50-$500.
• Texas Department of Pub-lic Safety (DPS) arrested a 29-year-old Springtown man Oct. 23 and charged him with possession of a controlled sub-stance – penalty group 1, less than one gram.
Parker County arrests
Hardin-Simmons University’s 2014 Homecoming Queen and King are Audrey Beth Heffington of Azle and Austin Ryan Hennesay of Springtown.
When Hardin-Simmons Uni-versity in Abilene crowned its 2014 Homecoming King and Queen Oct. 17, both Springtown and Azle were represented.
HSU’s 2014 Homecoming Queen is Audrey Beth Heffing-ton of Azle, a psychology major with a minor in Spanish who will graduate in May 2015.
Austin Ryan Hennesay of Springtown was named HSU’s 2014 Homecoming King. He is also a psychology major minor-ing in criminal justice.
Heffington is looking into graduate programs at Texas Woman’s University and the University of North Texas. She will be studying addiction, and
plans to become a clinical psy-chologist for drug and alcohol patients.
Heffington is the daughter of Cheryl Hopkins Swadley and Brad Swadley of Azle and Mark Heffington of Alexan-dria, Virginia. She is the grand-daughter of Kenneth and Char-lene Hopkins of Azle.
Hennesay plans to pursue a law degree at Texas Wesleyan University after graduating from HSU in May 2015.
He is the son of Tim Henne-say and Kim Bouldin, both of Springtown, and the grandson of Ron and Brenda Bredemey-er, Carl Hennesay, and Bill and Lajoy Goyne, all of Abilene.
Local duo named HSU King, Queen
By cARlA noAH StUtSmAnAlmost a year after Reno,
Azle and Springtown residents felt the jolt of the first-ever earthquake in the area, the Tex-as Railroad Commission (TRC) adopted amended rules directed at disposal well operations in areas of historical or future seismic activity.
On Tuesday evening, Nov. 5, 2013, the news spread quickly – the first known earthquake had occurred in the area.
That was big news in itself, since none had ever been re-corded in the tri-county area.
But that initial earthquake, 2.6 in magnitude, was just the be-ginning – they just kept coming.
On Tuesday, Nov. 19, several people attending a city council meeting at Azle City Hall dis-cussed the quakes as they wait-ed for the meeting to begin, and there were at least a couple who were not convinced the anoma-lies were, in fact, earthquakes.
They became believers at 6:40 p.m. that evening, when a 3.6 magnitude tremblor shook the entire building with a sud-den and very loud “bang.”
That quake was the 11th re-corded in the two weeks since they began. By the end of Janu-
ary 2014, there had been more than 30 quakes.
Commissioner David Porter came to Azle with TRC staff members Jan. 8 to host a Town Hall meeting to receive input from area residents about the series of earthquakes.
More than 800 people de-scended in the auditorium at Azle High School that evening, and most were already con-vinced that one or more injec-tion wells used to dispose of wastewater from oil and gas wells were to blame.
Shortly after that Town Hall meeting, the quakes stopped, just as suddenly and mysteri-ously as they had started.
But area citizens, along with the mayors of both Azle and Reno, took the fight for more regulation for disposal wells to Austin, where they testified before a special sub-committee created by the Texas House to look into seismic activity in the state.
In the meantime, research-ers from Southern Methodist University installed seismo-graphic equipment provided by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in the area and began tracking seismic activity.
The TRC hired its own seis-
mologist, Dr. David Craig Pear-son, in late March to explore the impact of seismic activity on gas and oil operations.
On Oct. 28, about a week shy of the one-year anniversary of the first Azle/Reno area quake, the TRC unanimously adopted disposal well rule amendments they say are designed to ad-dress disposal well operations in areas of historical or future seismic activity.
The main components of the adopted rule amendments, which become effective Nov. 17, are:
• requiring applicants for new disposal wells to conduct a search of the U.S. Geologi-cal Survey seismic database for historical earthquakes within a circular area of 100 square miles around a proposed, new disposal well;
• clarifying the Commis-sion’s staff authority to modify or suspend or terminate a dis-posal well permit, including modifying disposal volumes and pressures or shutting in a well if scientific data indicates a disposal well is likely to be or determined to be contributing to seismic activity;
• allowing Commission staff to require operators to disclose the current annually reported volumes and pressures on a more frequent basis if staff de-termines a need for this infor-mation; and
• allowing Commission staff to require an applicant for a disposal well permit to provide additional information, includ-ing pressure front boundary calculations, to demonstrate that disposal fluids will remain confined if the well is to be lo-cated in an area where condi-tions exist that may increase the risk that the fluids may not be confined.
Reno Mayor Lynda Stokes says she thinks the TRC’s adop-tion of amended rules is a step in the right direction, but hopes
the agency doesn’t stop there.“I appreciate the steps they
have taken, and that they moved as quickly as they have,” Stokes said. “I’m sure it’s exasperating for them – it seems to me they both promote and regulate the oil and gas in-dustry. I think they need to do one or the other.”
Alan Brundrett, Azle’s May-or, agreed with Stokes that the new rules are a good first step.
“While the rules could have been more strict, I believe they are adequate for the time be-ing,” Brundrett said. “The TRC did adopt a few of our sugges-tions which shows they did lis-ten to what we said.”
“They have been very good to work with – they stay in contact with me to inform me of any proposed new rules and they ask me for feedback,” he continued. “Overall I think the TRC has done a good job addressing our concerns and Rep. Phil King has been a big help with the whole earthquake situation.”
TRC adopts new rules aimed at reducing Texas earthquakes
Rodney Gatlin, D.C.400 Boyd Court
817-444-HELP (4357)
AZLE
Celebrating over 25 years in business
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Thank you for your support!
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Therapeutic Optometrist
Dr. Michael D. Conte601 B NW Pkwy • Azle817-444-1717
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Clarks Precision Machine & Tool 636 Profit St., Azle, Tx
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“Celebrating 15 years serving Azle area”
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www.larryscarpet.com
tire & automotive shopGarcia’s
“Serving Springtown Since 1977”NORTH SIDE OF SQUARE 817-523-7227 Metro 817-220-7927
DrugGarrett’s
S nirpgtown
HILLTOP FAMILY CHURCH
“Caring about what Jesuscares about... You!”
1227 Old Cottondale • 817-220-7177
140 W. MAIN ST.
817-444-4613
Compliments of
Rural Gas SupplyP R O P A N E
“In business since 1946”
CLEANERSBrookshire’s Shopping CenterThank you for your support!
489 Hwy. 199Springtown
817-220-2499
AUTO SERVICECENTER
302 Palo Pinto 1088 E. Hwy 199 Weatherford Springtown 817-594-3888 817-220-5959
Cliff’s
“Not Just a Tire Store”Complete Automotive, Light
Truck & Diesel“We are making drivers smile”
www.SpringtownDrug.com
Springtown Epigraph
The AzleNews
The
&This devotional and directory is made possible by these businesses who encourage all of us to attend worship services.
