Mt. Vernon Optic-Herald (Mount Vernon, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 10, 1959 Page: 6 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
low
K
SERVICE
SMITH
*
MT. VERNON DIAL Ui 7-28SS
By R B. GERMANT
CY
1
>4
New 13 Cu.Ft
Mr
<
Westinghouse
Combination
WITH EXCLUSIVE
- "ft'iiiiiiii
Si.iiiiim
w
Mr
NOW
[ATHLON FROS'
I ’’
I
was $269.50
now
was $49950
■i
was $39950
■
LI
GAS
fw
Md
T...
• •
AUTOMATIC
1
Jr
S3
UM
i
i
I
2S —
•■'■■.W--w
7. ..
.... ■“
T)ke Way.
3 See Jt
Last week'* 11 r • ■ damaged
about 100,00 pine seedling! plant-
ed thia past 4 years for Joe Beard,
M. L. McLain, C. W. Carns, Ted
Winkle, D. O. Aldridge, J. W. Fri-
day and Harmon Winkle.
Leo Fisher, area forester for
the Soil Conservation Service in
Mt. Pleasant, has found that all
sedlings burned over are killed.
It is suggested that a fire lane
10 to IS feet wide be plowed
around all woodland and pasture
fields now to avoid further da-
mage.
There' has been about 200,000
pine seedlings burned the past two
weeks.
M
■
Cold Injection
\ System
KEEPS ALL FOOD
FRESH LONGER
ter Bi
Mr
were
Mrs.
days
Mr
I. was assisted
b, presldeni
s presented a
E COLD INJECTOR^®^
was $599.95
aad b
if it
Kv.
tion I
TB LB.FREEZER STORAGE
was $319.50
i
L*
there
tries.
WAS «6MA0
now $22950
i «
one o
was si
in ou
busin
now $199.50
WITH TRADE
now $239.50
WITH TRADE
now $429.50
WITH TRADE
is Til
Mrs.
days I
Mr
LEE'S FEEDS
Grinding and Sweet Feed Mixing
ON HIGHWAY 97 AT THE UNDERPAM
DIAL LE 7-9878 MT. VERNON
[AT.......
WASH COMPUTER
MODEL CBM SO
CHEST TYPE FREEZER
UMmMT........
tu’’’ 1
W. L,
Mr
man
last J
now $35950
WITH TRADE
now $31950
WITH TRADE
$31950
WITH TRADE
11 FT. COMBINATION WITH 7.1 LB. FREEZER STORAGE
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
modelTmTs""-
UPRIGHT FREEZER 8 V
MODEL DSM, 14 FT.B
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
M^mL'iSdTr^n^raroonmKATioNwr
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
»’**•**•*•* I
► ■ « .».e®«s»e»e»eeeeeeeee e^^M«ee]
ENDS SATURDAY
JUST 2 MORE DAYS TO
REGISTER FOR A TAPPAN
GAS RANGE - FREE
.***“9’*
......now $
< • I" ’
WAS SSMO.BO
.now SIM
i »•
PM HORRY SIR, BUT THERE
IS NO PLACE TO PUT THK
OIL . . . YOUR CRANKCASE
HAS ROTTED AWAY
Thia fellow la in quite a fix!
But if your car has a place for
oil .. . and gas ... you’ll be do.
lighted with our fast oil-up and
gas-up service. Drive up, say
the word and wo spring into ac-
tion pronto!
‘ bl .
. Sullivan's life, not like
J. R Mercer of Richardson has
had a farm pond constructed. He
wil begin cross fencing and pas-
ture establishment this spring.
rho have trees planted
1. B. Snow, 16,006 on
tree farm southwest of
7 James Roberts,
of Winnsboro; D. B.
0. O. Aldredge, Frank
mas Davis, suothwest of
n; Mrs. Frances Ken- ;
Darwin Wright, south- 1
r I -J
FROST-FREE
AUTO-DEFROST )
REFRIGERATOR^ 2
.....
M*a asS riawa at the Ceaepasy.
