Page 4 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1974 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1974 TB ^B Town compares to JJ Walker s Desperado Plenty of beer-drinkin , little dominoes By BRUCE SUBLETT Special to the Batt “There was old men with beer guts and dominoes, lying bout their lives while they played. ” —Jerry Jeff Walker It was hot and clear in Hearne on October 1. The lit tle town was quiet, like everyone was inside for an af ternoon nap. The Chamber of Commerce office was closed in spite of the sign that says Open 8A-5P. The highway patrol and Western Union offices were closed too, because they share the same tiny building. Right across the street is an oasis for a hot and thirsty travel ler. The Hearne Domino Palace is a perfect example of the legendary Texas beer joint. It’s dim and cool inside, even though there is no air con ditioner. Henry Sadler, the barten der, says what will you have and you tell him a cold Pearl. He pulls a frosted mug from the freezer and draws off a cold One of the other customers has gone out to the movie thea ter and brought back three car tons of popcorn. For a while, everybody is busy eating the salty kernels. Henry smiles be cause he knows everybody will have another beer after the It's getting about supper time, so you get up to leave. Henry says you boys come back, now, and somehow you get the feeling he means it. Out of the cool dark into the hot bright street and two tough-sounding street rods rumble past, soul music pour ing out the windows with ear- splitting volume, welcominJ you back to the real world. Anil then you know: the HeanJ Domino Palace isn’tjustabetl joint, it’s Escape. AGGIELAND , FLOWER & GIFT 209 University 846-5825 Football Mums - Personalized and Custom-Designed GIG ’EM AGS! I I I si I I i Js “LETS-GET- ACQUAINTED” V2 PRICE SALE ON TOPS & PANTS Buy One Item at regular price and Get Another of Equal Value (or less) for Vz price Pa luce “HOME OF THE QUEEN SIZES” SPECIAL SNEAK PREV. SUNDAY AT 7:30 pm — (McQueen Escapes Again) -tli-A LACJ. Now Showing 6 pm-7:45-9:30 Streisand ui _ I;jin' ! v T- ■ .. *> ^' j.;//j e «t© r 1 SaKe** Skyway Twin i Ot.vr-IN ^2900t.29T« PK *22- 3 3 00 QUEEN West Screen at 7:30 pm “Challenge” (PG) Tonite at 7:30-9:15 “Black Godfather” (R) one. There is just one other per son at the bar, an old man with one arm in a cast. He’s drinking Budweiser, pouring it out of the can into a seven-ounce Pearl glass. He methodically crushes each can when it’s empty with his one good hand. H e doesn’t bother to call Henry for another beer, he just goes behind the bar and gets one. While he’s back there he asks if you’ll have one more. None of the other five men in the place are playing dominoes, but the tables are ready and a sign on the wall gives the prices: 20 cents a loss for two players, 15 cents for three and 10 cents for four. Henry looks up from watch ing nobody playing dominoes and notices you’re empty. He gets you another beer and you start talking about how hot it is and how there’s sure not any doves in the country. Henry says yes it is and no there’s not, but old Jim over there has been doing pretty good on squirrels. Sure enough, old Jim is put ting 13 squirrels in a pot of salt water to soak overnight. He says he’s going to make stew tomorrow in the bar’s little kitchen. Old Jim looks about 35, in hunter’s coveralls and a red baseball cap. In the process of filling the pot, old Jim has spilled some water on the floor. Henry tells him he’ll whip his ass if he ever does it again. Jim says he’ll mop it up and that will be the only time the floor has ever been clean. Everybody laughs. popcorn. Three more men come in. Two of them order beer, but one gets a small can of grapef ruit juice. He goes outside and returns with a big insulated mug of ice. Six ounces of grapefruit juice shouldn’t begin to fill the mug, but he only pours in half of it before the mug is full. Inevitably, talk turns to the recent double murder in Hearne. Each man acts as judge and jury, pronouncing sentence on the suspect. They all agree that he is guilty. The man with the powerful grapef ruit juice explains that trouble has been brewing since the suspect ran off to Mexico with the victims’ daughter. Most of them think the police should have killed the suspect instead of wounding him. One says it would save the taxpayers a lot of money that way. When most of the patrons leave about 6 o’clock to go home and eat supper, Henry comes over to gripe about his life and hard times. His red, leathery skin shows he hasn’t worked inside all of his life. He’s down on the owner of the place, whom he hasn’t seen since the previous