Your Ad Here!Call Johnna to reserve this space.817-270-3340
APOSTOLIC CORNERSTONE APOSTOLIC CHURCH1801 FM 730 N., Azle817-400-0612HARVEST TIME APOSTOLIC1 Block N. FM 2048 in Keeter817-433-8220ASSEMBLY OF GOD FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD114 Porter Drive, Azle 817-237-4903FELLOWSHIP OF LAKE WORTH4024 Dakota Trail, Lake Worth817-237-9433NEW BEGINNINGS CHURCH810 Goshen Rd, Springtown817-523-4462 OUTREACH OF LOVEHwy. 199 W. at FM 2257, Azle 817-221-2983 / 817-221-5760BAPTIST ASH CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH300 South Stewart, Azle817-444-3219AGNES INDEPENDENT BAPTIST350 Agnes N., Springtown 817-523-7271BETHEL MISSIONARY BAPTIST 408 S. Ash St., Springtown817-220-4238AZLE AVENUE BAPTIST2901 Azle Ave., Fort Worth817- 626-5556BRIAR FIRST BAPTISTWest of FM 730 N. at sign, Briar817- 444-3484BROOKSHIRE BAPTIST114 Brookshire Ave., Azle817-237-0892CALVARY HEIGHTS BAPTIST1 block off Hwy. 199,east of David’s Patio,Springtown, 817-221-2241CENTRAL BAPTIST4290 Old Agnes Road - 817-594-5918CHRISTWAY BAPTIST7673 West Hwy. 199, Agnes817-220-9133 or 817-220-3581CLEAR FORK BAPTISTCorner of FM 730 & Ragle Rd., Weather-ford, 817-594-1154COTTONWOOD CREEK BAPTIST10905 Jacksboro Hwy., Fort Worth 817-238-8269 817- 237-8113CROSSWAY BAPTIST CHURCH1355 Northwest Pkwy., Azle 817-691-0000CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCHCorner of FM 730 South & FM 1886 817-270-8476EAGLE MOUNTAIN BAPTIST8780 Eagle Mtn. Circle, Azle817-237-4135FAITH BAPTIST FELLOWSHIP1411 Carter Road, Springtown817-220-5828FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH171 Green Branch Road, Weatherford817-454-4582FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF AZLE1017 Boyd Road817-444-4828FIRST BAPTIST CASTLE HILLS401 Beverly Rd., Azle817-237-3891FIRST BAPTIST LAKE WORTH700 Charbonneau Tr.,west side of Effie Morris Elementary817-237-2624FIRST BAPTIST LAKESIDE8801 Jacksboro Hwy., Lakeside817-237-8113FIRST BAPTIST BRIAR6 miles N. of Azle on FM 730817-444-3484FIRST BAPTIST COTTONDALE1 block N. of FM 2123, Cottondale940-433-5539FIRST BAPTIST PEASTERFM 920 in Peaster817-596-8805FIRST BAPTIST POOLVILLE1 block W. of FM 920, Poolville817-594-3916FIRST BAPTIST SPRINGTOWN5th & Main Street, Springtown817-523-7011FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST801 Friendship Rd., 9½ miles S. of Springtown off Hwy. 51 S.817-594-5940 or 817-599-4917FUNDAMENTAL BAPTIST5th & Main in Springtown817-523-5477GRACE BAPTIST3 miles N. of Springtown on Hwy. 51across from Radio TowerHERITAGE BAPTIST CHURCH3577 FM 51 N., Weatherford817-564-3946HILLTOP FAMILY CHURCH
1227 Old Cottondale Road,Springtown, 817-220-7177LAJUNTA BAPTIST5207 E. Hwy. 199, LaJunta817-221-3989IGLESIA BAUTISTANueva Jerusalen6640 Midway Rd., Springtown 817-677-2907 INDIAN OAKS PRIMITIVEBAPTIST CHURCH3229 Shawnee Trail, Lake Worth817-237-8441LAKE WORTH BAPTIST4445 Hodgkins, Lake Worth817-237-4163LIGHTHOUSE BAPTIST6409 FM 730 S., Azle817-444-4311METROPOLITAN BAPTIST6051 Azle Ave., Fort Worth817-237-2201MIDWAY BAPTIST4110 E. Hwy. 199, Springtown817-221-LOVENEW HOPE BAPTIST782 New Hope Rd., Reno area817-221-2184NORTHWEST BAPTIST5500 Boat Club Rd., Lake Worth817-237-6063 or 817-270-8476SILVER CREEK BAPTIST730 S. & Veal Station Rd., Azle817-444-2325NEW BEGINNINGS BAPTIST CHURCH3605 Jacksboro Hwy., Azle817-707-2741PLEASANT GROVE BAPTISTFM 2048 and CR 4677, Boyd940-433-5477 PRIMERA IGLESIA BAUTISTA301 S. Stewart, Azle817-523-0074SPRINGTOWN BAPTIST TEMPLE201 J. E. Woody Rd., Springtown817-523-0376UNION BAPTIST CHURCH3451 Sarra Lane, Springtown817-613-1441WALNUT CREEK BAPTIST220 W. Reno Rd. in Reno817-221-2110WEST PARKWAY BAPTIST836 NW Parkway, Azle817-444-3752BIBLE COMMUNITY BIBLE FELLOWSHIP1405 Reynolds Rd., Reno817-444-7117CROSSING FELLOWSHIP1177 Southeast Parkway, Azle817-381-5888 · 817-381-5808NORTHWEST BIBLE CHURCH5025 Jacksboro Hwy., Fort Worth817-624-2111SOLID ROCK BIBLE CHURCH591 S. Reno Rd., Springtown817-221-3444CATHOLIC HOLY TRINITY CATHOLIC800 Highcrest Dr., Azle817-444-3063CHRISTIAN THE CHURCH AT AZLE1801 S. Stewart, Azle817-444-9973AZLE CHRISTIAN(DISCIPLES OF CHRIST)117 Church St., Azle817-444-3527AZLE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP35 West Forty Estates., Azle817-688-3339CENTRAL CHRISTIAN1602 S. Main St., Weatherford817-594-3043FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH4th & Main, ParadiseGREATER VISION FELLOWSHIP1801 S. Stewart St., Azle817-825-0485LIGHTHOUSE CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP404 Main St., Azle817-308-2557THE ABBEY CHURCH10400 Jacksboro Hwy., Azle817-238-1404VICTORY CHRISTIAN CENTER737 Boyd Rd., Azle817-444-LOVEWORD OF FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER1¼ mi. S. of LaJunta817-677-2577CHURCH OF CHRISTAZLE CHURCH of CHRIST336 NW Parkway817-444-3268BRIAR CHURCH of CHRIST109 W.N. Woody Rd.(½ block west of FM 730 N. in Briar)817-444-7102
MIDWAY CHURCH of CHRIST6400 Midway Rd.817-221-2107 NEWSOME MOUND ROADCHURCH of CHRIST1460 Newsome Mound Rd.817-677-3290NORTHWEST CHURCH of CHRIST6059 Azle Ave., Fort Worth817-237-1205POOLVILLE CHURCH of CHRISTWest of FM 920 in Poolville817-594-4182SOUTHSIDE CHURCH of CHRIST130 W. Bradshaw Lane, Springtown817-221-2799SPRINGTOWN CHURCH of CHRISTJust west of Hwy. 51 North817-523-4419TRI-COUNTY CHURCH of CHRIST525 Hwy. 199 W., Springtown817-538-8209CHURCH OF GOD ABUNDANT LIFE CHURCH of GOD4800 East Hwy. 199, Suite 7Springtown, 817-677-3208CHURCH OF GOD of LAKESIDE9500 Confederate Park Rd. (FM 1886)817-237-5500 or 817-237-7837EPISCOPAL ST. ANNE’S EPISCOPAL6055 Azle Ave., Fort Worth817-237-1888PROVIDENCE REFORMED EPISCOPAL405 Bowie Dr., Weatherford 817-596-7476ST. ELISABETH EPISCOPAL 5910 Black Oak Lane, River Oaks817-739-0504GOSPEL CENTRAL FULL GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP3009 Delaware Tr., Lake Worth817-237-7919JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES212 Pearson Lane, Azle817-221-2242LUTHERAN GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN (MISSOURI SYNOD)1313 SE Parkway, Azle817-237-4822HOPE LUTHERAN (ELCA)4795 Hwy. 199, Reno817-221-HOPEMETHODIST BOYD UNITED METHODISTFM 730 North in Boyd940-433-5334EAGLE MT. UNITED METHODIST7955 Reed Rd., Azle817-444-0226FIRST UNITED METHODIST200 Church St., Azle817-444-3323LIGHTHOUSE FELLOWSHIP7200 Robertson Rd., Fort Worth817-237-2758SILVER CREEK UNITED METHODIST2200 Church Rd., Azle817-444-1382FIRST UNITED METHODISTHwy. 51 N & 3rd Street, Springtown817-523-7874GARVIN UNITED METHODIST3 miles West of Boyd on C.R. 4699POOLVILLE UNITED METHODIST1 block W. of FM 920(behind Poolville Post Office)817-599-3601THE CHURCH OF JESUSCHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS (THE MORMONS) THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRISTOF LATTER-DAY SAINTS1010 Timberoaks, Azle817-237-5075PENTECOSTALGRACE CHAPELUNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH3508 Shawnee Trail, Lake Worth817- 237-4844IGLESIA CRISTIANA JUDA1649 S.E. Parkway, AzlePRESBYTERIANGRACE FIRST PRESBYTERIAN606 Mockingbird Lane, Weatherford817-594-2744ORTHODOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF FORT WORTHMeeting at Northwest YMCA 5315 Boat Club Road, Fort Worth817-989-9800CONVENANT ORTHODOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
4300 Williams Spring Rd., Fort Worth1 mile west of 820 on Jacksboro Hwy.JOHN KNOX PRESBYTERIAN4350 River Oaks Blvd, River Oaks817-642-9265
OTHER BETTER LIFE COMMUNITY CHURCH3131 E. Hwy 199, Spt 817-677-2300 CORNERSTONE COMMUNITY CHURCH2233 Hwy 199 East, Springtown817-221-LIFE (5433)FAMILY CHURCH9 miles S. of Springtown on Hwy. 51817-599-7655FOUNTAIN OF FAITH4397 E. Hwy 199, Springtown817-304-4739GRACE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH2964 W. Hwy 114, Paradise940-969-2427HARVEST FOR CHRIST CHURCH1108 NW Parkway (Hwy 199), Azle817-740-5774THE HOUSE OF PRAYER1356 Reno Rd., Springtown817-221-2551JUBILEE HOUSE11210 Hwy. 199 W., Poolville817-271-8008LIBERTY LIGHTHOUSE120 S. Main St., Springtown817-523-0222OASIS CHRISTIAN CENTRE CHURCH & HEALING SCHOOL1121 S.E. Parkway, AzlePOWERHOUSE OF PRAISE CHURCH1649 S.E. Parkway, Azle817-319-7364BRANDED CROSSCOWBOY CHURCH3282 FM 2048, Boyd 76023940-636-9158SECRET PLACE MINISTRIES112 Optimist Rd., Springtown682-229-1433SPRINGTOWN 7TH DAYADVENTIST Hwy. 199 4 miles west of Springtown GOSPEL GATHERING FELLOWSHIP7315 Silver Creek Rd at Flatrock Rd, Azle817-313-1793GOSPEL WAY COWBOY CHURCH420 Jaybird Ln. (FM 2257/ Hwy 199)Springtown, 817-225-8755 LIGHTHOUSE HARBOR CHURCH1960 Long Circle, Pelican Bay817-444-3547JESUS NAME HOUSE OF PRAYER2813 E. Hwy. 199, third drive past Boyd Feed Store817-221-4426NEW LIFE FAMILY FELLOWSHIP525 W. Hwy. 199, Springtown817-523-2045NEW LIGHTED WAY624 Harbor Dr. Circle, Azle817-444-1577NORTHWEST TEMPLE OF PRAISE6781 Jacksboro Hwy., Lake WorthPRECIOUS FAITH TEMPLE CHURCH8601 Hwy. 199 @ Vance Godbey’sSPIRIT FILLED CHURCH603 SE Parkway, Azle817-444-3058THE HOUSE OF PRAYER1356 Reno Rd., Springtown817-221-2551UNIVERSAL LIGHT OF CHRIST6117 Graham St., Lake Worth817-881-3889REAL FAMILY FELLOWSHIP202 Pearson Lane, Azle817-677-5963SOULS HARBOR11701 Jacksboro Hwy., Azle817-726-2065WESTERN HARVESTFELLOWSHIP CENTER6577 Old Springtown Rd., Weatherford817-523-2855 or 817-995-9087SHEPHERD’S HEART CHURCH14435 FM 730 N • Azle940-577-1954WESTERN STAR COWBOY CHURCH790 CR 3696 • Springtown817-880-5488
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817-270-3340.
