YOUR ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE NEWS NOVEMBER 2019 Made in Texas Alamo Survivor? Salado’s Stagecoach Inn heavy-duty flexibility When you need some extra space, a custom steel building from Mueller is the ideal solution. From workshops to garages to storage buildings, we’re ready to create structures that meet your specifi cations and enhance your lifestyle. All of our buildings are designed and manufactured in the USA, featuring commercial grade steel and limited paint warranties up to 30 years. Come see us and fi nd the one that’s right for you.
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November 2019 Since 1944
FAVORITES 5 Letters 6 Currents 20 Co-op News Get the latest information plus energy and safety tips from your cooperative. 33 Texas History Alamo Survivor? By Gene Fowler 34 Recipes 2019 Holiday Recipe Contest Winners 39 Focus on Texas Photo Contest: Up the Creek 40 Around Texas List of Local Events 42 Hit the Road Stopping by Salado’s Stagecoach Inn By Chet Garner
ONLINE TexasCoopPower.com Find these stories online if they don’t appear in your edition of the magazine. J. Alex Ruiz crafts a blade Texas USA that will last a lifetime. Finders Weepers By Clay Coppedge FEATURE Observations My Grandmother and LBJ In the Making Artisans infuse their singular creations By Lee Gaddis 8 with uncommon passion. Story and photos by Julia Robinson NEXT MONTH The Call of the Tamalada Making tamales is a holiday tradition, though eating them never ends. 34 42
33 39 RUIZ: JULIA ROBINSON. TAMALES: LUNAMARINA | SHUTTERSTOCK.COM
ON THE COVER Courtney Perry’s grand prizewinning recipe, Spiced Cookie Cheesecake With Caramel Sauce. Photo by Jody Horton
TEXAS ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Alan Lesley, Chair, Comanche; Robert Loth III, Vice Chair, Fredericksburg; Gary Raybon, Secretary-Treasurer, El Campo; Mark Boyd, Douglassville; Greg Henley, Tahoka; Billy Jones, Corsicana; David McGinnis, Van Alstyne • PRESIDENT/CEO: Mike Williams, Austin • COMMUNICATIONS & MEMBER SERVICES COMMITTEE: Marty Haught, Burleson; Bill Hetherington, Bandera; Ron Hughes, Sinton; Boyd McCamish, Littlefield; Mark McClain, Roby; John Ed Shinpaugh, Bonham; Robert Walker, Gilmer; Brandon Young, McGregor • MAGAZINE STAFF: Martin Bevins, Vice President, Communications & Member Services; Charles J. Lohrmann, Editor; Tom Widlowski, Associate Editor; Karen Nejtek, Production Manager; Andy Doughty, Creative Manager; Elaine Sproull, Advertising Manager; Chris Burrows, Senior Communications Specialist; Paula Disbrowe, Food Editor; Grace Fultz, Print Production Specialist; Travis Hill, Communications Specialist; Qasim K. Johnson, Administrative Assistant; Jessica Ridge, Communications Specialist; Chris Salazar, Digital Field Editor; Ally Schauer, Intern; Jane Sharpe, Senior Designer; Shannon Oelrich, Proofreader
TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 3 ADVANCEDHEARING AID TECHNOLOGY LIMITED $ 99 TIME For Only 19 9 OFFER! “I was amazed! Sounds I hadn’t heard in years came back to me!” — Don W., Sherman, TX How can a hearing aid that costs only $19999 be every bit as good as one that sells for $2,400 or more? The answer: Although tremendous strides have been made in Advanced Hearing Aid Technology, those cost reductions have Can a Hearing Aid Delay or Prevent not been passed on to you. Until now... Alzheimer’s and Dementia? MDHearingAid® uses the same A study by the National Institute on Aging suggests older individuals with hearing loss are kind of Advanced Hearing Aid Technology signifi cantly more likely to develop Alzheimer’s incorporated into hearing aids that cost and dementia over time than those who retain their thousands more at a small fraction hearing. They suggest that an intervention — such of the price. as a hearing aid — could delay or prevent this by improving hearing! Over 350,000 satisfi ed MDHearingAid customers agree: High-quality, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR FDA-registered hearing aids don’t 45-DAY RISK-FREE TRIAL! have to cost a fortune. The fact is, Hearing is believing and we invite you to try you don’t need to spend thousands this nearly invisible hearing aid with no for a hearing aid. MDHearingAid annoying whistling or background noise for is a medical-grade hearing aid yourself. If you are not completely satisfi ed offering sophistication and high with your MDHearingAid, return it within 45 Nearly Invisible performance, and works right out days for a FULL REFUND. BUY A PAIR of the box with no time-consuming For the Lowest Price Call AND SAVE! “adjustment” appointments. You BATTERIES can contact a licensed hearing INCLUDED! specialist conveniently on-line or 1-800-832-0414 READY TO USE RIGHT by phone — even after your www.GetMDHearingAid199.com OUT OF THE BOX! purchase at no cost. No other company provides such extensive Use Code JT37 support. Now that you know...why pay more? and get FREE Batteries for 1 Year Plus FREE Shipping Proudly assembled in America! DOCTOR DESIGNED | AUDIOLOGIST TESTED | FDA REGISTERED LETTERS
Other Musical Greats Chet Garner began by mention- A Nod and a Wink ing Willie Nelson, Janis Joplin, In 1954, I was a fourth grader in George Strait and Roy Orbison because they were born in Odessa. On Saturday afternoons, my small Texas towns [Wink’s sister and I watched the only show Spectacle, September 2019]. He missed the singer with by on television, several hours of West far the best voice that was Texas talent. Roy Orbison was on born in a small Texas town— Johnny Mathis, from Gilmer. this show—if not every Saturday, close to it. We really didn’t think JOE E. AND SHARON MCINTYRE at that time that he had talent [Wink’s Spectacle, September 2019]. Big Bend Beckons The next thing we knew, he is doing very well for himself. So much The Window Trail is an easy for the opinions of a 7- and 9-year-old. hike that emanates from the Chisos Mountain Lodge and provides a truly wondrous NANCY LEWIS | WIMBERLEY | PEDERNALES EC view of the valley below. And to see Casa Grande Peak lit up at sunrise is a sight one never forgets. Thanks to E. Dan visitors annually, not 4 million. mention that he was one of