Friday. He says this would be a real nice place if the owner would put in an air conditioner, but then he says he wouldn’t do it if he were the owner because of the elec tricity bill. Henry says he usually closes up about 9, since all the night business goes to the three honky-tonks up north of town. Justice survives transition from railroad to ghost tou By VK Spec : dosei (Verei (closer to y is closi Oc kuperinte [is up hf s lndep< Adviser discusses ‘'contrasumers At 9:15 pm “The Cheerleaders” (R) By KANAYA MAHENDRA Staff Writer Dr. Albert J. Fritsch, former ad viser to Ralph Nader, spoke Thurs day night on the topic, “The Con trasumers: A Citizens Guide to Re source Construction. According to Fritsch contrasumer means against consumers. Fritsch said that people should find out how much energy each in dividual is using and find out what they are doing. Sighting an example Dr. Fritsch said that people give up colored toilet paper but drive big cars and think they are saving energy. Dr. Fritsch compared the con sumption of energy in 1876 to what is projected for 1976. It is better to conserve energy than to expand the sources of energy, said Fritsch. A hundred years ago people were heavy con sumers of energy but they had a slower life. Today it’s pretty good where we are, we have made prog ress. It is difficult to pin down the quality and quantity then and now. Fritsch further commented that increased consumption of energy has dropped the net energy and we must change to environmental energy sources, like solar energy or windmills. 1876 Fuels in Trillion B.T.U. Mineral Fuels . . . 1,600 Water 182 Fuel 2,868 1976 Fuels in Trillion B.T. U. 80,000 3,650 275 Total 100,000,000 387,161,000 horsepower per per son 93 horsepower per per son By STEVE BALES Special to the Batt It was hot in Millican at two o’clock in the afternoon. The sun had finally come out of hiding after a week of record-breaking rain in Brazos County and making up foi lost time. No one was in sight, but the sign in the tiny post office said open. In side, behind the one-window counter, stood a woman about 40. The only person in town that knew anything about the history of Millican was Fletcher L. Pool, the justice of the peace, she said. But he was in Galveston for back surgery. All she knew was what she had read in the newspaper articles from time to time, something about Millican being a Confederate railhead in the Civil War. Something like that. Oh yes, Mrs. Dora Langford might help. Better stop at Dockery’s store and try to call her first to make sure she’s home and to get her to lock up her three dogs. Dockery’s store was a small place with few goods and high prices. The lady there said that the phone could only be used on local calls. Just dial the last four numbers to get a ring. No one answered at Mrs. Langford’s. The lady at the store said that Mrs. Fletcher Pool was at home and she knew as much about Millican as her husband did. Her number is there on the wall above the phone, along with the a dozen or so more of the people here. A small, frail voice answered the phone with a “hello ”. She said she knew a little about Milliean’s history and that she would be glad to talk about it. She said to just come back to the post office and turn right on the gravel road and go along till you get to the old, white house on the right. You can’t miss it, it’s been here for more than 130 years. The Pool’s place was old allright. The sandstone and mortar chimney attached to the house looked as if it had seen better days. The mortar had turned to powder in places, leaving large holes in the chimney. The front door opened and an el derly woman walked out on the porch. She said she was Mrs. Pool and to come on in and sit a spell. The old house had a musty smell of rotting wood and dirt that had been ground into the floor over the years. From the living room you could see four other rooms and the front porch. The fireplace had been boarded up and there were a few nick-nacks on the mantel. Mrs. Pool sat down and picked up East Screen at 7:35 “Our Times” (PG) At 9:25 pm Jane Fonda “Steelyard Blues” (PG) Tonite at 7:30 “Walking Tali” at 9:30 pm “Road Hustler” Coming Oct. 23rd “The Sting” We're talking to over 10,000 success- oriented college seniors on campuses all over the country. We'll hire 936. Yes, /Etna Life & Casualty is choosy. We want winners. College-trained people whose personal qualities give them the drive and maturity to succeed. We're prepared to offer them action-oriented careers both at our Hartford headquarters and in /Etna offices in 115 leading cities. And the choice of careers is as broad as you'd expect from one of the