The Celeste Courier (Celeste, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1965 Page: 4 of 4
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THE CELESTE COURIER — Friday, January 1,1965
COURIER AS GIFT
sx.
32
Printed by The Leonard Graphic
USE THIS ORDER BLANK
Name
Street
LISTINGS WANTED
City
State ......
CLEARANCE
SALE
FINAL
BUYING!
SWAPING!
RENTING!
NO MONEY
DOWN!
4
I
r
MOUNTING
FREE!
z.1
READ AND USE WANT ADS FOR QUICK RESULTS
PEE WEE'S TEXACO
YOUR GOODYEAR - TEXACO DISTRIBUTOR
LEONARD
Pho. 587-3610
Pho. 587-3306
I
II
••• --
MkOOD^EAR
Enclosed find check or money order for $
Send The Celeste Courier one year to —
Every new tire has
Goodyear’s new
These tires are
like new. Save!
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Swindell
visited Mrs. Clemmie Owens in
Leonard last Wednesday.
JACK BARBEE
Phone 587-3524 or 587-2173
B & B REAL ESTATE
PHO. 587-2173 — 587-3378
LEONARD
Dtata mN
Mtn
more exhibitionist among the
youth will rally to any “cause.”
Fortunately for the nation,
when they eventually acquire
the responsibility of making a
living and of a family, this en-
thusiasm for “causes” becomes
tempered with mature judg-
ment.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$2.00 a year in Hunt County
$2.50 a year sent elsewhere
$3.00 per year sent overseas
Think It Over
O.K. FEED MILL
Leonard, Texas
JEAN D. TONEY, Publisher
Drawer 38, Celeste, Texas
$2.00
and up
The Celeste Courier
Published Every Friday
g
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7T
1
EASY PAY TERMS
As Low As $1.25 Weekly
FOR A FULL SET!
e
NEW TREADS
Retreads on
sound tire bodies
or your own tires
ALL SIZES
ONE LOW
PRICE
$10.95
HIGH TREAD
USED TIRES
• Many Miles Left
• Many Major Brands
The Leonard Graphic
Phone 587-3303 Leonard, Texas
CELESTE, TEXAS
THE CELESTE COURIER
' ■ i
■I
GOOD/YEAR
I
Holiday visitors with (Ml*. and
teAco
CESWK18MMMB0BK
B. & B.
Real Estate Agency
FOR SALE
Coin Operated Automatic
, 6 dryers,
STRAYED
From pasture four mill
of Celeste—3 mixed
cows with C on right hip ki
under left, and cropped
ear. If found notify
Clymer Crabb
Pho. 587-2139 — Leonard,
We are glad to have a down town Texaco Service Station to serve your car
needs. In appreciation of your business on January 2,1965, we will give the
famous S. & H. Green Stamps with all retail sales. This does include Good-
year Tires and Delco Batteries.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. ___ ____ ______
j Swindell over the holidays were Speedqueen Laundry,
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Swindell and with 25x100 ft. air conditioned
Janice of Palestine, Mr. and Mrs. brick building.
Glen Swindell, Missy Duane and
Tony, Garland, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Martin, Ricky and Richard and
Miss Carol Saye, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Swindell and David of Ce-
leste.
All Real Estate and
Loan Service — Notary
s
west
Hereford
it in
right
C
Cline Stewart requested The
Courier be sent to Edwin West
for a year as a Christmas gift.
L
■>
NEED I
i CONCRETE i
CALL |
GREENVILLE READY MIX
GL5-7249
LAST CHANCE
ALL
CHANGEOVERS
up to
30Jff
“Trade Where Serving You Is A Pleasure”
NOTICE TO PUBLIC: Any er-
roneous reflection upon the char-
| aHer, reputation or standing of
. any individual, firm or corpor-
ation will be gladly corrected
when personally brought to the
attention of the publisher.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In Hunt, Co., 1 year------$2.00
Elsewhere in U.S., 1 yr.____$2.50
Overseas, 1 year________ $3.00
(Plus 2% State Tax)
w “"SI
■gSls jl B
BMmI
j|||s
SELLING!
NEW NYLON
SPECIAL
$069
1 M ■ 6.70x15
black tube~
type, plus
tax and old
tire
Famous Nylon
All-Weather “42”
with Tufsyn rubber
Whitewalls
Just $2 More
NATION-WIDE
NO LIMIT
GUARANTEE
No fine *print. Complete, simple to
understand Guarantee has no limit on
months, no limit on miles, no limit as
to roads, no limit as to speed, for the
entire life of the tread.
ALL NEW GOODYEAR AUTO
TIRES ARE GUARANTEED against
defects in workmanship and materials
and normal road hazards, except re-
pairable punctures. ,1
IF A GOODYEAR TIRE FAILS
UNDER THIS GUARANTEE any
of more than 80,000 Goodyear dealers
in the United States and Canada will
make allowance on a new tire based
on original tread depth remaining and
current “Goodyear Price”.
WANTED — LVN Nurses. Gil-
bert Nursing Home, Leonard,
Texas.
WASHINGTON AND
"SMALL BUSINESS”
By C. WILSON HARDER
JU
Mrs. W. W. McMichael and Mr.
and Mi-s. Doug Armstrong and
sons visited in Dallas over the
I'holidays. Miss Susan McNabb re-
turned home with them for a
visit.