the from Pearsall had kept as a pet. Klepper [Big Bend’s Golden CATHRYN HOYT | BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK original 300 colonists brought That man was my father, Jack Triangle] and Joe Nick Patoski RIO GRANDE EC by Stephen F. Austin—some- “Hoss” Keith. [Which Big Bend?] in Septem- thing your readers learned The bigger mountain lion in ber for their superb commen- Editor’s note: Our astute from their seventh grade the same museum is Charlie. taries. readers help keep us sharp, teachers but probably have During breeding, Charlie killed TIM O'NEIL | PAIGE for which we are grateful. The forgotten [Gail Borden’s Sally. My father was well known BLUEBONNET EC online version of this story Follies, September 2019]. in the Pearsall area as an avid has been corrected. DONNA ENGLISH | HIGHLAND VILLAGE cat hunter with his dogs. Definitely on my bucket list! COSERV ALLEN KEITH | BOERNE I’ve been to Big Bend twice Point of History BANDERA EC but never Fort Davis! As a Texas history teacher for Bush’s Bailout PATRICIA JANECEK BURT | VIA FACEBOOK more than 30 years, I often use Any military pilot who read Texas Co-op Power articles as your Almanac item in Currents I enjoyed Which Big Bend?, supplementary reading in my [September 2019] probably GET MORE TCP AT but it needed some fact- classroom. I was excited to see could correct the facts surround- TexasCoopPower.com checking. Big Bend National the story about Gail Borden but ing George H.W. Bush’s being Sign up for our e-newsletter for Park gets about 400,000 was disappointed it did not downed by anti-aircraft fire in monthly updates, prize drawings 1944. Ejection seats didn’t exist and more! in 1944, so he actually went over the side (bailed out), We want to hear from you!
hitting his head as he did so. ONLINE: TexasCoopPower.com/share WILLY CARROLL | KERRVILLE EMAIL: [email protected] CENTRAL TEXAS EC MAIL: Editor, Texas Co-op Power, 1122 Colorado St., 24th Floor, Sally the Mountain Lion Austin, TX 78701 Please include your town and electric co-op. Fun in the Past Tense [August Letters may be edited for clarity and length. 2019] mentioned a mountain lion named Sally that a man D FE Texas Co-op Power
TEXAS CO-OP POWER VOLUME 76, NUMBER 5 (USPS 540-560). Texas Co-op Power is published monthly by Texas Electric Cooperatives (TEC). Periodical postage paid at Austin, TX, and at additional offices. TEC is the statewide association representing 75 electric cooperatives. Texas Co-op Power’s website is TexasCoopPower.com. Call (512) 454-0311 or email [email protected]. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE is $4.20 per year for individual members of subscribing cooperatives and is paid from equity accruing to the member. If you are not a member of a subscribing cooperative, you can purchase an annual subscription at the nonmember rate of $7.50. Individual copies and back issues are available for $3 each. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Texas Co-op Power (USPS 540-560), 1122 Colorado St., 24th Floor, Austin, TX 78701. Please enclose label from this copy of Texas Co-op Power showing old address and key numbers. ADVERTISING: Advertisers interested in buying display ad space in Texas Co-op Power and/or in our 30 sister publications in other states, contact Elaine Sproull at (512) 486-6251. Advertisements in Texas Co-op Power are paid solicitations. The publisher neither endorses nor guarantees in any manner any product or company included in this publication. Product sat- isfaction and delivery responsibility lie solely with the advertiser. © Copyright 2019 Texas Electric Cooperatives, Inc. Reproduction of this issue or any portion of it is expressly prohib-
MURAL: COURTESY CHET GARNER. BIGited BEND: E. DAN KLEPPER without written permission. Willie Wiredhand © Copyright 2019 National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.
TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 5 CURRENTS
WEB EXTRAS MARK YOUR a Find more CALENDAR happenings online. BUTTING OUT
Only 14% of American adults smoke, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Preven- tion. That’s an all-time low in the U.S.
Trying to kick the habit? November 21 is the Great Amer- ican Smokeout, an annual event since 1977 aimed at encourag- ing Americans to stop smoking. HAPPENINGS McAllen Holiday Parade ALMANAC MCALLEN, the self-declared South Pole of Texas, kicks off the festive 50 YEARS AGO: Richard M. season with its HOLIDAY PARADE, which the city describes as the largest Nixon became the first presi- illuminated holiday and helium balloon parade in Texas. dent to attend a regular-season NFL game while in office. Nixon 1 The 1 /2-mile parade, DECEMBER 7, will feature more than 50 lighted sat in the stands at RFK Memo- floats, more than 30 inflatable character balloons and marching bands. rial Stadium in Washington, D.C., as the Dallas Cowboys beat the Washington Redskins INFO a (956) 681-1200, mcallenholidayparade.com 41-28 on November 16, 1969. g LOOKING BACK AT SOCIETY THIS MONTH 1940s 1950s 1960s 1944 Jackie 1955 Using the August 22, 1960 Leonards Department Robinson, 1949, Life magazine cover of Store in Fort Worth becomes the who in 1947 Panhandle rancher Clarence first major retailer in that city or IN THE 75 YEARS since would become Hailey Long as its inspiration, Dallas to take down all segrega- Texas Co-op Power the first black Philip Morris creates the Marl- tionist signs and welcome debuted in July 1944, player in major league baseball, boro Man, an advertising cam- African Americans. folks like Audie Murphy is court-martialed for refusing paign that increased the brand’s and Walter Cronkite to move to the back of a bus cigarette sales by 3,241%. 1962 Walter became household at Fort Hood. Cronkite, raised names, and Leonards 1958 Philanthropist Ima Hogg in Houston, Department Store and 1945 Audie Murphy of Kings- donates the Varner-Hogg helps launch the National Women’s ton receives the Medal of Plantation to the state. the CBS Even- Conference helped Honor. He later becomes the ing News and change society. most decorated U.S. soldier serves as its news anchor until of World War II. his retirement in 1981.
