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Feb 13, 2018 13:24:13   #
mongo Loc: TEXAS
 
Kazudy wrote:
I was born and raised in McAllen, Texas 78501, 7 miles west of Alamo Texas. 7 miles north of the Mexican border. It's a lot warmer here them them Northern States thank God.


I'm retired to Edinburg, Texas, and loving it!

SEMPER FI

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Feb 13, 2018 14:20:21   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Arch, I'm wondering how Happy, Texas was left off the list of Texas towns with unusual names.


Beats me Slat! It's a nice, Happy little bump in the road.

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Feb 13, 2018 14:27:57   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
mongo wrote:
I'm retired to Edinburg, Texas, and loving it!

SEMPER FI

Belated congratulations, Mongo You have become that rarest of inimitable, indomitable superior beings...a Texas Marine.

Maintain, ole buddy (if you can), our unmatched modesty.

Reply
 
 
Feb 13, 2018 14:30:07   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
archie bunker wrote:
Beats me Slat! It's a nice, Happy little bump in the road.

I recall Happy as being a town in which one could be rattlesnake-bit in the post office.

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Feb 13, 2018 14:50:03   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
I recall Happy as being a town in which one could be rattlesnake-bit in the post office.


Well, yeah, but all that aside, it's a really Happy place! Cept in wintertime.....

Reply
Feb 13, 2018 15:14:12   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
slatten49 wrote:
A lesson on Texas History and Geography. Little known, but true facts. This is a must read for all Texans, used-to-be Texans, adopted Texans or wanna-be Texans, and sent to me by a non-Texan, but considers herself the 'Head-Hen-In-Charge (HHIC):

Texas has many, many towns – with some unusual names!

Just Texas
Pep, Texas 79353
Smiley, Texas 78159
Paradise, Texas 76073
Rainbow, Texas 76077
Sweet Home, Texas 77987
Comfort, Texas 78013 (in Kendall Co. you can live between Comfort and Welfare)
Friendship, Texas 76530
Valentine, Texas

Love the sun?
Sun City, Texas 78628
Sunrise, Texas 76661
Sunset, Texas 76270
Sundown, Texas 79372
Sunray, Texas 79086
Sunny Side, Texas 77423

Want something to eat?
Bacon, Texas 76301
Noodle, Texas 79536
Oatmeal, Texas 78605
Turkey, Texas 79261
Trout, Texas 75789
Sugar Land, Texas 77479
Salty, Texas 76567
Rice, Texas 75155
Pearland, Texas 77581
Orange, Texas 77630
And top it off with: Sweetwater, Texas 79556

Why travel to other US cities? Texas has them all!
Detroit, Texas 75436
Cleveland, Texas 75436
Colorado City, Texas 79512
Denver City, Texas 79323
Klondike, Texas 75448
Pittsburg, Texas 75686
Newark, Texas 76071
Nevada, Texas 75173
Memphis, Texas 79245
Miami, Texas 79059
Boston, Texas 75570
Santa Fe, Texas 77517
Tennessee Colony, Texas 75861
Reno, Texas 75462
Pasadena, Texas 77506
Columbus, Texas 78934

Feel like traveling outside the country?
Athens, Texas 75751
Canadian, Texas 79014
China, Texas 77613
Dublin, Texas 76446
Egypt, Texas 77436
Ireland, Texas 76538
Italy, Texas 76538
Turkey, Texas 79261
London, Texas 76854
New London, Texas 75682
Paris, Texas 75460
Palestine, Texas 75801

No need to travel to Washington D.C. Whitehouse, Texas 75791

We even have a city named after our planet! Earth, Texas 79031

We have a city named after our state: Texas City, Texas 77590

Exhausted? Energy, Texas 76452

Cold? Blanket, Texas 76432 & Winters, Texas 79567

Like to read about History?
Santa Anna, Texas 76878
Goliad, Texas 77963
Alamo, Texas 78516
Gun Barrel City, Texas 75156
Robert Lee, Texas 76945

Need Office Supplies? Staples, Texas 78670

Want to go into outer space? Venus, Texas 76084 & Mars, Texas 79062

You guessed it. It's on the state line. Texline, Texas 79087

For the kids...
Kermit, Texas 79745
Elmo, Texas 75118
Nemo, Texas 76070
Tarzan, Texas 79783
Winnie, Texas 77665
Sylvester, Texas 79560