Mrs. Ann Goodman
Christmas in Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. Hershell Grier
and children of Dallas, Mr. and
Mrs. Jimmie Bradford and chil-
dren of Greenville visited Mr.
and Mi’s. Glen Compton during
the holidays.
Every once in a while charg-
es are set up that the business
community is “anti-intellectu-
al.” In view of the fact that the
taxes paid by independent busi-
ness support the state operated
colleges and universities, and
that in the majority of cases,
it is businessmen’s organiza-
tions whoi
carry the
drives on to
improve the
educational
facilities, this
charge be-
comes quite
ridiculous.
♦ ♦ ♦
To be sure,
businessmen!
are some- C. W. Harder
times critical of the conduct
of the schools at times. Recent-
ly at the University of Califor-
nia in Berkeley, it required a
force of 500 police officers to
hold in check several hundred
students and neo-stadents who
were bent on demonstrating in
defiance of law and order.
♦ ♦ ♦
Now most everybody under-
stands that youth is a time of
inner rebellion. On the Ameri-
can campus the display of non-
conformity has usually been
confined j;o such didoes as swal-
lowing live goldfish, pantie
raids, other manifestations.
While the Mrs. Grundy’s frown
their censure, the majority of
people usually chuckle over
these peccadilloes.
♦ ♦ ♦
However, in foreign coun-
tries, university students have
been in the forefront of politi-
cal movements. In some cases
they have marched to the tunes
of the “Internationale,” in oth-
ers to the Horst Wessel song.
Actually the “cause” has been
somewhat immaterial, as the
(E) National Federation of Independent Business
Visitors in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Rdell Patterson over the
i holidays were Mr. and Mrs. Frank
i Patterson and children of Rock- j
spent wall, Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Patter-
; son of Dallas.
IT'S THE TOWN'S BIGGEST MARKET PLACE....
DAWSON PROPANE CO. I
Whitewright — FO4-2969
Champlin Oils
Carburetion Flame Cultivation
Tank Rentals and Sales
Propane Gas Appliances
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson
i and children of Houston viisted1
! Mr. and Mrs. Carson Brewer
' Tuesday.
FRED BUNCH
Phone 587-3378
.....
1 < 8 Itl- .JLL' f
I Mr. and Mrs. Haskell Biggs and
Mrs. Allene Lipsey and Mike vis-
ited over the holidays with Mr.
1 and Mrs. Pete Williams at Texas
i City, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Williams,
j Dickinson, Texas and Mr. and
| Mrs. Jess Freeman, Houston.
* • *
But while enjoying this first
freedom from parental re-
straint, a minor percentage of
them become avowed social-
ists, fascists, or wha1_
seems to strike their fancy?
* ♦ ♦
At California, the issue was
over the expulsion of a few stu-
dents who broke the rule not
permitting solicitation of funds
on the campus for political par-
ties. In state owned colleges
where the support is given by
all citizens regardless of politi-
cal affiliation, this appears to
be a sound rule.
♦ ♦ ♦
But immediately, some 500
impetuous youths, out of a
student body of more than 27,-
000, started a riot.
* * *
Taxpayers dislike financial*
such displays of anarchism.
♦ ♦ ♦
Thus, resentment is lodged
against educators, all students.
This is unfair to the teaching
profession as well as the thous-
ands of serious students.
♦ ♦ ♦
Rather the blame should be
directed toward those politi-
cians who not only condone, hut
encourage anarchistic demon-
strations to achieve political
or social ends. The emotionally
unstable adolescents should not
be too harshly judged for heed-
ing the demagogue, for it ap-
pears that demagogues to hold
power will sacrifice anybody
or anything.
OX;
mMBm
gWFp
Ik
Holiday visitors with Mr. and Holiday visitors with (Mr. and MR. FARMER—Do you know
Mrs. S. M. Compton were Buster Mrs. George McGee were Mr. and that it takes 160 Lbs. pure Nitro-
Compton and family of Houston, Mrs. W. D. Gale, Terri and David gen, 60 Lbs. Pure Phosphate, 120
Mr. and Mrs. James Compton and of Richardson, Mr. and Mrs. M. Lbs. pure Potash to make 100
' Larry of Garland, Mr. and Mrs. D. Morton, Johnetta and Linda Bu. of corn per Acre? Why not
Buddy Compton and sons of Mes- of Greenville, Mr. and Mrs. Carl fertilize in the same preportion
quite, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Comp- Weatherford of Fort Worth, Mr. that it is used by the com plant?
ton and Jan of Dallas, Mr. and and Mrs. G. A. Weatherford of We recommend 200 Lbs. 18-12-6
Mrs. L. T. McGuffey and family Cash, Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Sumrow analysis per acre for com in the
of Garland, Mr. and Mrs. Howell of Dallas, Mrs. Nellie Ward of, Blackland.
Day McCarley and family of ; Kingston and Joe Reed of Green-
Dallas, Dennis Simpson of Irving,' ville.
i Linda McGuffey and Betty Bad---
! gitt of N.T.U., Denton.
Mr. and Mrs. Jones Lanier re-
turned Mrs. O. A. Roach to her
home here Saturday.
fc "O
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The Celeste Courier (Celeste, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1965, newspaper, January 1, 1965; Celeste, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1223784/m1/4/?q=kitchen: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Leonard Public Library.