Couple travels many miles to bring supplies
It probably wasn’t the way Malachi Salazar and his girlfriend, Karina Osorio, wanted to return home.
It probably wasn’t the way Malachi Salazar and his girlfriend, Karina Osorio, wanted to return home.
Texas Farm Bureau Insurance client Alicia Moncallo and her granddaughter, Alyla Williams, 6, get a hamburger lunch at the Dawson County Farm Bureau offi ce here.
Youths attending Vacation Bible School at the Lamesa Church of Christ compiled first-responder baskets for the police department, sheriff’s office, fire department and emergency medical services pe
Although everyone should still take appropriate precautions, recent rains have significantly lowered the risk of Fourth-of-July fireworks – or anything else, for that matter – igniting wildland fir
Lamesa’s 13- to 15-year-old Babe Ruth baseball all-stars have finished their season but not without proving themselves as a team to watch in the future.
The Golden Tornadoes’ search for a new head baseball coach is finished.
They didn’t even have to look outside their own dugout.
Having a mother who spent most of her career in health care and a dad who once coached, Jordan Martinez was basically born into his profession.
For about a year or so, Crestview Baptist Church here did not have a pastor. Supporters would temporarily step into the job to help out with pastoring the church’s 40-plus members.
The Dawson County Public Library is hosting an array of activities for all age groups for the month of July.
Tin Buck Coffee Shop owners Jim and Andrea Rodriguez opened their business Tuesday with a ribbon cutting ceremony by the Lamesa Area Chamber of Commerce. The business, located at 528 N.
P.O. Box 710
Lamesa, TX 79331
806-872-2177