Other city names in Texas , to make you smile......
Frognot, Texas 75424
Bigfoot, Texas 78005
Hogeye, Texas 75423
Cactus, Texas 79013
Notrees, Texas 79759
Best, Texas 76932
Veribest, Texas 76886
Kickapoo, Texas 75763
Dime Box, Texas 77853
Old Dime Box, Texas 77853
Telephone, Texas 75488
Telegraph, Texas 76883
Whiteface, Texas 79379
Twitty, Texas 79079

And last but not least, the Anti-Al Gore City...Kilgore, Texas 75662

And our favorites...
Cut and Shoot, Texas 77303
Gun Barrell City, Texas 75147
Ding Dong, Texas
West, Texas (it’s in Central Texas )
and, of course, Muleshoe, Texas 79347

Here is what Jeff Foxworthy has to say about folks from Texas...

If someone in a Lowe's store offers you assistance and HE doesn't work there, you may live in Texas;

If you've worn shorts and a parka at the same time, you may live in Texas;

If you've had a lengthy telephone conversation with someone who dialed a wrong number, you may live in Texas;

If 'Vacation' means going anywhere south of Dallas for the weekend, you may live in Texas;

If you measure distance in hours, you may live in Texas;

If you know several people who have hit a deer more than once, you may live in Texas;

If you install security lights on your house and garage, but leave both unlocked, you may live in Texas;

If you carry jumper cables in your car and your wife knows how to use them, you may live in Texas;

If the speed limit on the highway is 55 mph --you're going 80 and everybody's passing you, you may live in Texas;

If you find 60 degrees 'a little chilly, you may live in Texas;

If you actually understand these jokes, and share them with all your Texas friends, you definitely live in Texas.

Here are some little known, very interesting facts about Texas

1. Beaumont to El Paso : 742 miles (763 miles Orange to El Paso)
2. Beaumont to Chicago : 770 miles (894 miles north to south tip)
3. El Paso is closer to California than to Dallas
4. World's first rodeo was in Pecos , July 4, 1883.
5. The Flagship Hotel in Galveston is the only hotel in North America built over water. Destroyed by Hurricane Ike -2008!
6. The Heisman Trophy was named after John William Heisman who was the first full-time coach at Rice University in Houston.
7. Brazoria County has more species of birds than any other area in North America.
8. Aransas Wildlife Refuge is the winter home of North America 's only remaining flock of whooping cranes (and many alligators)
9. Jalapeno jelly originated in Lake Jackson in 1978.
10. The worst natural disaster in U.S. history was in 1900, caused by a hurricane, in which over 8,000 lives were lost on Galveston Island.
11. The first word spoken from the moon, July 20,1969, was "Houston," but the space center was actually in Clear Lake City at the time.
12. King Ranch in South Texas is larger than Rhode Island.
13. Tropical Storm Claudette brought a U.S. rainfall record of 43' in 24 hours in and around Alvin in July of 1979.
14. Texas is the only state to enter the U.S. by TREATY, (known as the Constitution of 1845 by the Republic of Texas to enter the Union )
instead of by annexation. This allows the Texas Flag to fly at the same height as the U.S. Flag, and may divide into 5 states.
15. A Live Oak tree near Fulton is estimated to be 1500 years old.
16. Caddo Lake is the only natural lake in the state.
17. Dr Pepper was invented in Waco in 1885. There is no period in Dr Pepper.
18. Texas has had six capital cities: Washington -on- the Brazos, Harrisburg , Galveston ,Velasco, West Columbia and Austin .. and San Antonio was the regional capital of New-Spain.
19. The Capitol Dome in Austin is the only dome in the U.S. which is taller than the Capitol Building in Washington DC (by 7 feet).
20. The San Jacinto Monument is the tallest free standing monument in the world and it is taller than the Washington monument.
21. The name 'Texas' comes from the Hasini Indian word 'tejas' meaning friends. Tejas is not Spanish for Texas.
22. The State Mascot is the Armadillo (an interesting bit of trivia about the armadillo is they always have four babies. They have one egg, which splits into four, and they either have four males or four females.)
23. The first domed stadium in the U.S. was the Astrodome in Houston.