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In A Great Spot?
Call Today!817-270-3340
Get noticed with us: Call 817-270-3340
to place your ad here!
1825 W. Hwy. 199 Springtown, TX 76082
Air Conditioningand Heating
817-220-4506
TACLA014745E RRC#11349
J&E
Call Johnna for details 817-270-3340.
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817-270-3340
EAGLE MOUNTAIN AUTO PRO“Everyone otta know an Auto Pro”
Auto, Diesel, RV, Equipment
Azle, TX ASE Certified Clay Stanton
817-228-3410
We will welcome you at the Azle
Church of Christ
336 NW Parkway817-444-4202
IN SEARCH
OF THE LORD’S WAYSunday 7:00 a.m. Channel 27 TV
Wednesday, November 5, 20144B COMMUNITY
Wednesday, November 5, 2014 5BCOMMUNITY
Ad Classifi cation RATESUp to 16 words, fi rst insertion:
Combo (Azle & Springtown)Only $8.00!
Over 16 words, add 20 cents per word
• Discounted rates for additional insertions available if no weeks are skipped and words do not change
• Boxed display ads also available
(All ads must be paid in advance unless you have previously established credit)
Reach more than 8,000 households with combo advertising in the Azle News and the Springtown Epigraph.
Nobody does it better!
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE:
MONDAY BY 5:00 P.M.Most ads require payment in advance, but we do accept VISA, MASTERCARD OR DISCOVER by phone.
CLASSIFIED 817-270-3340 - Azle - classifi [email protected] - Springtown - [email protected]
Springtown Epigraph
THETHE
COMMUNITY
1. Air Condition/Heating2. ......................Antiques3. ................... Appliances4. .........Appliance Repair5. ....................Arts/Crafts6. ............ Asphalt Paving7. .......................Auctions8. ............... Autos, Trucks9. .... Auto Repair Service10.........Backhoe Service11. ............ Boats, Motors12...............Bookkeeping13. .................... Business
Opportunity14........ Campers/Trailers15...........Carports/Patios16...... Equipment Repair17............ Carpet Service18 ......................Catering19...............Cement Work20.................Ceramic tile21................... Child Care22................... Cosmetics23...Computers/Services
24................... Electrician25............... Equipment &
Tool Rental26 ................. Excavating27............. Exterminating28 ........Farm Equipment29 ...................... Fencing30 .................... Firewood31 .............................Free32 ...................... For Sale33 .................... Furniture34.............. Garage Sales35 ......... Garden/Mowing
Service36........................ Hauling37...............................Hay38.............Health/Fitness39 ...............Help Wanted40 ...Home Improvement41 ..........House Leveling42.......... House Cleaning43.................. Income Tax44....... Janitorial Service45................. Job Wanted
46........... Looking to Buy47.............. Lost & Found48 Maintenance/Repairs49...................... Masonry50 Mobile Home Service51................ Motorcycles52.........................Movers53.. Musical Instruments54........... Music Lessons55.............Miscellaneous56........................ Notices57........... Pets, Livestock58..............Piano Service59................Pool Service60................Professional
Services61...................... Personal62.....................Plumbing63...............Public Notice64............... Photography65........................Printing66........................Roofi ng67.................... Recycling68........................Storage
69................ Sand/Gravel70................Septic Tanks71.....Sewing/Alterations72.............Sewer Service73......................TV/Radio74........... Tractor Service75.................. Upholstery76....... Vacuum Cleaners77........................ Wanted78.................Well Drilling79....................... Welding80.............. Lots/Acreage81..................Business &
Commercial Property82..........Resort Property83.......... Houses for Sale84............. Mobile Homes
for Rent85............. Mobile Homes
for Sale86.... Mobile Home/RV Lots87...........Rent Furnished88....... Rent Unfurnished89 ..........Wanted to Rent
006 Asphalt Paving
008 Autos, Trucks
2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer, good condition, newer tires, leather, sunroof, runs good. Leave message at 940-210-9169.
2003 Mitsubishi Outlander XLS, good condition, new radiator & fan, hitch, leather, sunroof. Call 724-757-1412.
1998 Ford Explorer Sport, 209,000 miles, single owner, good tires and in very good condition. No accidents. $2,000. To see this automobile (in Azle) call 817-237-9991 weekdays. Weekends call 817-238-7493, leave message.
014 Campers & Trailers
NICE MOTORHOME: 29’ Jamboree, 1 slide-out, new generator. 817-444-4012.
DEER HUNTER SPECIAL! Challenger 5th wheel, 32’x8’ with 3’x12’ pop-out, fully loaded, very clean, $4,500/OBO. 817-585-0366.
Multi Family Sale Saturday & Sunday, 1337 Oak Ridge Road, Azle. Baby items and lots more!
BIG, BIG SALE! Friday & Saturday, 7th & 8th at 8AM, 128 Tamarron Drive, Lakeside 76135.
Estate Sale Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 8A-5P, 805 Quail, Springtown. Jewelry, glassware, household, antiques (bedroom suite, china cabinet, radio cabinet & old cathedral confessional window: ornate), books, much, much more. 817-658-4107.
Estate Sale Saturday, Nov. 8th, 8A-2P, 224 N. Broadway, Azle. Lots of furniture, art & crafts supplies, small aluminum boat, misc. knick knacks. Everything must go.
4 Kona Drive, Azle. Furniture, clothes, collectibles, housewares and lots more. Too many goodies to list. Friday, 11/7, 9A-5P; Saturday, 11/8, 9A-3P. Please no early birds.
Giant Closeout Antique Sale! Stoves, leather sofa, wardrobe, glassware, McCoy, Louisiana stoneware, Emerson TV, cleaning out! Don’t miss it! Friday & Saturday, 8A-3P, 11120 Stanfi eld Road, Azle 76020. No early birds please.
HUGE YARD SALE! Friday & Saturday, Nov. 7th-8th, 8A-5P, at 640 South Drive, Springtown. Too much to list!
Thursday & Friday, starts @ 8AM, 424 S. Stewart Street, Azle. Lots of misc. items!
Saturday, 8A-4P, 598 Morrow Road, Springtown. Microwave, vent hood, utility sink, furniture and clothes.
Friday, 11/7 and Saturday, 11/8, 8:30A-4P, 125 N. Ash Avenue, Azle. Kids stuff, furniture, misc.
113 Prairie Hill Court, Friday & Saturday, 11/7 & 11/8, 8A-? Furniture, refrigerator, TV and misc.
Woody Estate Sale Friday, Nov. 14th and Saturday, Nov. 15th, 8A-4P, 251 Edward Street, Springtown. Furniture, washer, dryer, misc.
NEIGHBOR TO NEIGHBORS HOLIDAY SALE Nov. 15th, 8A-12N. Decorator items from an estate: household items, holiday decor, new & used clothing and shoes.
VENDORS PARKING LOT SALE 8A-6P. New Store Hours: Tues-Sat, 10A-6P; Sun, 12N-5P. Anything from old to new. Vendors Welcome. In-Store Gift Certifi cates Now Available! 1240 E. Hwy 199, Springtown. 817-262-1892; 817-991-5712.
Big Garage Sale Thursday-Saturday, 8A-5P, 412 Mockingbird, Springtown. Lots of good women’s clothes size 4-20, big furniture, leathers, household stuff.
Large Yard Sale Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 8A-6P, 12420 Deeds Court, Azle. Hunting/fi shing equipment, Christmas lights & decorations, truck tires and much more.
ga-RAGE Sale Friday, Saturday, Sunday. DON’T MISS THIS ONE! 1000 SE Parkway. Huge volume furniture, curios, antiques and stuff galore! Delivery assistance.
024 ElectricianBULLDAWG ELECTRIC CO. All types of electrical services
and MH hook-ups. Free Estimates. 817-675-4921
www.bulldawgelectric.com. TECL#25253.
026 Excavating
029 FencingAll types fences and metal buildings built and repaired. Portable welding, 817-444-6461.
BOBBY’S FENCE. All types, free estimates, over 23 years experience 817-444-3213.
RAY’S FENCE CO. Free Estimates, 817-444-2146, [email protected].