HOLIDAY PARADE: TIM CARROLL. CIGARETTE: RAJA RC | DREAMSTIME.COM. ROBINSON: BETTMANN | GETTY IMAGES. CRONKITE: BETTMANN | GETTY IMAGES
6 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com POWER OF OUR PEOPLE A Leader of Kind Strangers
IT’S HARD TO KEEP UP WITH ELLEN FULLER. “I’m a serial volunteer,” she says, and her fast-paced conversation and exuberant attitude make it easy to believe she devotes boundless enthusiasm to any cause she might undertake. POWER OF OUR PEOPLE recognizes These days, Fuller focuses her abundant energy on Wreaths Across America, co-op members who improve their a nationwide organization that places holiday wreaths on veterans’ graves. In community’s quality of life. 2018, with Fuller as co-chair of the statewide effort, WAA collaborated with 674 Nominate someone by emailing groups to place 160,000 wreaths on almost one-third of veterans’ graves across [email protected]. Texas, as featured in TCP in November 2018. Fuller now serves as treasurer on WAA’s national board. “My dad passed in 2011,” she says, “and he was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. I visited his grave in December 2011 and wondered what kind stranger had placed a wreath on his grave.” The kind stranger was a volunteer with Wreaths Across America, an effort started in 1992 when Worcester Wreath Company of Harrington, Maine, placed extra holiday wreaths to honor those buried at Arlington. That effort evolved into the Arlington Wreath Project and ultimately into Wreaths Across America. If you’re wondering what a holiday-focused organization does year-round, bear in mind that WAA’s reach in Texas has grown 30%—from 86 cemeteries in 2017 to 112 in 2018 and more for 2019. Because wreath day in 2019 is December 14, Fuller and crew will not stop counting until the very last day. Their motto is, “Any vet. Anywhere.” Besides, as Fuller, a customer of Bryan Texas Utilities, says, “Any day is a good day to thank a veteran.”
INFO a wreathsacrossamerica.org
LOOKING BACK AT ARTS AND FASHION NEXT MONTH a 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 1971 The Lyndon Baines John- 1982 Molly Ivins begins writing 1990 Marguerite Ross Barnett son Library and Museum, which columns at The Dallas Times Her- becomes president of the Uni- houses more than 45 million ald. In syndication, her columns versity of Houston and the first pages of historical documents, appeared in black woman to lead a major opens on the campus of the 350 papers American university. University of Texas at Austin. across the U.S. 1992 Gov. Ann Richards buys 1975 Gloria Dean Randle Scott the first Texas Lottery ticket, a of Houston becomes the first 1987 More Lone Star Millions scratch-off, black president of the Girl than 700 at an Austin feed store. 2012 Big Tex, the 52-foot-tall Scouts of America. music fans attend Austin’s inau- mechanical cowboy that towered gural South by Southwest festi- 1993 West Texas A&M Univer- over the State Fair of Texas for 1977 The National Women’s val, which has evolved into a sity in Canyon, which previously 60 years, catches fire and is Conference takes place in major annual tech, music and went under several different destroyed. His replacement Houston. media event. names, adopts its current name. debuted the next year.
FULLER: CHRIS SALAZAR | TEC. WREATH: COURTESY WREATHS ACROSS AMERICA. IVINS: JOHN PIDEDA | GETTY IMAGES. BIG TEX: HEINERLE | DREAMSTIME.COM
TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 7 STORY AND PHOTOS BY JULIA ROBINSON
IN THE Making ARTISANS INFUSE THEIR SINGULAR CREATIONS WITH UNCOMMON PASSION
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THE MADE IN TEXAS moniker gets applied to so much more than boots, hats and Texas-shaped tchotchkes. I went in search of distinctive makers and found diverse artisans with deep thoughts about the act of creation. Whether fulfilling grand ambitions and pushing the limits of a craft or rendering spiritual communion and psychological healing, these Texans use their minds and hands to transform raw materials into objects of beauty and purpose. This holiday season, let’s remember to invest in our local makers. Here are a few from Co-op Country to get you started.
See more of Julia Robinson’s work at juliarobinsonphoto.com.
8 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 0 THE CHARACTER OF LEATHER 0
ODIN CLACK wandered into a leather store one day in 2012 and exited with $200 worth of goods and a new curiosity. He wondered if he could make a lap- top sleeve from the leather and began tinkering at his dining room table. The graphic designer found a new challenge in leathercraft and was soon mak- ing wallets, belts and bags for family and friends. “The thing I love about leather is that the way it looks to me is different from the way it will look in a year from now. How we use it affects the way it looks and feels,” Clack says. “Every dent and scratch tells a story.” In 2018, Odin Leather Goods moved out of the family’s garage and into a workshop in Coppell, near the Tri-County Electric Cooperative service area. Odin and his wife, Rachelle, work with one shop assistant to fulfill orders for their wide range of products. “When people buy local, they know their dollars are going towards daycare and swim- ming lessons and supporting a local family,” Clack says. “It also trickles down because I buy my mate- rials and hardware from other U.S. companies.”
ODINLEATHERGOODS.COM
November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 9 0 FORGED WITH HEART 0
J. ALEX RUIZ has always loved making things with his hands. He spent his childhood sculpting and crafting historical replicas, which led him to study archaeology in college, where he dis- covered the tools and crafts of long ago. A penchant for colonial-era ironwork brought him into a blacksmith shop, where he made functional ironworking tools like bladesmithing tongs, hammers and knives. As a maker, Ruiz feels a deep kinship to those historic people we learn about through artifacts. “When I go to museums and look at historical weapons or ironwork, I like to see the flaws,” he says. “As someone who actually makes these things, I can spot if something has been broken and fixed.” Ruiz, a member of Karnes Electric Cooper- ative, began teaching and performing demon- strations around Texas and earned a spot on the History Channel’s Forged in Fire competi- tion, where he won $10,000 for a medieval horseman’s battle axe. Volundr Forge is Ruiz’s business that he runs part time from his home in Adkins. It’s not uncommon for his shop to reach 120 degrees, and there is a 16-week back- log for his custom knives. “My market is the everyday guy that wants something handmade that’s going to last a lifetime,” he says.