Cowboy's Ten Commandments posted on the wall at Cross Trails Church in Fairlie, Texas :
(1) Just one God.
(2) Honor yer Ma & Pa.
(3) No telling tales or gossipin'.
(4) Git yourself to Sunday meeting.
(5) Put nothin' before God.
(6) No foolin' around with another fellow's gal.
(7) No killin'.
(8) Watch yer mouth.
(9) Don't take what ain't yers.
(10) Don't be hankerin' for yer buddy's stuff.

Y'all git all that?

Lord, keep Your arm around my shoulder and Your hand over my mouth.
A lesson on Texas History and Geography. Little k... (show quote)


Oh yeah? Well, AR is truly an international State: We have

Paris, AR
Moscow, AR
Scotland, AR
Dublin, AR
London, AR....................

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Feb 13, 2018 15:23:43   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
lpnmajor wrote:
Oh yeah? Well, AR is truly an international State: We have

Paris, AR
Moscow, AR
Scotland, AR
Dublin, AR
London, AR....................

Sure, but as in Texas, those are Reader's Digest versions of world class destinations.

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Feb 13, 2018 15:33:24   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Sure, but as in Texas, those are Reader's Digest versions of world class destinations.


Yep..............and they all speak English. At least, I think it's English.

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Feb 13, 2018 17:33:11   #
SGM B Loc: TEXAS but live in Alabama now
 
archie bunker wrote:
I believe we were born in the same hospital, weren't we? And your dad was right about that fence! It also had real skinny posts holding it up!
I haven't been up to Sunray in a couple of years, but last time I was there, it's become quite the bustling metropolis. Heck, they have a Dairy Queen, and everything now! I used to deliver office supplies to the Happy State Bank there on Wednesday founded by a guy from Happy, Texas. Happy is just a rock throw south of here.

Ain't Texas great?
I believe we were born in the same hospital, weren... (show quote)


St Anthony's I believe, however I'm not sure it is still there. Seems there is a big hospital on the West side off I-40 - I think it's called SBA or something.
My folks used that bank, but then it was Sunray State Bank.
In looking thru Slats list, I don't think I saw Peacock or Turkey or the town my mother was born in, S of Childress - she called it High Point Community. I have been there years ago, nothing left but one old house.
Good times were had in Texas. Oh, almost forgot...there was an old wood frame, flat roof hotel just N of my folks house in Sunray. Me and a few of my renegade friends used to go down the alley and smoke Camels the oldest one of us stole from his old man. Well, the hotel burned to the ground one Saturday and fortunately for me, I went to Dumas with mom and dad to the Polar Pantry to buy groceries and boxed meat for the freezer. Had I been home, I would have been in the big middle of that. The other 3 boys got caught and if memory serves (that was 60 years ago), those boys folks had to pay $1000 each to pay for that old run down hotel. Dad said the owner should have paid the boys because the lot was worth more bare than it was with the hotel on it.
I wonder, maybe the DQ was built on that lot. LOL! It was about 2 blocks into town from the S and was on the W side of Main Street. Hmmmmm...

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Feb 13, 2018 18:58:49   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
SGM B wrote:
St Anthony's I believe, however I'm not sure it is still there. Seems there is a big hospital on the West side off I-40 - I think it's called SBA or something.
My folks used that bank, but then it was Sunray State Bank.
In looking thru Slats list, I don't think I saw Peacock or Turkey or the town my mother was born in, S of Childress - she called it High Point Community. I have been there years ago, nothing left but one old house.
Good times were had in Texas. Oh, almost forgot...there was an old wood frame, flat roof hotel just N of my folks house in Sunray. Me and a few of my renegade friends used to go down the alley and smoke Camels the oldest one of us stole from his old man. Well, the hotel burned to the ground one Saturday and fortunately for me, I went to Dumas with mom and dad to the Polar Pantry to buy groceries and boxed meat for the freezer. Had I been home, I would have been in the big middle of that. The other 3 boys got caught and if memory serves (that was 60 years ago), those boys folks had to pay $1000 each to pay for that old run down hotel. Dad said the owner should have paid the boys because the lot was worth more bare than it was with the hotel on it.
I wonder, maybe the DQ was built on that lot. LOL! It was about 2 blocks into town from the S and was on the W side of Main Street. Hmmmmm...
St Anthony's I believe, however I'm not sure it is... (show quote)

Peacock, like Happy, was missing...but, under the 'want something to eat' listing of Texas towns, you can find Turkey. Turkey, of course, is the home town of Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys...the originators of Texas Swing music way back when.