KILEY CHESNEYCONSTRUCTION
All Types Fences - Tractor Work817-846-6645
030 FirewoodFirewood, $75/truckload, $90/8 ft. bed, split. Your truck, I load. 817-690-4011; 817-444-0861.
Firewood, delivered and stacked. $135 for half cord; $250 for cord. 817-238-9175.
Seasoned oak fi rewood, $140: ½ cord; $280: full cord. Delivered. 817-808-2873.
031 FreeFREE: 5 playful puppies (3M/2F), mother is Australian Shepherd. 817-228-7257 Don.
032 For SaleCorner Curio Cabinet 28”x19”x83”. Needs glass shelves and glass in doors. Wood coffee table 26”x54” with one matching end table 29” square; 36” white double oven; wall baskets; 40” fl uted round dining table, no chairs; fold up twin bed; antique school desk and chair. 817-237-9848.
For Sale: Antique sewing machine and record player with many oldies, daybed, queen bed, bell collection (porcelain & lead crystal), grandma clock, pottery: plates, cups, saucers, etc., whatnots. Call for info 817-237-5570.
033 FurnitureDOWNSIZING...Brand New Look - Used Price! 4 pc medium oak table set that includes 2 end tables, coffee table and sofa table. Less than 2 years old, excellent condition! Paid $1,000/set, sacrifi ce for $650. Call or text for more info and/or pictures 817-692-9186.
034 Garage SalesFriday-Saturday, Nov. 7th-8th, 9A-2P, at Sportsman RV Park, 1100 Sportsman Park Road, Azle.
Yard Sale Saturday, Nov. 8th, 8A-5P, 241 Rhoades Street, Azle.
921 Sportsman Park Road, Azle, Friday & Saturday, Rain or Shine! TVs, wooden bunk beds, 2000 Grand Voyager, tools, computer desks, 5th wheel hitch, boat.
Friday-Saturday, 3 miles past Azle on FM 1542. Go 6/10 of a mile on the left.
Friday & Saturday, 9A-5P, 700 Blue Meadow Drive, Azle. Haven’t had a garage sale in 3 years. Lots of different things, may have something you can’t live without. Too much to list.
Saturday, Nov. 8th, 8A-? 1516 Inlet Drive 76020. Tow bar, clothes, toys, household items, etc.
Friday-Saturday, 10A-6P, 275 Baughman Hill Road, Azle.
2009 28’ Denali travel trailer, electric awning, super slide, sleeps 6, fully loaded, 2 entry doors, electric tongue jack. Used very little. $13,750. 817-729-4278.
2001 Sea Breeze travel trailer, 3 slides, solid surface countertops, built-in microwave, nice condition, $10,500. 817-238-6932.
34 ft. 2013 Raven Express by Winnebago, 5th wheel, unusual layout, sleeps 8 w/1½ bath, twin bunks, fully loaded, $30,000. 817-444-3383, still almost new.
DEER HUNTER SPECIAL! 1970 LRWD 21 ft. RV, fully equipped, sleeps 6, bath & shower, new plumbing throughout, $5,000. Call after 11AM 817-237-9502.
019 Cement WorkAllen Chesney Concrete
All Types of Concrete WorkResidential - CommercialFoundations, driveways, sand, gravel, demolition, haul-off, retaining walls
817-271-4541
021 Child CareAnother year at The ARK. Now Enrolling Pre-K. Abeka accredited curriculum. Drop-off and pick-up at all Azle schools & Reno. M-F, 6:00AM-6:30PM. 3 meals and snacks included. 817-237-3711 or 817-994-5228.
Excellent references, excellent environment. Will care for 2 children M-F. 817-523-4737.
023 Computers/ServicesHomeComputerWiz. Computer repair specialist: hardware & software. Call today! Terry Jones 682-229-7273. Email: [email protected]. Website: homecomputerwiz.com.
D R I V E WAY SAsphAlt & GrAvel
Seal Coating, Pot Hole Repairs, Crack Filling
817-907-7410 • 817-221-2125
Bishop’sWise Car
& Truck Co.101 Southeast Parkway • Azle
817-444-5074BAD CREDIT OK
BUY HEREPAY HERE
WWW.WISECARANDTRUCK.NET
J.A.M. ConcreteAll Types of Concrete, Building Pads,
Driveway, Patios, WalkJim McKiel
817-480-884130 yrs. exp.
Kiley Chesney ConstructionDirt & Concrete Work
Kiley Chesney, OwnerSpringtown, TX • Mobile 817-846-6645
Driveways • House Slabs • Garages • Add-onsSmall Land Clean-ups • Gravel Driveways
• SITE PREPARATION• GRAVEL ROADS• LOT CLEARING• PARKING LOTS• LEVELING • DEMOLITION• FINAL GRADE • STOCK TANKS• LAND EROSION
Dump Truck Hauling 817-919-3696
• Small jobs accepted• Rough landscaping • Jobsite clearing
BOBCATSERVICE
444-5069TOM'S
All types materials deliveredExcavation—Final Grade—Demolition
We Shape the Worldto Fit Your Needs!
You have a Friend in the Business!
☺ ☺
Cliff Hall (817)221-2681
HALL'SSand, Dirt & GravelQualified Family Business Since 1938
817-523-7248 • 817-239-6215
ALL TYPES OF EXCAVATINGTanks • House Pads • Clearing
Also ..Sand • Top Soil • Gravel
Andy’s Pest Management Co. LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED
NICK JUNIORLocally Owned & Operated45 Years Experience
8712 Township Ct. Fort Worth, TX 76179
Serving Tarrant County817-996-9485
10% OFF with this Ad!
PROMPT PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Saul SalinaSAll Types of Fencing
Farm and Ranch817-690-6246 • 940-393-9754
RITZY HAIR DESIGNS CLOSING NOVEMBER 22ND!
1161 S.E. Parkway • Azle817-237-7371 • 817-229-6573
EVERYTHING MUST GO:Fixtures • Cabinets • Stations
Hydraulic Chairs • Chair Dryers 3 Shampoo Bowls • 2 Shampoo Chairs
Showcase and More...Lots of Antiques ½ Price
S A L E STA RT S S AT U R DAY, NOV. 8 T H AT 7 A M
Campfire Lawn & GardenTrees trimmed-removed
Full lawn care & haul-offsInsured • Azle since 1962 Compare Prices
A.W. Teater 817-444-0861817-690-4011 cellAll major credit cards accepted
Terms AvailableNo Job Too Small
Chad's TreeService
Trimming • Removals - Stump GrindingSystemic Feeding • Brush Chipping • Cable Bracing
Insured for your protection
817-221-2201 • 817-246-5943
FREEESTIMATE
S
Lic. #4346 & #6537
Family Owned & Operated Since 1989
Commercial & ResidentialSprinkler Installation & Repair • Landscaping
Tractor Work • Drainage • Lot GradingRock & Stonework • Sod & Hydromulching
djhuffmaninc.com
Sprinkler Installation & Repair • Landscaping Experiencewith Competitive
PricesFamily Owned & Operated Since 1989
SENIOR DISCOUNTS • FREE ESTIMATES
817-270-0544 • 817-379-0545
014 Campers/Trailers
PLACE AN AD IN THE CLASSIFIEDS TODAY!
817-270-3340
Advertising Works!
027 Exterminating
Sell It In The Classifieds!
034 Garage Sales
034 Garage Sales
034 Garage Sales
Garden/Mowing Service continued next page...
035 Garden/Mowing Service
6B Wednesday, November 5, 2014 COMMUNITY
Classifi eds817-270-3340 - AZLE817-220-7217 - SPRINGTOWN
Deadline:5:00 PM Monday
NOW HIRING: 2 Openings at group homes located in Azle. 1 part-time & 1 full-time position. Both positions require working weekends. Must have clean criminal & driving records. Training will be provided. Please text or call 817-443-2494, Monday-Friday, 9A-5P.
Quality Inspector. Seeking a self-motivated gauging inspector. Must be familiar with Aerospace blueprints and able to use all equipment that is associated with said job. DO NOT apply in person. Send resume to [email protected].
Bartenders needed at Honky Tonk Woman. Apply in person at 11509 FM 730 N., Azle. 817-444-6569.
Small, local business looking for experienced CDL Truck Drivers. Drug test required. Heath 817-716-5171.
Springtown ISD is accepting applications for Bus Drivers. Training available. Contact Kim Cremeen 817-220-1418.
NOW HIRING: Two Experienced Line Cooks, due to increased business. Pay based on experience. Apply in person at SHINOLA’S TEXAS CAFE, Springtown.
Vance Godbey’s Restaurant now hiring experienced cook. Full-time. Valid driver’s license required. 817-237-2218.
Now hiring Class B-CDL Mixer Drivers. Production & Safety Bonuses paid monthly, Employer Matching Retirement Plan available. Apply in person at Wise Ready Mix, 1349 NW Parkway, Azle.
EAGLE CREST VILLA is taking applications for Personal Care Attendants. Shifts: 3PM-11PM and 11PM-7AM. Must apply in person at 113 Denver Trail, Azle.
Drivers: CDL-B: Great Pay, Hometime! No-Forced Dispatch! New Singles from Dallas to surrounding states. Apply: TruckMovers.com or 1-866-224-8948.
Hiring CDL Drivers around Dallas, $1,100+ weekly, New trucks, Paid vacations. Also offering FREE Refresher Training. Call 888-479-1990.
