Parker County Today January 2016 | Page 31

in the hands of the communities where they are located. 
“I think as long as people want to deal with family businesses, they’ll be around,” Judy said, adding she receives regular calls from customers who choose to buy locally. 
“I’m sure they need the chains (stores) and all, and there’s a place for that,” Judy said. “But I think as long as you can offer, to quote City Pharmacy, ‘service the chains can only dream about,’ we’ll be around.”
Well, that’s a pleasant vision, but at 58 years old, how long can Texas Butane keep running?
“You know I see a sixth generation taking over one of these days,” Judy said. “Actually, they’re already working in the business. The two youngest members of our family are already working here. They pose for our company calendar and we pay them for doing it too.”

 Mary Kemp and Leon Tanner with their Nebo Valley Press history books PA R K E R C O U N T Y T O D AY moved in for the jobs. You begin to see that it’s not the old Weatherford we were raised in.”
Morris said the county’s business emphasis has moved from agriculture to industrial to retail, where it rests now, claiming some family-owned businesses as casualties of progress.
“Years ago, the old Carter-Ivey Hardware store was the hub of everything going on,” he said. “Those stores are gone. “I suppose you have to have a balance of both (chain and familyowned stores). I know you could walk into the Carter-Ivey store and if you needed something, a certain bolt or a certain tool, the clerk would go right back there and get it for you. Now you have to go find it yourself. The volume of items they have in the stores now is so great, you have to go hunt for it. I kind of miss that hometown feel.”
Judy says there are very real benefits to dealing with locally-owned entrepreneurs.
“We can make decisions overnight to change,” she said. “We don’t have to go through a corporation to see if we can make a change, or to make a donation, anything like that.”
Both Morris and Judy said the futures of family-owned businesses are largely JANUARY 2016 “It’s worked out real well. Everybody knows their jobs and we all pull together when something goes wrong. You can count on them. You can count on family.“
 But, how do you meld non-family members into a small business?
“Our employees, to us, are like family, too,” Judy said citing as an example a woman who has worked in the store office since V.E. Kemp, Jr. died nearly 17 years ago.
“She took care of Daddy,” Judy said. “He didn’t talk or walk for nine years. When he passed away, we thought, ‘what are we gonna do with Janie?’ She’d turned into family. She moved right up here into this office and she was here for 15 years. They’re just family, even if they’re not family.”
With the changing commercial face of Weatherford, the Whites see the value of their new corporate neighbors, but they don’t plan on changing the way they do business. “The box stores and several new banks have come in,” Morris pointed out. “There has been a cosmetic change here in the last 15 years or so. With those stores and big corporations that have come in, so have the jobs. A lot of new people have History Books and Harmony Mary Kemp had been looking for a partner to work with her on book writing projects. She also needed help identifying some photos taken when she was a child. She sent letters and emails in an effort to connect to someone from that time. The last time she had heard from her childhood friend Leon Tanner, he’d been living in California. But it was Leon who answered her inquiry. He was able to identify one of the children in a photo that included Mary. That mystery child was Leon. The ranch the Kemps had purchased in 1975 had been in Leon’s family for more than a century. But of course, Mary knew that, but it was just one more common interest the two of them shared. Leon also had a great grandfather who signed the Parker’s petition in 1855, alongside Mr. McDonald. Turns out that Tanner had been looking for someone to work with him, to help bring the concept of his book into reality. The two old friends began working together and eventually partnered in writing a book that was based on a collection of diaries by Tanner’s father, called A Parker County Cowboy; other books followed. 
 Together, the partners produced half a dozen books about Parker 29