VOLUNDRFORGE.COM
10 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com 0 JEWELRY AND TIME HEAL ALL THINGS 0
In 2006, TARA HUTCHINSON was serving her 10th year as a soldier—a military police sergeant on deployment in Iraq—when a truck she was in was hit by an improvised explosive device. Hutchinson lost her right leg above the knee and suffered a traumatic brain injury that left her with muscle tremors and difficulty controlling fine motor skills. “I couldn’t use my hands to do anything after my injury,” Hutchinson says. “I couldn’t write. I couldn’t feed myself. I had no control over my hands at all.” The loss of a career she loved and her independence sent Hutchinson into a deep depression. “I definitely contemplated suicide on multiple occasions because I couldn’t see any kind of a worthwhile future for myself,” she says. A physical therapist suggested she find a new hobby to help her regain muscle strength, and Hutchinson found jewelry making. “Before that, I didn’t even own any jewelry at all,” Hutchinson says. “I was in the Army and playing in the dirt with the guys.” She took a class, and after making jewelry for six months, Hutchinson’s jerky hand movements were smoothed out. Making gave her new purpose and new hope. She spent two years researching jewelry making and became a master goldsmith. Hutchinson runs Tara Hutch Jewelry out of her home studio in San Antonio. “Now to be able to help women feel beautiful is the most amazing thing ever,” she says. “People can take home something that reminds them that if I can make it through this hard time, anyone can.”
TARAHUTCHJEWELRY.COM
TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 11 0 THE FIBER OF OUR BEING 0
MAURA GRACE AMBROSE studied textile design and fiber arts at the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia, where she found a passion for natural dyes and quilting. “The natural dyes were soft and chalky and harmonious, and it played into the poetic, beautiful parts of art,” says Ambrose, a Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative member. “The colors were alive because they came from something that was alive.” Ambrose runs Folk Fibers from her home studio in Bastrop, where she forages and tends an organic garden for plant-based dyes. It takes about 250 hours to make a bed-sized quilt with Ambrose’s process of natural dying and hand stitching. “I can’t compromise on the process because that’s what makes them special and makes them an heirloom,” she says. For Ambrose, making is a creative expression, the revival of an ancient process and a way to connect to a community. “The long-term goal is to teach, spread the word and inspire others,” she says. “In those exchanges and conversations, nothing else matters. The women become so empowered to make quilts themselves.”
FOLKFIBERS.COM
12 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com 0 WORKING WITH WOOD 0
RYAN DRAPELA grew up selling watermelons near his home in El Campo, southwest of Hous- ton. “I was born with the hustle,” Drapela says. He sold small skateboards in third grade, duct tape wallets in middle school, and candy and jerky in high school. “We grew up super broke,” explains Drapela, a member of Wharton County Electric Coop- erative. “I started buying all my school clothes and supplies myself in the seventh grade.” Drapela walked into his high school woodshop and found a new business opportunity creating cutting boards from wood scraps. His offerings expanded to clipboards, bottle-cap tabletops and custom plaques. The orders from his Etsy store kept growing. In May 2019, Drapela earned his degree and the title of Entrepreneur of the Year from Texas A&M University’s agriculture school. He runs Drapela Woodworks with 15 employees ful- filling 1,000 orders a week for his Man Stands docking stations. “I grew and grew from per- sistence and hard work, not pure talent, not pure intellectual knowledge,” he says. “Just from working harder, longer and more consistently than competitors.” For Drapela, his success is a measure of his ability to create change in the world, whether it’s a new product or jobs for the local economy. “Whatever I’m doing, it’s a way to chase my capacity,” he says.
DRAPELAWOODWORKS.COM
November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 13 0 DIVINE INTERVENTION 0
Tucked into the gentle hills of Christoval, 20 miles south of San Angelo, you’ll find the Mount Carmel Hermitage Monastery, where the HERMITS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY OF MOUNT CARMEL make breads, jellies, fudge and honey. In 1991, Father Fabian, a priest from San Angelo, founded the hermitage with $2,000. Until 1994, he lived alone in a remote house. “He had the vision, the grace and the leap of faith to give it all up and start from zero,” says Brother Martin, who joined the hermitage in 2001. “Monks have always worked to support themselves by their own hands,” Martin says. “There is a beautiful relation between making food and the idea of communion. We are making something that people are going to put into their bodies for their sustenance and enjoy- ment, and there’s a communion of spirit there.” Today, the eight monks of the Mt. Carmel Hermitage live in silence and solitude. “Our order is a very simple order,” Martin says. “We’re not interested in scholarly work or writing papers or books. We just try to pray and work and maybe we do badly sometimes, but we try. We try hard.” The hermitage has a gift shop and an online store from which they ship all over the world.
CARMELITEHERMITS.ORG
BROTHER AUGUSTINE
14 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com H H
H holidayH GIFTH GUIDE In the magazine and on TexasCoopPower.com, we make it easy to shop for friends and family.
It’s Time To Bake Pecan Give the Gift of Treats for the Holidays! Authentic Texas BBQ
Berdoll’s has been family-owned No one knows BBQ like the for 40 years. We provide delicious oldest joint in Texas. Surprise the chocolate pecans, honey glazed bbq-lover in your family with any pecans, pecan pies and more! of our savory, hand-made barbeque Let us ship for you or stop by our items, shipped nationwide. retail store for gifts and take your picture with our squirrel, Ms. Pearl.
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Texas Red Grapefruit 2020 Texas and Avocados Sunrise Calendar
Always a gift in good taste! Large 20-by-15 inch calendar Orchard-fresh grapefruit and with 12 watercolors of Texas other Texas products are all sunrises by Texas State Artist hand-selected, carefully packed George Boutwell. $12.50 plus and shipped to be delivered just sales tax and $3.50 shipping. in time for the holidays. Quantity prices on website.
1-800-580-1900 1-800-243-4316 www.crockettfarms.com gboutwell.com
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New crop pecans, chocolate- Soft leather protective sleeves covered nuts, bakers boxes, contour to hands and arms. specialty gift baskets, fudge, Comfortable and very effective pecan pies. Our very own at preventing injuries. Useful in specialty roasted and salted many situations, and provides pecans & gifts galore! adjustable airflow. See website for all the benefits!