Comet Cleaners in Azle. Must apply in person, 113 Speer Street, Azle.
Springtown ISD Child Nutrition Dept. is now accepting applications for Food Service. Please apply online at springtownisd.net.
HIRING 2 HOUSE CLEANERS. Part-time and/or permanent. We will train. Car necessary. Usually home by 2PM. Great for Moms with kids in school. No weekends. Not suitable if your only income. Your Cleaning Service 817-237-9848.
DIAMOND FOOD MARKET, INC.DATA ENTRY CLERK
Monday thru Friday, 6AM-3PMExperience in Retail Pricing
Excel & Word.Apply at
150 Industrial, Suite 210Azle, Texas
(Compass Bank 2nd Floor)
Drivers: $5,000 Orientation Completion Bonus! $5,000 Driver Referral Bonus! Great Pay (New hires min. $800/week guarantee)! CDL-A OTR experience required. 1-888-993-0972.
Town of Lakeside is accepting applications for Water & Wastewater Technician I. For applications and job description, visit the Town website at www.lakesidetexas.us.
TRICAN WELL SERVICE WEATHERFORD YARD: Oilfi eld Maintenance; Mechanics with 2 years experience & Class B CDL; Welders with 2G certifi cation. Apply in person at 2001 Ranger Hwy, Weatherford, Texas 76088 or call 682-233-7567. Good Benefi ts & 401K.
040 Home ImprovementBefore you buy vinyl siding or windows, call Jimmy for a free estimate 817-444-5270; 817-296-7567. allamericanhc.net.
Keith Hays Construction Company. All types cement work, carpentry, roofi ng and metal buildings. 817-220-7201
Let my 40 years of experience work for you. Integrity and quality work at affordable prices. BOBBY MCWILLIAMS PAINTING 817-821-6377. www.bobbymcwilliams.com.
DEVIN’S HANDYMAN SERVICE. Carpentry, cement, rock, granite, tile, painting, siding, insulation, kitchen/bath, roof/gutters, powerwashing, decks. FALL SPECIAL: 20% Off w/this Ad! 817-629-9608.
WILLIE SIMON TILE & WOOD. Shower, Tub Surround & Backsplashes. 817-366-4555.
ROBERT’S HANDYMAN SERVICE. I do additions, kitchen & bathroom remodel, ceramic tile, foundation repair, painting, pressure washing, roofi ng, fencing and decks. Call for Free quote. 817-964-2562.
AZLE HOME REPAIR & REMODEL. No job too big; no job too small. 30 years experience. Contact Doug Batey 817-361-2361.
LOCAL HANDYMAN SERVICE & REMODELING. No job too small! Kitchens, bathrooms and all tile work. 817-404-2927.
PYRAMID CONSTRUCTION. TILE: Bathroom Shower, Floors; PAINTING: Interior, Exterior, Tape & Bed, Texture, Popcorn Ceiling; Stain Porches, Stain Fence; ROOFING & More! FREE ESTIMATES. 817-944-7658.
PAINTING, REMODELING, CARPENTRY. Home Improvement Special: $100 off any job of $1,000 or more. Painting, carpentry, sheetrock, storage buildings, porch covers, decks. 36 years experience. Call Bill Rosser now for a Free Estimate. 817-374-2566; 866-374-3559. www.billrosserpainting.com. NOW ACCEPTING VISA & MASTERCARD.
042 House CleaningEagle Maids with an Eye on Detail 817-618-3245. [email protected].
T&M CLEANING. Cleaning done the way you want. 15 years experience, reliable, references. 817-333-8786.
049 MasonryMASONRY & STONEWORK, retaining walls, patios, fl owerbeds, entryways, anything w/stone and repairs. Senior Citizen Discount. 817-919-4487.
051 Motorcycles
2000 Harley Sportster, red/white/blue, 10,000 miles, $7,700 817-228-2255.
035 Garden/Mowing ServiceFREE ESTIMATES. Mowing, weed eating, scrap haul off, property clean up. Call Brett 817-881-2357.
MANDO’S TREE SERVICE. Take downs, trimming, lot clearing, haul offs. Senior Discounts. Save Big Money! Call 817-808-2873. 20 year expert.
If you need your pasture mowed, call 940-389-1936.
036 HaulingUnwanted debris removed at a reasonable rate. Call Tom 817-448-8578.
037 HayFresh-cut fertilized Coastal and Sudan round bales. Will deliver to Springtown/Azle area. 940-389-1936.
Horse quality fertilized Coastal round bales, $75/each; square bales, $8/each. Will deliver. 817-909-4052.
Fertilized Coastal round bales in barn, $70. Cash only. No texts. 817-694-5554.
Fertilized Coastal hay, 55 rolls at $65/each. Discount if all taken at one time. 817-657-5682.
039 Help WantedLVN & CNA needed for Lake Worth Nursing Home. Contact Jon 817-319-9073.
Tree Removal & Trimming · Brush Hog · Box Blade Front Loader · Tiller · Truck & Trailer for Hauling
Jon Reed, Owner
All work is done by off duty professional firefightersFirefighter Tractor & Tree Service
Call, Text 817-291-3955 or Email [email protected] Downs, Trimming,Lot Clearing, Haul Offs
Mando’s Tree Service
Call 817-808-2873Senior Discounts Save Big Money!
20 year experT
RNA Lawn Services
Serving Our Community since 2007.
Your Residential Special ist .
817-304-3677
Ask About Our Specials!
NOW HIRINGClass A CDL Drivers
Paid Weekly, Insurance,Aflac, Paid Vacations
and much more
Oilfield/EnvironmentalConstruction Transportation
with 2 years experience
NOW HIRINGClass A CDL Drivers
Call Daniel1-800-448-6323
“Class A” Flat Bed Drivers and Frac Sand Haulers.
2 years of verifiable driving exp. $500 BONUS after 90
days, plus Benefits.
817-444-7711 • 817-444-7774
Trucking Company Hiring
Azle Manor Inc • 817-444-2536
Accepting Applications for Nurse-Aide Training Program
Earn While You Learn!
721 Dunaway Lane • EOE
Karl Klement Properties, Inc.
For consideration of all positions apply to:
Jodi Dusek, H/R Mgr.605 N. Business 287, Suite 102, Decatur, Texas
No Positions Available at this Time
Marketing AssistantPart-Time/Flexible Hours. Presentation skills needed.
Route DriverMust have valid TXDL and good driving history.
We offer paid holidays, vacation & training.Maintenance Helpers Needed
Multi-housing make-ready experience a plus, will train!Must have a valid TXDL & be dependable.
Paid holidays, vacation and training.
Ford Certified Transmission TechnicianWe offer paid holidays & vacation. Benefits available.
Body Shop HelperMust be dependable and have valid drivers license.
Parts Drivers/ WarehouseMust be dependable and have valid drivers license.
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TEXASCROSSWORD
by Charley & Guy Orbison
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1 San ____, TX 5 gemstone found in East TX 6 TX newspaper: “The Mexia ____” 7 __ Porte, TX 8 facial spasm 9 oval jewelry with portraits15 abundant tree in TX Piney Woods16 justified19 these TX goats produce mohair21 Jason of Austin “Trail of Dead” band22 tread on and crush27 TXism: “big ____ in a small pond”28 “____ __ the wrist” (minor penalty)29 aging sherry & wine by slow blending30 lukewarmly32 TXism: “dance with who brung __”33 Richard Nixon _________ LBJ Library in 197136 TX-born Joan Crawford was a “film ____” actress37 western comedy: “4 ___ Texas” (1963)38 in Lee Co. on FM 14139 this is high in East Texas41 fine arts based on ancient culture44 TXism: “sticks out like a ____ thumb”45 dog’s bark
1 film “___ of Belle Starr” (1953) 2 TXism: “fits like ugly on an ___” 3 TXism: “vocal as a _______ calf at weaning time” 4 Castroville: “The Little ______ __ _____” 8 fork prong 9 TXism for “die” (4 wds.)10 semi-automatic rifle by Colt: __-1511 noted TX legislator: “__ Sam” Rayburn12 TXism: “dew chaser” (2 wds.)13 Crowell h.s. class
46 TX wheeler dealer Billie Sol47 TX Ross Perot founded this company in 196248 TXism: “bone _______” (cemetery)51 sports fishermen catch this fish in the Gulf52 TXism: “sour enough to pucker a ___”53 nat’l environment agcy.54 nat’l ID number (abbr.)
14 “Texas Two-____”15 Grand Prairie has a “______ __ Wax”16 TX insect with a stinger17 Six Flags junior roller coaster: “Wile _ _____ Grand Canyon Blaster”18 decimal20 town name in Germany, Austria, & Switzerland22 this Skerritt was in 2001 film “Texas Rangers” (init.)23 this Strickland played for the Spurs and the Rockets
24 auto headlight today might be _ ___ light25 county of 4-down26 preparatory coat to get ready for subsequent coat of paint28 actor Pickens who used a TX drawl
31 monkey you might see at a TX zoo34 it’s a start on the alphabet35 decorative metalware37 Piney Woods trees40 this Molly was in 1978 film “Harper Valley PTA”42 pack or store43 Mexican poncho49 TX Ben who was one of the best golfers ever50 Olajuwon’s initials when he was at UH
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CUSTOM HOME BUILDINGSince 1995
Sebas t ianSebas t ianSebas t ianSebas t ianSebas t ianEnterpr i sesEnterpr i sesEnterpr i sesEnterpr i sesEnterpr i ses
817-239-9571817-237-9571
REMODEL & REPAIRHOME & BUSINESS
Many Happy Local Customers Since 1978
Chapman CarpentryOff-Duty Firefighter
Professional& Dependable
exterior & interiorremodeling, patio
covers, drywall repairs
817-946-6787817-444-4198
LOOKVinyl Siding: Insulated ReplacementWindows: Complete Remodeling
Lowest Prices: Best MaterialFree Estimates: Since 1963817-991-6815
Devin’s Handyman Service• Carpentry• Cement• Rock• Granite• Tile• Painting• Siding
Call Devin at 817-629-9608
FallSPECIal20% OFF
with this ad!
