rosebudnew
Texas Hunting, Fishing Licenses on Sale Aug. 15
Fall is upon us and for hunters and anglers that can only mean one thing, it is time to renew hunting and fishing licenses. Before taking the boat out or hitting the field, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) reminds hunters and anglers to purchase their new licenses for the 2025-26 season.
Proud to Serve Rural Texas
One of my favorite parts of serving you as state representative is being able to effect real change for real rural Texans. The very best way to do that is by listening directly to you. I’m constantly crisscrossing our district, attending community events, and sitting down with folks to hear your concerns and ideas. In fact, many of the bills I introduced this session were ideas that first came from a constituent of House District 13. That’s why I always encourage you—if you have an idea for how to make our laws work better for rural Texas—reach out. Some of the best legislation in Austin starts as a conversation here at home.
Social Security Matters
Dear Rusty: In your answer to the retired U.S. Navy veteran about why he is forced to enroll in Medicare, you focused on military TriCare’s requirement for the member to enroll in Medicare. But you said nothing about regular VA health care. If a non-career veteran is eligible for VA health care, couldn’t that be used in place of Medicare?
In The Right Hand
August, a month that starts us thinking about the coming of Autumn. Maybe it is the dry and the heat that makes us relish the thought of cooler days. Or maybe it is a time that sees schools starting, bringing the promise of Friday Night Lights and that pastime called football. Maybe it is getting us prepared for mornings with just a tad of a cool touch that stirs the slumbering strings of a hunting trip across fields ripe for the harvest and we relish the thought of our ancestors that set the pattern for us. We are at a time when a lot of girls and boys and young women and men will be starting a new year at school. And for all of these students the “new year” brings the stress associated with dealing with an unknown ingredient. Most of these students will welcome the challenge, though they may experience a feeling of trepidation. I see an analogy of the challenge these students will experience and my Mom’s biscuit making! I am sure she had to wonder if everything would work out, just as students wonder about their “new year.” Yes, she knew how to make biscuits, but Mammy left nothing to chance. Her day would start early, usually before daylight and when she had the coffee ready, she poured a cup, sat at the table with her Bible open to her reading for the day and said a prayer to her Lord, asking that He guide her through the day. You see, Mammy’s biscuits were really good, because one of her main ingredients was “the touch of the Master’s Hand.” Yes, her prayer time was one of the ingredients that she always used. In the same way, students. teachers, and school officials might find a smoother start to their school year if they let their stress and worries be touched by the Master’s Hand. If they would find the time to have a quiet moment and ask God to prepare their path, to guide them along the way. My prayer for all students, teachers, and school officials is to find a moment in their day to get quite, thank our Lord for their blessings, and pray for “the touch of the Master’s Hand” to help them make good decisions and to guide their paths. This poem is not about biscuit making or starting to school, but in anything you do, you are never wrong when you start out by putting the current situation in “The Right Hand!”