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TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 15 No Other Fruitcake Comes Close! COLLIN STREET BAKERY As different from ordinary store-bought as night and day! Since 1896
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FREE! Each cake comes Shipping on orders in its own tin over $55.00
ou haven’t tasted REAL fruitcake until you’ve tasted Collin Street DeLuxe® YFruitcake! It truly puts ordinary fruitcake to shame. is is why people around the world have come back to us year after year, Pineapple ordering our fruitcake as gifts for their Pecan Cake Apricot families, friends - and themselves! We honor Pecan Cake that trust with every single order, using the same time-honored recipe we started with N No. o . 101 Regular Size DeLuxe® (1 lb. 14 oz., serves 16-20).16-20)...... $29.95 in 1896. Every shipment guaranteed fresh, No. 102 Medium Size DeLuxe® (2 lbs. 14 oz., serves 24-30) ...... $42.95 moist and delicious. Our Customers Say – No. 113 Apricot Pecan Cake (1 lb. 14 oz., serves 16-20) ...... $36.95 “…It outstrips all cakes I have ever tasted No. 175 Apricot Pecan Cake (2 lbs. 14 oz., serves 24-30) ...... $49.95 (including my mother’s).” No. 115 Pineapple Pecan Cake (1 lb. 14 oz., serves 16-20) ...... $36.95 “ roughout the offi ce it was unanimous that none of us had ever met a fruitcake we liked. No. 149 Pineapple Pecan Cake (2 lbs. 14 oz., serves 24-30) ...... $49.95 We had one of your FABULOUS DeLuxe® Fruitcakes at work this past week and changed FREE STANDARD U.S. SHIPPING ON ORDERS OVER $55. our tune.” “It is made just the way I like Christmas cakes For orders under $55, please add $6.95 per U.S. shipment, for products above. to be, rich and moist, and totally packed with Not valid on orders previously placed. Not valid with other off ers. fruit and nuts - I am almost ashamed to say that I consumed one whole one myself - in the Off er expires December 10, 2019. space of a week I hasten to add.” Order at www.collinstreet.com or phone 1-800-292-7400
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GovMint.com • 14101 Southcross Dr. W., Suite 175, Dept. SHN274-01 • Burnsville, MN 55337 GovMint.com® is a retail distributor of coin and currency issues and is not affi liated with the U.S. government. The collectible coin market is unregulated, highly speculative and involves risk. GovMint.com reserves the right to decline to consummate any sale, within its discretion, including due to pricing errors. Prices, facts, fi gures and populations deemed accurate as of the date of publication but may change signifi cantly over time. All purchases are expressly conditioned upon your acceptance of GovMint.com’s Terms and Conditions (www.govmint.com/terms-conditions or call 1-800-721-0320); to decline, return your purchase pursuant to GovMint.com’s Return Policy. © 2019 GovMint.com. All rights reserved. CUSTOM BLINDS, SHADES, SHUTTERS & DRAPERY
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CONSERVATION AND SAFETY INFORMATION
During the winter, covering cold surfaces with an area rug can improve comfort and helps retain indoor heat. CAMPWILLOWLAKE | ISTOCK.COM Steps To Stay Comfortable This Winter
SO YOU’VE BEEFED UP THE INSULATION IN YOUR HOUSE BUT IT These are some of the most common spots air leaks occur: still feels a bit chilly. What more can you do? Actually, there a Penetrations and cracks around windows and doors. are many additional steps you can take to warm up your home a Exterior cracks in brickwork and siding. and your family. a Plumbing and wiring penetrations from the exterior to An important piece of the comfort puzzle is radiant heat, the interior of the home. which transfers heat from a warm surface to a colder one. A a Mail slots or pet doors. room that’s 70 degrees can still feel uncomfortably chilly if A variety of products, like caulk, weatherstripping, outlet there’s a cold surface nearby, like a single-pane window, hard- gaskets and dryer vent covers, can be used to seal these leaks. wood floor or an exterior wall. Covering these cold surfaces Your pursuit of comfort should also include a careful look at can help. your home’s heating system. Is it distributing heat evenly and Try using area rugs, wall quilts, tapestries, bookcases and efficiently? Forced-air systems distribute air through supply heavy curtains to help prevent heat loss and make your home ducts and registers. Small rooms may have only one register, feel more comfortable. Use radiant heat to your advantage: A but large rooms could have several. You may find some supply dark-colored tile floor that receives several hours of direct sun registers are blowing copious amounts of warm air and others can retain heat during the day and radiate it into the room dur- little at all. ing the evening. Ideally, every room should have return air registers. If you Another possible cause of discomfort during winter is air see possible shortcomings with your forced-air system, enlist movement. We recognize this when weather forecasts report the help of a certified contractor who knows how to improve wind chill factor, which is a calculation combining tempera- ductwork. ture and wind speed. Ensure your furnace is running at peak efficiency by sched- Moving air makes us feel colder, which is why we use fans in uling an annual inspection. Check your filter monthly and the summer. But during the winter, cold, outdoor air can infil- replace or clean it as necessary. trate our homes. Beyond that, you can always warm up by wearing heavier On average, a typical home loses about half its air every clothing, doing some light exercise throughout the day, and hour, and that amount can increase when outdoor conditions snuggling with a pet or under a blanket. are extremely cold and windy. In this case, the best way to keep By taking some of these small steps, you can enjoy a more your home toasty is to minimize air leaks. comfortable winter at home.
20 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com Be Smart With Space Heaters
WHILE A GOOD CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEM IS DESIGNED TO MEET WHOLE-HOUSE NEEDS, sometimes we have to turn to space heaters for additional warmth. And in some cases, small space heaters can make financial sense—for example, if you only want to heat or supplement inadequate heating in one room. However, a space heater is not necessar- ily an economical source of long-term warmth.