• Insulation• Kitchen/ Bath• Roof & Gutters• Powerwashing• Decks
Home Improvement • General Contractor • New ConstructionAdditions Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling
Architectural Planning and Design
Tommy Russell, Sr. • 817-444-6505 or 817-291-6364 • Fax: 817-444-2206P.O. Box 224 • Azle • [email protected]
AZLEREMODELING.COM
T.R.D. Construction, LLCYour Hunt For Quality Is Over
“No Job Too Small or Too Large”
Commercial • Residential
Mr. Sweeps
Keep your home safe.Call Parker/Wise County’s oldest chimney sweeping
company, Mr. Sweeps.
817-692-5624 ask for Doug
www.mrsweepschimneycleaning.com
Chimney CleaningService
$150Special:Chimney & Dryer Vent
Cleaning
Painting817-902-7355• Tape Bedding • Texture• Sheetrock Repairs • Free Estimates
HOGAN’SPAINTING
All types painting, tape, bed, texture, staining, wall paper removal, sheetrock
repair, wood repair“Quality work done at a
reasonable price”senior citizens discount
For Free Estimates Call817-477-7147
Your CleaningServiceProfessional
Cleaning since 1989
Backgrounds CheckedWe furnish Tools & Chemicals
Hospitality Guarantee“Your Way”
One time - Monthly - Bi-Weekly - Weekly, or as needed
You’ll love the care you get!
Phone hours: Mon thru Fri7 am - 1 pm: 817-237-9848
PLEASE LEAVE VOICE MAILour pros may be out chasing fairy dust
All Types Stone & Brick WorkNew Construction • Remodels
Free Estimates
Cell 817-308-6512Home 817-444-3806
email [email protected]
commercial • residential
Azle, TX
Landscape Designs, Patios, Outdoor Kitchens, Retaining Walls, Mailboxes
,L.L.C.concrete
817.479.9503 LI 19046
Landscape Sprinklers
Lawn Care
Best Lawn Guarantee in Town
Online Account Management
• Sod• Flower Beds• Clean Up
Dependableand Reliable
• Stone Work• Fencing• TreesEmail: [email protected]
Family Owned • FREE ESTIMATES • INSURED
817-220-1141817-444-9574
Serving the Metroplex Since 1975
Residential • CommeRCialtRee Removal • topping
pRuning • Feeding
FALL DISCOUNT10% OFF
IrrigationRepair
Licensed ProfessionalServices include Wire &Valve locates,Pipe repair,Head adjustor replace,System Design
817-845-6965
STUMP GRINDINGDon’t dig it! Grind it!1 or 100 - We can do it.
$65 minimum817-237-5592
035 Garden/Mowing Service
039 Help Wanted 039 Help Wanted
040 Home Improvement 040 Home Improvement
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
817-220-7217
817-270-3340Azle News
Springtown Epigraph
049 Masonry
Motorcyc lescont inued
next page . . .
7BWednesday, November 5, 2014COMMUNITY
Classifieds817-270-3340 - Azle817-220-7217 - Springtown
Deadline:5:00 PM Monday
068 StorageInnerspace Storage Hwy 199, Springtown. Now renting all unit sizes, 24-hour access. 817-677-4050.
069 Sand/GravelDriveway gravel, top soil, septic rock, tandem dump trucks. Grady Mansell 817-713-7495.
078 Well DrillingNeed a quality water well at a fair price? Also pump sales and installation. Kelvin’s Pump and Well Service, 817-221-4300.
079 Welding
080 Lots/AcreageFOR SALE: 6704 sq. ft. lot in Azle (1908 Gale Drive). Has electric, city sewage, gravel driveway and includes gas lease royalties. 817-237-5118.
Secluded hilltop 2 acres with trees, no restrictions. OWNER WILL CARRY WITH NO CREDIT CHECK. 817-994-3730 [email protected].
081 Business/Commercial40x50 building for rent 3 miles west of Springtown 817-713-7495.
Professional Office Space For Lease. 800 sq. ft., 1230 E. Hwy 199, Suite 104, Springtown. 817-220-2150.
FOR SALE OR RENT: 6,700 sf office/warehouse at 1750 N. FM 51, Springtown. Several offices, 3 bathrooms, kitchen, large meeting room, warehouse area, loading dock, all on 1 acre. $169,000 or $1,600/mo. 817-220-5339; 817-798-0891.
Great office space for rent on the square next to Springtown Drug. 565 sq. ft., new carpet. Call 817-523-4952.
Great Exposure, Across from City Park. Office Spaces for Rent on Main Street, Azle. Choose from small to large square footages. Rent starting from $275 up to $1,800. Please call 817-444-5326 or 817-235-2284 for more information.
084 Mobile Homes for Rent2 & 3 BR mobile homes for rent, Springtown and Azle ISD, no pets. 817-980-3066.
3-2 MH, total electric, $885/mo. Available immediately. 817-220-4095.
2-1 mobile home for rent, $450/mo. $350 deposit, $35 application fee (over 18 years of age). If interested, 817-221-3112.
MOVE-IN SPECIAL! 3 BR 1 BA mobile home, $525/mo. + electric & propane, $500 deposit, CH/A, Azle ISD, no pets, application required. 817-270-5682; 817-501-2238.
2007 HD Road King, white, radio, alarm, cruise control, 11,500 miles. $11,995. 817-237-4712.
052 MoversU.S. Army Retired-but not tired! Careful moving-Cheap. Call Big Jim @ 817-237-5151.
055 Miscellaneous
057 Pets/LivestockWill pay top dollar for grazing and hay leases. Call 940-389-1936.
WANTED: Young Barbado Ram. Call 817-237-6952, leave message.
059 Pool ServiceAs the leaves fall, we’ll be there to catch them all. GANNON SWIMMING POOL SERVICE. 817-230-3838.
PARADISE SPAS. Your local complete hot tub repair service. Spa covers, pumps, spa pak retrofits. Adam 940-210-1583.
060 Professional ServicesLONE STARR STEAMER PROFESSIONAL CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING. Basic Package: 3 rooms and a hall, $89. Call 817-361-2361.
062 Plumbing
066 Roofing
2-1, CH/A, Azle ISD, $525/mo. $300 deposit, $35 application fee. 817-444-0205.
12198 FM 730 N. R-1. 1 bedroom SW, fenced yard, water/trash service paid, $550/mo. $500 deposit. 817-247-8414.
IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE: NICE 3-1 MH, white carport, on 2 acres, storage building, close to 114/51 intersection, Paradise ISD, Stonegate Drive. $650/mo. $350 deposit. 682-551-0424; 682-559-1819.
085 Mobile Homes for SaleWe buy used mobile homes with clear titles. K&P Homes, Inc. 817-677-3446.
BANK REPOS817-677-3446
USED REFURBISHED HOMES817-677-3446
NEW HOMES-FACTORY DIRECT817-677-3446
K&P HOMES, INC.
086 Mobile Home/RV LotsPELICAN BAY: Mobile Home Lots for rent: 1708 GALE DRIVE, $155/mo. $50 deposit. Gene Thompson & Associates, 817-246-4646. gtatx.com. Hablamos Español.
Lots for Rent: Springtown. First Month Free. 817-353-4233 ask for Vicki.
088 Rent UnfurnishedSPRINGTOWN APARTMENTS, 624 East 3rd Street. 2 bedroom 1 bath, clean, new carpet, $625/mo. includes water, trash service & basic cable, $500 deposit. 817-875-8406.
2 & 3 bedrooms, 2 bath duplexes, 1 car garage, fenced backyard, all appliances, all brick, great location. Stewart Bend Duplex Homes in Azle. 817-444-2362. www.stewartbend.com.
3-2 duplex, Springtown ISD, $750/mo. $350 deposit, Section 8 accepted. 817-980-3066.
WATERWOOD APARTMENTS500 E. 7th St., Springtown
CALL TODAY! 817-523-4308. Rental assistance available
with some units. Energy Efficient Appliances,
Playground. NOW TAKING RENTAL
APPLICATIONS for 1 & 2 Bedroom Units
starting at $443.
RENT SPECIAL! 2-2 4-PLEX, IN AZLEWOOD w/New Carpet! $725/$500 security deposit, WBFP, walk-in closets, box windows, large kitchen w/pantry, 1,100 sq. ft. 817-360-3039.
FOR RENT: Large 2-2 brick home (room for 2 horses) w/tornado shelter, separate man cave area, large kitchen, large living room area. Address is 12199 FM 730 N. $895/mo. without pasture or $1,100/mo. with pasture, $600 deposit. Please text 817-504-2746.