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Feb 13, 2018 19:54:39   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
SGM B wrote:
St Anthony's I believe, however I'm not sure it is still there. Seems there is a big hospital on the West side off I-40 - I think it's called SBA or something.
My folks used that bank, but then it was Sunray State Bank.
In looking thru Slats list, I don't think I saw Peacock or Turkey or the town my mother was born in, S of Childress - she called it High Point Community. I have been there years ago, nothing left but one old house.
Good times were had in Texas. Oh, almost forgot...there was an old wood frame, flat roof hotel just N of my folks house in Sunray. Me and a few of my renegade friends used to go down the alley and smoke Camels the oldest one of us stole from his old man. Well, the hotel burned to the ground one Saturday and fortunately for me, I went to Dumas with mom and dad to the Polar Pantry to buy groceries and boxed meat for the freezer. Had I been home, I would have been in the big middle of that. The other 3 boys got caught and if memory serves (that was 60 years ago), those boys folks had to pay $1000 each to pay for that old run down hotel. Dad said the owner should have paid the boys because the lot was worth more bare than it was with the hotel on it.
I wonder, maybe the DQ was built on that lot. LOL! It was about 2 blocks into town from the S and was on the W side of Main Street. Hmmmmm...
St Anthony's I believe, however I'm not sure it is... (show quote)


It was St. Anthonys. On Polk street. It's now a vacant building. They teamed up, and built BSA. Babtist St. Anthony Hospital. It's quite a complex. Took me 20 minutes last week to find my newest grandson in that mess!

Here's one for an old Panhandler! I had a guy today freaking out over a delivery to the Nine ranch over at Slapout. Do you remember that place? Slapout, I mean.

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Feb 13, 2018 20:06:17   #
PaulPisces Loc: San Francisco
 
archie bunker wrote:
It was St. Anthonys. On Polk street. It's now a vacant building. They teamed up, and built BSA. Babtist St. Anthony Hospital. It's quite a complex. Took me 20 minutes last week to find my newest grandson in that mess!

Here's one for an old Panhandler! I had a guy today freaking out over a delivery to the Nine ranch over at Slapout. Do you remember that place? Slapout, I mean.


I do recall several slapouts at the Roundup Saloon in Dallas, but I have the feeling they are not exactly what you are referring to.


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Feb 14, 2018 09:42:39   #
SGM B Loc: TEXAS but live in Alabama now
 
archie bunker wrote:
It was St. Anthonys. On Polk street. It's now a vacant building. They teamed up, and built BSA. Babtist St. Anthony Hospital. It's quite a complex. Took me 20 minutes last week to find my newest grandson in that mess!

Here's one for an old Panhandler! I had a guy today freaking out over a delivery to the Nine ranch over at Slapout. Do you remember that place? Slapout, I mean.


Yep, Polk St!
If you are talking about Slapout, OK - I know exactly where it is.


Reply
Feb 14, 2018 10:25:13   #
Kazudy
 
slatten49 wrote:
Heck, Kazudy, your place is only half-way across the state from me, a comfortable 8-9 hours drive from Lake Whitney, NW of Waco.


Slatten49, I lived in Detroit,Mi. in the 60's and 70's and enjoyed driving to what is called The Rio Grande Valley, when we hit Texas we were barely have way there. Yep it's a big state. My grandfather was born in Waco, he was a baker in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Have a nice day paison.

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Feb 14, 2018 10:30:54   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Kazudy wrote:
Slatten49, I lived in Detroit,Mi. in the 60's and 70's and enjoyed driving to what is called The Rio Grande Valley, when we hit Texas we were barely have way there. Yep it's a big state. My grandfather was born in Waco, he was a baker in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Have a nice day paison.

I spent several years of my youth living in Waco. I now reside 30-35 miles northwest of there in an area off the shores of Lake Whitney.

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