Rongagin71 said:
Free testimonial - "Hunt's 100% Natural Tomato Ketchup, thicker&richer" is better than anything Heinz puts out, but Hunt's cheap brand of ketchup sucks.
Whataburger (spicy or regular) > Heinz >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hunt's
Rongagin71 said:
Free testimonial - "Hunt's 100% Natural Tomato Ketchup, thicker&richer" is better than anything Heinz puts out, but Hunt's cheap brand of ketchup sucks.
Shout out for Rudy's BBQ sauce for some uses that are similar…RED AG 98 said:Rongagin71 said:
Free testimonial - "Hunt's 100% Natural Tomato Ketchup, thicker&richer" is better than anything Heinz puts out, but Hunt's cheap brand of ketchup sucks.
Whataburger (spicy or regular) > Heinz >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hunt's
Quote:
STATE HIGHWAY NO. 124
Minute Order 016701, dated 09/26/1939
From Beaumont via Stowell to High Island. (Jefferson and Chambers Counties)
https://www.dot.state.tx.us/tpp/hwy/SH/SH0124.htm
Quote:
STATE HIGHWAY NO. 123
Minute Order 016701, dated 09/26/1939
From a point on US 81 near San Marcos via Seguin and Stockdale to Karnes City. (Hays, Guadalupe, Wilson, and Karnes Counties)
https://www.dot.state.tx.us/tpp/hwy/SH/SH0123.htm
Quote:
STATE HIGHWAY SPUR NO. 122
Minute Order 068352, dated 01/29/1974; Adm. Cir. 017-1974, 02/15/1974
From SL 13 in San Antonio, southeastward to US 181. (Bexar County)
https://www.dot.state.tx.us/tpp/hwy/SS/SS0122.htm
My Paternal grandparents' house was just down the street and so was my Great-Aunt's houseaggiewilliford said:
Days Left:122
East Columbia, Texas
Ammon Underwood House
The oldest surviving building in the two Columbias is the house of merchant and cotton planter Ammon Underwood, who came to Velasco in Mexican Texas in 1834 from Boston. It originally faced the Brazos River (East Columbia's real main street), just downstream from what had been East Columbia's Front Street commercial district. In 1838 Underwood bought what was a three-year-old, two-room frame house in partnership with widow Catherine Carson. He and Carson expanded it to its present appearance: a two-story, central-hall-plan house with a two-story front veranda incorporated beneath the side-gabled roof. The portion of the house to the left of the front door is the oldest part. In the 1860s, again around 1900, and in 1937 the house was moved on its lot as the eroding riverbank threatened to undermine it. During the c. 1900 moving, the house was rotated to face Main Street. The Underwood House was rehabilitated in 1975 by the First Capitol Historical Foundation for use as a historic house museum.
To the south of the Underwood House, also facing Main Street, is a side-gabled, single-pen log cabin with V-notched corner joints and an attached shed-roofed porch. The cabin is dated to about 1850 and was moved to this site by the First Capitol Historical Foundation from the John Sweeny Plantation in western Brazoria County. It was one of the slave houses on Sweeny's plantation. After the Civil War, it was home to Mark and Larkin Waddy, formerly enslaved people whose descendants occupied it as a tenant farm cottage until 1953.
Quote:
STATE HIGHWAY NO. 121
Minute Order 109187, dated 02/27/2003; DesLtr 01-2003, dated 04/04/2003
From SH 78 north of Bonham, southward to its junction with US 82; then concurrent southwestward with US 82; then from another point on US 82, southwestward via Randolph and Trenton to its junction with US 75; then concurrent with US 75 southward via McKinney to its junction with SH 121 west of Fairview; then southwestward via The Colony, Lewisville, Grapevine, and Bedford; then southwestward via Coppell to Ft. Worth, then southwestward and southward to US 67 in the city of Cleburne, a distance of approximately 100 miles. (Fannin, Collin, Denton, Dallas, Tarrant, and Johnson Counties)
https://www.dot.state.tx.us/tpp/hwy/SH/SH0121.htm
Quote:
STATE HIGHWAY LOOP NO. 120
Minute Order 042589, dated 09/27/1957; Adm. Cir. 046-1957, dated 11/07/1957
From US 82 west of Dickens, eastward and northward along the old route of SH 70 through the city of Dickens to a junction with SH 70 north of Dickens. (Dickens County)
https://www.dot.state.tx.us/tpp/hwy/SL/SL0120.htm
Rongagin71 said:
That is pretty remarkable.
Wonder how long it will last.
OK.
Edit to add a little article on how to use discarded tires.
I often go through Jacksboro on my way down to College Station so that I can get a Herd's Burger.dabo man said:
Texas County Courthouses:
119 Jack County, Jacksboro, Texas
I actually like this one. It is plain and detailed all at the same time. Kinda neat to start noticing all the ornamentation as you look at it moredabo man said:
Texas County Courthouses:
119 Jack County, Jacksboro, Texas
At Walmart, the M in Texas A&M stands for "Mississippi State"
— Someone's An Idiot (@SomeonesAnIdiot) June 22, 2015
(via @mwnfootball) pic.twitter.com/KZgLgIa8mI
nonregdaduck75 said:At Walmart, the M in Texas A&M stands for "Mississippi State"
— Someone's An Idiot (@SomeonesAnIdiot) June 22, 2015
(via @mwnfootball) pic.twitter.com/KZgLgIa8mI