1 bedroom 1 bath, lake view, jacuzzi bath, 2-sided fireplace, vaulted ceilings, $825/mo. 817-980-4070.
Last Puzzle Solution
S-1192
S A B A O P A L N E W S L A T I C C A M E O S P I N E W A R R A N T E D A N G O R A S R E E C E T R A M P L E F I S H S L A P O N S O L E R A T E P I C L Y Y A D E D I C A T E D N O I R F O R D I M E B O X H U M I D I T Y N E O C L A S S I C S O R E A R F E S T E S E D S O R C H A R D W A H O O P I G E P A S S N
Carolyn’s CritterSitter
817-319-6224817-319-6224817-319-6224817-319-6224817-319-6224
Pet Sitting SpecialistLocal References
HORSE SALEFriday, nov. 7, 2014 - 6:00 PMHwy. 281 N. - Stephenville
(254) 646-3161 or 968-4844On-Site EIA Test - $20
LANDERSPLUMBING CO.
817-444-3054M10078
Plumbing Repairs
Drains Cleaned
Water Heaters
Faucets
Slab Leaks
GFA/GRAHAM PLUMBING CO.
“The Solution
To AllYour
Plumbing Needs”
817-220-2469
Commercial-Residential
Serving Springtown, Azle, Boyd,
Weatherford Area
M#15899
grahamplumbingco.com
051 Motorcycles
ROOFING & METALBUILDINGS
817-220-1794817-304-4224
Tired of alwaysreplacing your roof?
We’ll be hereafter the storm.
Call us for ametal roof quote.
817-237-2852
FREEMANRoofing & ConstRuCtion inC.
Commercial • ResidentialFREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED
Repairs • New Construction
PREFERRED CONTRACTORwww.owenscorning.com®
36 Years in Azle
State Certified Applicator #106
Insurance Claim Specialists
Robert Burge Roofing & Remodeling
Residential 817-344-8465New ConstructionAdd On’sElectricalPainting
PlumbingSheetrockRoofingRemodeling
FlooringFencingFree TrimmingLandscaping
Commercial
817-523-4137
Commercial & Residential
• Free Roof Inspection• Roofing• Windows• Attic Insulation• Painting
426 E HWY 199 • SpringtoWn
He r e B e f o r e T h e S t o rm , H e r e L o n g A f t e r .
We buy cars & TrucksCopper • Aluminum • CAns
BuyingCars & Trucks
817-221-2472
Roll OffContainer Service
191 Monticello Dr. • Springtown
Ash CreekStorage
Convenient LocationCorner of Main St. & Locust • Azle
817-444-3292
West Side Storage
Now LeasingStorage Units
817-239-1670 • 817-220-5813
STORAGE UNITS1350 Liberty School Rd, Azle
Special!
817-246-46466 Months ... $125
5x10 $25/month
MIDWAY BOAT/SELF STORAGE
Contact Chasity Avirett or Brian Tarter940-255-9212
11x30 Units Available
SAND • DIRT • GRAVEL
TOP SOIL • ROADBASE • BRICK SANDDRIVEWAY GRAVEL • CRUSHED STONE
(sizes ¼ inch up to 2 feet)
817-444-DIRT(3478)
BEST DEALDozer and Tractor Work
YOU CALL...WE HAUL
Jerry W. Mitchell
QualityFamily Business
Since 1938
(817)221-2681We go the extra mile to ensure you
get more for your $. On House Pads,Driveways, Lot Clearing & Tractor
Work, Etc.
CALLCliff Hall
Our Business is Metal Buildings- And We’re Good!
DESIGN FABRICATION ERECTION
METALBUILDING SYSTEMSCozart
Fabrication and erection of qualitymetal buildings at reasonable prices,
any size - any design
Office Fax 817-237-0904
Mark Cozart Jeremy Cozart817-233-6668 817-237-2028
Metal BuildingSpecialist
• Weld Ups/ Bolt Ups• Pipe Fencing• Concrete• Horse Barns• All Types Fencing• Metal Roofs
NO JOB TOO SMALLCompare Pricing
R & EConstruction
owner Rodney Vick 817-220-3044
fax 817-523-7639 cell 817-253-1614
Metal Building Erectors• Pre-engineered Weld-up •
Barns/Shops• Arenas/Hangars • Fencing
1220 E. Hwy. 199 • Springtown
817-220-2150 www.weld-done.net
WELD-DONE CONSTRUCTION LTD.WELD-DONE CONSTRUCTION LTD.WELD-DONE CONSTRUCTION LTD.WELD-DONE CONSTRUCTION LTD.WELD-DONE CONSTRUCTION LTD.
111 Mulligan Lane Azle 76020$269,000
Across the street from hole 6 on Cross Timbers. A very custom one of a kind, almost 2100 sq ft. on 1 acre, open concept. Large oversized garage, fenced yard, all foamed, topend windows, real hardwood floors, stained concrete, tile bathrooms, topend granite walk-in tub and much, much more. Highest electric bill around $120.
Must be pre-approved to see house, by appointment only.Contact JR Tritton, 817-657-4041
817-221-2002
MIDWAY MOBILE HOME PARK
AFFORDABLE COUNTRY LIVING2 or 3 bedroom mobile homes for rent. Also, RV lots & rentals and mobile home lots for rent.
RV Spaces by Day, Week or
Month
Pecan Acres RV Park Inc.12667 FM 730 South • 1 mile south of Azle
• LargeShadedLots• Nice&Clean• Electric,Water& Sewerincluded• LaundryRoom& ShowerFacilities• Wi-Fi
Call for Rates - 817-291-4679817-846-8190
We now have Pull-Throughs!
We’ll relocate your RV here for FREE!
(up to 50 miles)
We May have the Perfect Place for you if you are a...
AZEL RV PARKBetween Azle & Springtown
Call To See If We Can Move Your RV FREE
• Paved Streets• Mail Service• Covered RV Spaces• Free Wi-Fi• Laundromat• Adult RV Park• No Road Noises
Heritage RV PARK
FULL TIME RV’er
Covered & Open Spaces• Free Wi-Fi• Laundromat• Mail Service• Tiny Houses & RV Rental
817-677-2160
817-444-3760
Roofingcontinued next page...
Find it in the classifieds
066 Roofing
067 Recycling
068 Storage
www.azlenews.netwww.springtown-epigraph.net
16 words for only $8.A great way to raise extra money!
Call today for more info.Azle News 817-270-3340
Springtown Epigraph 817-220-7217
069 Sand/Gravel 083 Houses For Sale
084 Mobile Homes For Rent
Rent Unfurnishedcontinued
next page...
8B Wednesday, November 5, 2014 COMMUNITY
Classifi eds817-270-3340 - AZLE817-220-7217 - SPRINGTOWN
Deadline:5:00 PM Monday
3-2-2 in Azlewood, $1,025/mo. $850 deposit, $35 application fee. 817-444-0205.
PELICAN BAY: 1916 PELICAN DRIVE N., 3-1-1, $655/$400 deposit; 1836 CORAL ROAD, 3-1-1, $635/$400 deposit; 1508 CORAL CUT OFF, 2-1-1, $545/$400 deposit. Gene Thompson & Associates, 817-246-4646. gtatx.com. Hablamos Espanol.
905-C Greg Street. 1 bedroom apartment w/carport and patio, storage shed, $775/mo. $700 deposit, all bills paid. 817-247-8414.
2-1 duplex, water furnished, no pets, $550/mo. 817-296-6169.
TexSCAN Week of November 2, 2014
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITYACHIEVE FINANCIAL FREEDOM and Flexibility. Own your own frozen yogurt store now and take control of your density. What’s stopping you? Call 1-877-6775 today!RUN YOUR OWN Medical alert company. Be the only distributor in your area! Excel-lent income opportunity. Small investment required. Limited available, start today, 1-844-225-1200.
DRIVERSAVERITT EXPRESS New Pay Increase For Regional Drivers! 40¢ to 46¢ CPM + Fuel Bonus! Also, Post-Training Pay Increase for Students! (Depending on Domicile) Get Home EVERY Week + Excel lent Benef i ts. CDL-A required. 1-888-602-7440 Apply @ AverittCareers.com EOE - Females, minorities, protected veterans, and individuals with disabilities are encouraged to apply.DRIVERS TRAINEES needed now! Learn to drive for Werner Enterprises! Earn $800 per week! No experience needed! Get your CDL and pre-hire now! 1-888-734-6710HIRING DRIVERS: Class-A CDL Tanker, Haz-Mat oilfi eld Driving. 2 years’ experi-ence. Texas/ Oklahoma locations. 3 weeks on and one week off. Housing provided. EagleOne: 1-866-501-7549
MAKE A CHANGE this Fall. PAM has owner operator and company driver. Team positions available based out of Laredo, TX. Laredo, TX to Detroit, MI. Off 2 days per week. Idea candidate will live in 50 mile radius of Laredo TX; Irving, TX; North Little Rock, AR; Memphis, TN; Indianapolis, IN: Detroit, MI. Call PAM; 1-855-899-6916 or pamjobs.comYOUR PARTNER in excellence. Drivers needed. Great home time $650 sign-on bonus! All miles paid 1-800-528-7825 or www.butlertransport.com25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED! Learn to drive for Stevens Transport! No experience needed! Paid CDL training! New drivers can earn $800 per week! 1-866-861-1323, drive4stevens.com$2000 BONUS! Oilfi eld drivers. High hourly, overtime. Class A-CDL/tanker. 1 year driv-ing experience. Home monthly. Paid travel, lodging. Relocation not necessary. 1-800-588-2669. www.tttransports.com
GUN SHOWSWORLD’S LARGEST gun show! Nov. 8 and Nov. 9, Tulsa, OK fairgrounds. Sat. 8-6, Sun. 8-4. Wanenmacher Productions. Free apprais-als. Bring your guns! www.TulsaArmsShow.com
SCHOOL/TRAININGMEDICAL BILLING trainees needed! Train to process medical billing and insurance claims from home. No experience needed. Online training program! HS diploma/GED and PC/internet needed. 1-888-926-6073
REAL ESTATEBEST VALUE on the Coast 1 to 7 acres water access and bay views. From $39,900 access to the Gulf of Mexico. Renowned fi shing area. Call 1-888-903-5120 ext. 28LOOKING TO SELL land? Reach over 2-million readers for one low price in the Texas Statewide Advertising Network. Contact this newspaper or call 1-800-749-4793.TEXAS VETERANS You’ve earned this coastal land bargain. One acre with Matago-rda Bay access as low as $239.59/month. 360 month term, $39,900 Lot Price. Only 5% down! Call 1-888-895-5575 ext. 29
Extend your advertising reach with TexSCAN, your Statewide Classifi ed Ad Network.