Getting More for Less The key to efficiency is using space heaters in smaller rooms that are occupied infrequently, in conjunction with lower thermostat settings on your central system. Lowering thermostat settings from 70 to 65 degrees and using a thermostat- controlled space heater to heat 10% of a home’s conditioned floor space will save about $67 a year. Space heaters are most efficient when used in small spaces for lim- ited periods and will likely waste energy if used to heat too large of an area. Buy the right size heater for the right size space—too small and the results could be disappointing, too large or powerful and you’ll be uncomfortable (and pay more).
Safe, Not Sorry ASKMENOW | ISTOCK.COM Space heaters get seasonal use, but they are responsible for 25,000 residential fires a year. Burn injuries associated with surface contacts with room heaters send about 6,000 people to emergency rooms every year. Quick Tips for Because the devices are designed to give off heat, they should always be plugged directly into the wall and set in locations clear of all flammable materials and out of Thanksgiving Savings reach of small children, pets and anyone with impaired mobility. Choose a heater with an adjustable thermostat and a tip-over safety feature to Turn down the thermostat. With a full automatically shut off in the event that the unit tilts beyond its upright position. house and a hot kitchen, your house will be too steamy at its usual setting. Replace your lightbulbs with LED bulbs. Your guests won’t notice a differ- DON’T: Leave your space ence in lighting, but you’ll see a differ- heater unattended. Always unplug it before you leave ence in your energy bill. the house or go to bed. Don’t just stuff the turkey—stuff the oven. As long as your oven will be DON’T: Use an extension cord to plug in your space running all day, make the most of it by heater. It can cause the cooking several dishes at once. A varia- heater to overheat and can tion of 25 degrees in either direction be a tripping hazard. from the recommended cooking tem- DON’T: Place your space perature will still produce the desired heater near curtains, cloth- result in most cases. ing, furniture or bedding. Cook at least one dish from start to finish in the microwave. Microwaves are faster than the oven and use about one-third the electricity. Keep cleanup easy. Load the dish- DO: Plug your space heater washer completely full. With a mountain directly into the wall outlet. of dinner plates, using the dishwasher DO: Keep your space heater DO: Buy a unit with an will be more efficient than hand-washing. at a safe distance (at least 3 automatic shut-off in case Don’t rush to put leftovers in the feet) from kids, pets and the unit tips over or you refrigerator, which will work harder to flammable items. forget to shut it off. cool off hot foods. Let leftovers cool
CBCK-CHRISTINE | ISTOCK.COM slightly on the counter.
TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 21 Give friends and family the Best of Texas this holiday season.
THE BEST OF TY P I CA L LY Texas Co-op Power presents a collection of best-loved recipes from two of our most popular cookbooks ever, the Typically TEXAS Texas Cookbook and The Second Typically Texas Cookbook. — — COOKBOOK This cookbook is filled with more than 700 recipes, including more than 300 dessert recipes.
Order online at TexasCoopPower.com and put The Best of Typically Texas Cookbook in your kitchen for only $29.95 (price includes tax, shipping and handling). To order by mail, send a check or money order payable to TEC for $29.95 to Best of Typically Texas Cookbook, 1122 Colorado St., 24th Floor, $29.95 Austin, TX 78701. FROM THE PUBLISHERS OF TEXAS CO-OP POWER From the publishers of Texas Co-op Power Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery.
Bring Texas nature home for the holidays. Texas Co-op Power presents an illustrated Seashells of Texas poster by artist Aletha St. Romain, 20x16 inches, suitable for framing. Order online at TexasCoopPower.com for only $20 (price includes tax, shipping and handling). Bonus offer: Get 2 posters shipped to the $ 20 same address for just $30. or 2 for $30 Please allow 4–6 weeks for delivery. From the publishers of
22 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com “To you, it’s the perfect lift chair. To me, it’s the best sleep chair I’ve ever had.” — J. Fitzgerald, VA
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Finders Weepers
Treasure discovered in 1885 led to trouble for a Bell County ranch hand
BY CLAY COPPEDGE O<5 42G 8< 1885, 2 G=C<6 ;2< <2;54 on his way. That evening, at his father’s A.C. Urvin left the Turnbo Ranch near house, a neighbor spied Urvin inspecting Youngsport, in western Bell County, where the coins. Urvin told him he’d won the gold he worked as a hand, to visit his father playing poker, but the neighbor was skep- near Bertram in Burnet County. He crossed tical. He told another neighbor, who was the Lampasas River near the McBride likewise skeptical. Maybe they believed settlement and sat down on what he that people don’t play poker with rare and thought was a rock to wring out his wet valuable Mexican coins. And the truth socks. The rock turned out to be an old was Urvin was lying. stone jar full of gold and silver coins, some Urvin returned the next day with his dated as early as 1671. brother to the spot where he’d concealed Though Texas history is crammed with the jar. The brothers filled a couple of bags stories about lost gold and silver—the Lost with more coins, then again hid the jar. Bowie Mine, Steinheimer’s silver, Jean They returned to Bertram and told locals Lafitte’s buried booty—we don’t see a lot Eugene Gahn and a man named McDonald of stories about found treasures. This story of their find. Soon, Urvin’s newfound turned out to be an exception. Urvin prob- wealth was an open secret throughout the ably knew exactly what he’d found. region. Stories of a Mexican treasure buried At that point, Urvin probably went to somewhere in that area had been retold Mexico to exchange the coins for Ameri- for decades. Old-timers told of how groups can dollars. Though his fortunes had of Mexican miners and treasure hunters increased, his reputation suffered. The had visited this section of the river for popular notion in Bell and Williamson many years, always looking for something. counties was that the “young man of in- They never told anybody what they were dustrious habits,” as the Belton Journal looking for until one day, when a blabber- described him, was actually a thief and mouth revealed that the object of their a liar. pursuit was a large stone jar full of coins “At Belton, the story did not go far until and three metal chests filled with gold it reached the ears of Moses Whitsitt,” and silver. Harry Christmas wrote in a 1964 edition The locals kept a close eye on the treas- of Real West magazine. “He went imme- ure hunters as they consulted their com- diately to the Belton Journal, telling the passes and poked holes in the ground, but editor that young Urvin was wanted for after several days, the searchers always theft. He [said] that a merchant named went home empty-handed. Atkinson of Florence, who had been a rare Urvin hadn’t been looking for the treas- coin collector, was robbed of his collection. ure, but he did not go home empty-handed. He further made the claim that young He put some of the coins in his pocket, Urvin’s alias was Maxwell.” carefully concealed the jar and continued To defend himself in the court of public
24 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com opinion, Urvin wrote a letter to the George- And that, as far as history knows, is the town Sun. The letter appeared in the end of the story. August 13, 1885, edition and read: “Dear We don’t know what became of the Sirs; I found $11,300 in old Spanish coins three chests loaded with gold or if they and have it now in U.S. currency. As to my even existed. We don’t know what hap- name, it is A.C. Urvin. I have both father pened to Urvin because he disappears from and mother and two brothers to prove my the historical record after that, but it’s safe connections. I am now living in the neigh- to assume he never worked on the Turn- borhood of Holland with G.T. Smith. I am bo Ranch again. His $11,300 find in 1885 no thief or robber. I will be in Belton this would be worth about $300,000 today. week to see you. I can prove as good a char- Others may have made similar finds acter, from my childhood down to this but kept quiet about it to avoid just the time, as any man in Texas. Yours truly, kind of trouble and suspicion that followed A.C. Urvin.” Urvin after he claimed finders keepers on In reporting this, an El Paso paper con- that stone jar. cluded, “The fact that Mr. Urvin found the Clay Coppedge, a member of Bartlett EC, lives
JOHN KACHIK money seems to be well documented.” near Walburg.
TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 25 Observations
My Grandmother and LBJ
How a persuasive woman helped start the school that launched Johnson’s career
BY LEE GADDIS MG 6@2<4;=B75@ F:=@5<35 C78:5A the county commissioners knew she had was born in 1878 in Lockhart. She married won. School bonds were approved in 1926, John Terry Maltsberger in 1900, and they and the school was built by 1927. ranched the South Texas brush country in In 1928, 20-year-old Lyndon B. John- La Salle County. In the 1920s, they built a son took a break from his studies at San house in Cotulla and continued to operate Marcos Teachers College, now Texas State ranches. University, and accepted a teaching job at Florence was stylish, usually wearing Welhausen School to help cover his tuition hats and gloves when in public. She was expenses. He was one of five teachers and Cotulla’s postmaster and was respected taught mathematics and history to 29 fifth, and persuasive. She had a strong sense sixth and seventh graders. He was shocked of right and wrong and an instinct for at the poverty he saw and how little many power. She appointed herself advocate of the people had. of the local Mexican American children, Johnson soon made friends with and by the mid-1920s, she was actively my grandmother, who was known as lobbying county leaders to build a school “La Florita,” and the two of them worked for them. on improving condi- She cared deeply for tions at the school. the poor in her South There was no play- Texas community, who ground equipment, lived in very difficult cafeteria or school conditions. There was buses. little education or My grandmother health care and no urged Johnson to help social services. Most of lead the school, and them labored in the he was soon promoted fields, working cotton, to principal. They en- beets or spinach crops. couraged Welhausen’s And most of them did primarily Spanish- not see a way out of speaking pupils to poverty. learn English and get She was able to grab FLORENCE MALTSBERGER an education, know- county leaders by the ing that it would open nose and persuade them to support her doors for them. Johnson created oppor- plan for a school. After working all of her tunities for his students and organized connections, she finally focused her efforts debates, spelling bees and physical educa- on the county judge, G.A. Welhausen. tion activities. When she played her last card—proposing Johnson soon learned that Florence to name a new school after Welhausen— was his best champion for improving
26 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com WEB EXTRAS u Read this Lyndon B. Johnson story on our school condi- many fundraising efforts, including a Johnson traveled with his first pupils website to see tions. She would massive annual rummage sale. to San Marcos in 1965 march into county Working together, Johnson and Flo- at the Welhausen to sign the Higher more photos School in Cotulla from Cotulla. commissioners rence became lifelong friends, though in 1928. Education Act, which and city council Johnson returned to college after a year increased federal meetings and de- in Cotulla. The two of them corresponded funding for univer- mand funds for for years. Florence’s only granddaughter, sities, creating scholarships and giving books and equipment. They rolled their Terry Gay Puckett, attended a junior col- low-interest loans to students. In a speech eyes when she showed up, but she usu- lege in Washington, D.C., when Johnson that November day, he said, “I shall never ally prevailed. was then a senator, and he showed her all forget the faces of the boys and the girls She persuaded city and county leaders the sights and even took her to Dwight in that little Welhausen Mexican school, to dedicate a city block across the street Eisenhower’s inauguration. and I remember even yet the pain of real- from the school as a park. Volunteers Florence spent the rest of her life advo- izing and knowing then that college was came together and built walkways, cating for the Hispanic community, often closed to practically every one of those benches and a bandstand. The park was driving sick or injured people to Santa children because they were too poor. And named Florita Plaza in my grandmother’s Rosa Hospital in San Antonio. She worked I think it was then that I made up my honor. on immunization campaigns and food mind that this nation could never rest The school and park became the hub drives and twisted arms for donations. She while the door to knowledge remained of the Mexican American community. was a great woman. closed to any American. So here, today, There was a dance and celebration almost Florence died in June 1963, when John- back on the campus of my youth, that door every Saturday night. Florence arranged son was vice president. He sent a huge floral is swinging open far wider than it ever for a surplus government building to be arrangement for her funeral. Five months did before.” moved to the park, and it served as a com- later, in the most tragic way, he became Lee Gaddis is chairman of T3, a marketing firm
MALTSBERGER: COURTESY LEE GADDIS.munity CLASS: COURTESY LBJ PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY center where she presided over president of the United States. founded by his wife, Gay.
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NORTH TEXAS AUDIENCE Circulation 527,000 • Readership 1,212,100 If North Texas Is Your Market, We’ve Got You Covered. Target customers close to home with SORRELLS FARMS PECANS the North Texas advertising section of Texas Co-op Power. Be part of a statewide magazine—without the statewide cost. Call or email today.