world's leading insurance and financial service organizations. If it's sales or marketing that appeals to you, we have all kinds of opportunities, both salaried and commission. Data processing? /Etna is into some of the most varied and sophisticated systems work in the business world. Accounting? Choose from a host of different openings. Or actuarial. Underwriting. Claims. Investments. A dozen other areas. In fact, we can offer just about any college-trained person a career suited to his or her abilities and interests. All /Etna's career areas have one thing in common. For the individual willing to work hard, the rewards are large. Show us decisiveness, discipline and self-reliance. Prove to us you're goal-oriented with a proven success pattern. Convince us that you've got what it takes. We'll take it from there. If all this sounds good, you've already started in the right direction. Contact: Texas A&M Placement Office before Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1974 You get attion with >Etna LIFE & CASUALTY An equal opportunity employer and A Jobs lor Veterans Company an envelope with a bunch of yel lowed newspaper clippings in it. She said she had been keeping them for a long time. Most of the clippings had Fletcher Pool mentioned in them somewhere because everyone that came to Millican looking for its history talked to him. The old woman smiled and said she knew most of what her husband had been able to find out, how Millican got its name and what life here used to be like. She sat and thought a while and then she started her story. Millican was named for Elliott M. Millican, the son of Robert Millican who was one of Stephen F. Austin’s original 300 colonists, who came to Texas from South Carolina. Elliott was given title to two citios of land (which equals about 8,857 acres) by the Mexican Government in March, 1831. He served as sheriff of Navasota County in 1941. Brazos County was created that same year but wasn’t organized until 1843; the name was changed from Navasota to Brazos in 1842. Elliott also served as a representative and later a senator of the Texas congress. In 1853 the first Texas railroad had been completed from Alleyton to Galveston to Beaumont to Hous ton and by 1859 to Millican. The second leg of the railroad from Houston to Millican was called the Houston and Texas Central (H. & T. C.) With the outbreak of the Civil War the railroad couldn’t be ex tended any farther north so Millican became the northernmost terminus of the H. & T. C. As wagons and traders poured into Millican from all around the population boomed to 6,000. Sanger-Harris department store in Dallas first started in Milli can during the Civil War. Confederate soldiers came to Camp Speight, located at Millican, for training and then to march over land to Louisiana and Arkansas. Others went by train to Houston and Galveston and then from there by boat to New Orleans to be sent up the Mississippi river tojoijj trans- M ississippi campaign. After the war the railroad i northward taking with it manydj people and merchants of Mil In 1866 a cholera epidemic! the town and claimed aboutl lives. A year later a yellow epidemic struck and took morei ilose anc aulds, a ily is clo spent hi ie district A&M aster’s t [e’s con mty schc 350 lives. Mrs. Pool saidthati Srural sch times whole families diedandi houses were burned down will bodies still in them, tokeepthei ease from spreading. The tion dwindled quickly; mostoli people that hadn’t got the di packed up and left before caught it. By 1868, the population! dropped to about 1,200. Theti didn’t change much until £ World War I when the traflico: main road that ran from Navason Bryan, through Millican, nw eastward to the new Highwij With the loss of the traffic iw the remaining merchants movd more prosperous locations Millican now has the postofe one small store, two churches about 1(X) people. |a science ;h school iition sin t over t iOol distr aulds r< d ones iblems. The ' peron, The i im Cam Thosi II be sol La Petite Academy of Dance REGISTER NOW CLASSES START SEPT 3 Yr. Olds Thru Adults TAP-BALLET-JAZZ Classes Limited JAN JONES HAMMOND Teacher 3406 S. College 823-8626 ( M Mi Corp d const the ad The held ii esent p Mov ABC ature tl hree m ottom ; The UBMJ Our gang THE CORN DOG THE ..7^ x// POLISH W SANDWICH 1 ! ——-"-i Meet our gang of delicious hot dogs. i i We make ’em to order with your favorite topping. And we make ’em fast so there’s seldom any waiting. Send some one for a sackful tonight. l I OPEN SUNDAY-THURSDAY UNTIL MIDNIGHT OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY UNTIL 2 a m. FI North Texas Avenue (at 30th Street) L Wranerschnrtzel J