NOTICE: While most advertisers are reputable, we cannot guarantee products or services advertised. We urge readers to use caution and when in doubt, contact the Texas Attorney General at 1-800-621-0508 or the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP. The FTC web site is www.ftc.gov/bizop
Run Your Ad In TexSCAN!
To Order: Call this Newspaperdirect, or call Texas Press Service
at 1-800-749-4793 Today!
Statewide Ad ..................$550290 Newspapers, 871,154 Circulation
North Region Only ......$25093 Newspapers, 297,505 Circulation
South Region Only .....$25097 Newspapers, 366,627 Circulation
West Region Only .......$25098 Newspapers, 205,950 Circulation
Duplex Homes2 & 3 Bedrooms • 2 Bath • 1 Car Garage
(817) 444-2362www.stewartbend.com
Stewart Bend Court, off South Stewart Street close to Cross Timbers Golf Course in Azle
For Lease
AZLE OAKSAPARTMENT
700 JARVIS • AZLE700 JARVIS • AZLE700 JARVIS • AZLE700 JARVIS • AZLE700 JARVIS • AZLE817-444-1712817-444-1712817-444-1712817-444-1712817-444-1712
1 & 2 BedroomUnfurnished
Rent based on income.
TDD:800-735-2989
This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
AZLEWOODAPARTMENTS1 & 2 Bedrooms
See the Di f f e r ence !817-444-6122
GENE THOMPSON& ASSOCIATES
HOMES and MOBILE HOMESFOR RENTgtatx.com
817-246-4646
SHADY CREEKAPARTMENTS
817-444-2430
1 & 2 Bedrooms• W/D Connections• Swimming Pool• Water/Trash Service Furnished
Crestwood Apartment HomesFabulous Floor Plans
525 Commerce Street • Azle
To Fit Your Every Need and Lifestyle!
Call for Details 817-444-0030
crestwoodapartmenthomes.com
New Appliances, FS W/D Connections, Water/Trash Service Included, Warm Colors,
Brushed Nickel Hardware and So Much More!Beautiful Pool!
088 Rent Unfurnished R E A L E S TAT E
817-270-3340Real Estate Deadline Monday by 12:00 PM
088 Rent Unfurnished
PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illigal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodi-ans, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18.This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-tised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.
Make it a “Smart” [email protected]
817-821-5236
Tammy Smart,
511 W. Main St., AzleGRI, ABR, CRS, SFR, ReAltoR®
Ca l l Me Fo r Mo r e Home L i s t i n g s !
PENDING
PENDING
SOLD
Each office is independently owned and operated
Pride of Ownership Shows! Custom built 5-3-3 with open concept & formal dining room. Beautiful rock fireplace in living room. Gourmet kitchen features center island, granite counter tops, built in microwave & double oven. Large master bedroom downstairs. Master bath has double vanities, jetted tub & walk in shower. Game room comes complete with wet bar & mini fridge. Great 19x10 balcony for viewing wildlife & views of the countryside! Landscaped with sprinkler system. Azle ISD- $345,000.
WARM & WELCOME! - Great 4-2-2 with open concept, fireplace & split bedrooms. Master bath features dual sinks, separate shower & garden tub. Nice large backyard with lots of big trees. Close to schools & shopping! Azle ISD - $125,000.
INSTANTLY APPEALING - REDUCED! Beautiful 4-2-2 with formal dining room. Open concept and split bedrooms. Large living room with vaulted ceilings and fireplace. Kitchen features double oven, built in microwave, granite countertops and lots of cabinet space. Master bedroom has separate room off of it that would make a great office or nursery. Gorgeous landscaped backyard features pool with spa & waterfall. Covered patio with full outdoor kitchen. Sprinkler system, circle drive, extra RV or boat parking. Situated on a corner lot. Springtown ISD - $229,900. HORSES WELCOME! - Nice 3-2 with formal dining & 2 car detached garage. Large living area with wood burning fire place & recently added wood floors. Kitchen features center island, new oven & lots of cabinet space.Recently replaced items include, back splash in kitchen, ceiling fans, carpet & HVAC. Fully fenced with pipe fencing. 2 metal barns with stalls & tack rooms. Great wrap around porch to enjoy the beautiful views. Springtown ISD- $259,000.
SOMETHING SPECIAL! - Neat and clean 3-2-3 with study & split bedrooms. Wood floors in living area & fireplace with gas starter. Kitchen features include granite counter tops, built in microwave, center island, lots of counter & cabinet space. Upgrades include back splash in kitchen, beautiful stone in front of bar and granite in both bathrooms. Master bath has jetted tub, double sinks and separate shower. Landscaped yard & full sprinkler system Eagle Mt. ISD- $187,500.
112-A E. Main St. Azle · 817-444-5330Real Estate
Marsha Hardin: 817-235-8839Gilda Brawley Jackson: 817-980-0569Kelly Dildy: 817-233-9128Mark Donahew: 817-528-1535Karen Fuller: 817-300-7703
Gena Grauman: 817-901-4491Shane Grauman: 817-401-1030
Tim Riddle: 817-929-7112Linda Sharp: 817-846-6063Robert Hard: 682-239-7129
Residential • Commercial • Property Management • HUD Homes & Foreclosures
View All MLS Listings Online At MarshaHardinRealEstate.com
165 Horizon Circle, Azle
Home for Sale on heavily wooded 1 acre lot in Hidden Forest Subdivision.
4-2.2-3, 3515 sq. ft. very private setting, $349,000.
Contact Sharon Hodnett, Realtor with Keller Williams 817-994-7152
SAMPLE
House Movers
get your ad started today, to move your home off the market!
3.792” x 3”ACTUAL SIZE
Call817-270-3340
or 817-220-7217
$139Gets your ad in The Azle News
and The Springtown
Epigraph
OnlySPECIAL OFFER
Limited time only
Move your home off the market - run a
photo of your home, address, 50-word
description, phone number & price.
AD RUNS UNTIL IT IS SOLD
(OR FOR 12 WEEKS)Must be in the format of the
sample ad shown. Description: 50 word
maximum. Non-Refundable Open to individuals and realtors.
Ad cannot be changed during12 week run. Ads are in black
and white. Color available call Johnna for details.
1234 Woods St.2 bedroom, 1 bath home in Azle/Springtown area. Granite counters,
stainless appliances, and ceramic tile in kitchen. Wood floors through-out the rest of the house. This home is a must see! Call 000-000-0000.
$100,000.
www.azlenews.netwww.springtown-epigraph.net
in the Springtown Epigraph and the Azle News
CLASSIFIEDSAzle News
SpringtownSpringtown
Azle News
It pays to do your shopping
CLASSIFIEDS
It pays to do your shopping
The Bryants Co. 817-220-2021Dana Bryant/Realtor 817-613-7189
SpRingtown CenteR1500 sq.ft. $850/mo $850 deposit
commercial rentals!
LAnD1 ACRe restricted lot on cul-de-sac. $18,5001.26 ACReS on restricted cul-de-sac. $18,500Heavily wooded 13 acres off Agnes Northwest of Springtown. $97,500.
4.510 ACReS with water, septic and electric, ready for your home and animals! Slidell ISD. $42,50019.43 Heavily wooded acres in Wise County. Boonsville area. Well, septic, electric, large storage building and fenced. $138,500. Financing options.
nice 1 ACRe lot in Reno on Quail Run. Water, septic and electric. Build your home here. $30,500. Financing options..81 ACReS inside city limits. Pecan and fruit trees, storage bldg. $35,000.10 ACReS of trees and pasture. Has old structure $90,000.13 ACReS wooded. Perfect for dream house or manufactured home $97,500.
4-2-2 Brick home on wooded lot. Conveniently located in town close to schools. Open concept. $124,000.
3-2 Triplewide with 2 living areas & 2 dining areas on 17 acres in Boonsville area. Bridgeport ISD. Storage buildings and loafing shed. Creek runs through property. $197,500.00