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TexasCoopPower.com November 2019 Texas Co-op Power 29 Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation (Required by 39 USC 3685)
1. Publication Title 2. Publication Number 3. Filing Date Texas Co-op Power 0540-560 October 1, 2019 4. Issue Frequency 5. Number of Issues Published Annually 6. Annual Subscription Price Monthly Twelve $7.50
7. Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication (Street, city, county, state, and ZIP+4) 1122 Colorado St., 24th Fl, Austin, Travis, Texas 78701-2167 8. Complete Mailing Address of Headquarters or General Business Office of Publisher 1122 Colorado St., 24th Fl, Austin, Travis, Texas 78701-2167 9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing Editor Publisher Texas Electric Cooperatives, 1122 Colorado St., 24th Fl,
Austin, Texas 78701-2167 Editor Charles Lohrmann, 1122 Colorado St., 24th Fl, Austin, TX 78701 Managing Editor Karen Nejtek, 1122 Colorado St., 24th Fl, Austin, TX 78701 10. Owner Full Name Complete Mailing Address Texas ECs, Inc.,is a nonprofit association of rural electric cooperatives organized as a cooperative membership corporation under Article 1528b, Texas Civil Statutes. Its members are: Bailey County EC Association, Muleshoe; Bandera EC, Bandera; Bartlett EC, Bartlett; Big Country EC, TCP E-newsletter Roby; Bluebonnet EC, Giddings; Bowie-Cass EC, Douglassville; Brazos EC,
IN Waco; Bryan Texas Utilities, Bryan; Central Texas EC, Fredericksburg; E-NEWS Get our best content Cherokee County EC Association, Rusk; Coleman County EC, Coleman; Comanche County EC Association, Comanche; Concho Valley EC, San YOUR INBOX delivered to your Angelo; Cooke County EC Association, Muenster; CoServ EC, Corinth; inbox every month! Deaf Smith EC, Hereford; Deep East Texas EC, San Augustine; East Texas EC, Nacogdoches; Fannin County EC, Bonham; Farmers EC, SIGN UP TODAY Greenville; Fayette EC, LaGrange; Fort Belknap EC, Olney; Golden Spread Feature stories, EC, Amarillo; Grayson-Collin EC, Van Alstyne; Greenbelt EC, Wellington; recipe and photo Guadalupe Valley EC, Gonzales; Hamilton County EC Association, Hamilton; Harmon Electric Association, Hollis, Oklahoma; Heart of Texas contest winners EC, McGregor; HILCO EC, Itasca; Houston County EC, Crockett; J-A-C EC, SIGN UP TODAY AT and more—get it Bluegrove; Jackson EC, Edna; Jasper-Newton EC, Kirbyville; Karnes EC, Karnes City; Lamar County EC Association, Paris; Lamb County EC, TexasCoopPower.com all in the e-newsletter! Littlefield; Lea County EC, Lovington, New Mexico; Lighthouse EC, Floydada; Lower Colorado River Authority, Austin; Lyntegar EC, Tahoka; Magic Valley EC, Mercedes; Medina EC, Hondo; Mid-South Synergy, Navasota; Navarro County EC, Corsicana; Navasota Valley EC, Franklin; North Plains EC, Perryton; Northeast Texas EC, Longview; Nueces EC, Robstown; Panola-Harrison EC, Marshall; Pedernales EC, Johnson City; Rayburn Country EC, Rockwall; Rita Blanca EC, Dalhart; Rusk County EC, DONNA STOTTLEMYER Henderson; Sam Houston EC, Livingston; Sam Rayburn Dam G&T EC, Nacogdoches; San Bernard EC, Bellville; San Miguel EC, Jourdanton; San LOVE ON A LEASH (Eldorado chapter) Patricio EC, Sinton; South Plains EC, Lubbock; South Texas EC, Victoria; provides free pet therapy services. Southwest Rural Electric Association, Tipton, Oklahoma; Southwest Texas POWER OF OUR PEOPLE | JULY 2019 EC, Eldorado; Swisher EC, Tulia; Taylor EC, Merkel; Tex-La EC of Texas, Nacogdoches; Tri-County EC, Azle; Trinity Valley EC, Kaufman; United Cooperative Services, Cleburne; Upshur-Rural EC, Gilmer; Victoria EC
Company, Victoria; Wharton County EC, El Campo; Wise EC, Decatur; Wood County EC, Quitman. 11. Known Bondholders, Mortgagees, and Other Security Holders None 12. Tax Status Has Not Changed During Preceding 12 Months 13. Publication Title 14. Issue Date for Circulation Data Below Texas Co-op Power October 1, 2019 15. Average No. Copies Each Issue Actual No. Copies of Single Issue Extent and Nature of Circulation During Preceding 12 Months Published Nearest to Filing Date a. Total Number of Copies 1,609,196 1,632,636 b. Paid and/or (1) Mailed Outside-County 1,597,829 1,621,220 POWER Paid Subscriptions Requested (2-4) In County, Sales Through Circulation Dealers and Carriers, Other mailed none none c. Total Paid and/or Requested 1,597,829 1,621,220 d. Free Distribution (1) Free Outside-County Mailed Copies 5,121 5,099 OF OUR (2-3) Free In-County/Other none none (4) Free Distributed Outside the Mail 5,589 5,649 e. Total Free Distribution 10,709 10,748 f. Total Distribution 1,608,538 1,631,968 g. Copies not Distributed 658 668 PEOPLE h. Total 1,609,196 1,632,636 i. Percent Paid and/or Requested 99.33% 99.34% 16. Average No. Copies Each Issue Actual No. Copies of Single Issue $100 Extent and Nature of Circulation During Preceding 12 Months Published Nearest to Filing Date WINNER Nominate someone today! a. Paid Electronic Copies none none b. Total Paid Print Copies 1,597,829 1,621,220 c. Total Print Distribution 1,608,538 1,631,968 d. Percent Paid 99.33% 99.34% 17. Publication of Statement of Ownership Tell us about somebody who improves the quality of life in your community. Email your nom- Publication required. Will be printed in the November ination to [email protected]. Include the person’s name, co-op aliation and a short description 2019 issue of this publication.
of his or her work in the community. Featured nominees will receive a $100 donation for their cause. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner Date
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30 Texas Co-op Power November 2019 TexasCoopPower.com SUPER COUPON SUPER COUPON
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