■ 7------WAR aaoo.no
.... now$299.50
• Low temperature all ovei
. . . you can even store
milk in the door
• No - Bind Glide - Out
Shelves
■
I
SEPARATE 1
101 LB.
FREEZER j
M. L. McClain of Oklahoma
City has led this area In number
of trees planted for a number of
years. He is now 'preparing for
planting 300,00 trees at this time
from the Marr Nursery.
[McLain like other successful
tree planters has found it pays to
shred the brush and weeds and
then scilp his land before plant-
ing his trees MoClaln also has an
order with Texas Forest Service
for 100,000 trees.
te
date there have been about
00 trees lifted from the Ro-
Marr Nursery and planted in
irea. Marr has about 460,000
a lift. His trees are of excell-
yuality, being some of the
trees ever planted in this
Range Will Be Given Away
Saturday, Dec. 12 at 4:00 p.m.
(Presence Not Necessary To Win)
[DEE $15.65 SET OF
Free cookbooks
WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY TAPPAN GAS
RANGE DURING OUR STH ANNIVERSARY HALE.
FULL SIZE TAPPAN
GAS RANGE
JfXe’SSSS
. larnett in Quitman
or T. G. Fond at Mt. Vernon for
your needed prior approval.
OVEN, SWING OUT BROILER
..........
THE JOB MAKERS OF AMERICA
These are just a few of the “job-
makers" who built our plants to
make jobs for our people. Yet,
there are those who sneer at these
Industrial pioneers and call them
rubber barons, oil tycoons, and ex-
ploiters of slave labor.
Many of these terrible “job-
makers" built our schools,
Y M CA ’ s, libraries, hospitals,
churches, and cathedrals. Much of
this work was done before and
without the privilege of tax deduc-
tion. Research foundations were
paid for from their personal earn-
ings and many a crippelj child
now walks, a blind man jow sees,
and there is little fear of a'ptherla
and other epidemics because these
same “job-makers” also made ad-
vanced scientific research possi-
ble.
How much of Jim Hoffa’s
money is spent on Texas charity?
He doesn’t even feed the people
who fight Illegal battles in wild-
eq strikes.
v-ipb— makers, the community
bunders, are partners.of the work-
ing man In this great enterprise
jre call American industry. They
■
• Cheese ana Butter Com-
partment
• Freezer holds 161 lbs. —
has package and can
dispenser
MODEL TNM18 REFRI-
GERATOR FREEZER
COMBINATION WAS
*400.00
salmi, white breed, milk, dough-
Wedneoday, filled franks, sauer-
kraut, buttered potatoes, sliced
beets, white bread, milk, peanut
butter cookies.
Thursday—Tamale pie, pinto
beans, scalloped ' potatoes, dill
pickles, and cheese, white bread,
milk and devil’s food eake.
Friday — Sandwiches, soup,
crackers, milk, assorted candy.
---------------------------------------------- I
EsGii^tc Yttr Itak
During the Months Ahead
luy Now! Save!
lonK are not enemies.
Those who plan and pay side-by-
side with those who work and stay
are building in these beautiful
East Texas hills a new and pros-
perous, happy and peaceful, reli-
gious and patriotic economic para,
dise in the pines.
Don’t let professional “hate"
mongers from the outside disrupt
our program of induatdlal pro-
gress, social betterment and eco-
nomic security.
That’s the way I see it!
Lsns Star 8$mI Canpae, far flbs psrpM* at ragalarlr
■■nc abaat Um paiietea. news aaS dvrs et the Cempaar.
_ -a a a - - 4 - -- -a TV IW v — 4
99 ■ WHWRay ■•RaHIW OT WV
There are those who still live by
their wits. They shine best in an
atmosphere of hate. They, them-
selves, live In luxury on the huge
take from their converts. They
upend most of their efforts in the
direction of a “hate the corpora-
tions and the corporation heads"
campaign. These quick-witted art-
iats see no fault in a rock 'n roll
singer making 350 to 3100 thou-
sand a year, $16,000 for one per-
formance, or a long term contract
at $60,000 a year. But if the man
Who has built, over a long period
of years, plants that give employ-
ment to millions of workers,
draws anything like such sums he
has, to the profesional corpora-
tion “hater”, committed a terri-
ble crime against the working
man.
Most of the men who make this
loud outcry draw more money
than many of the corporation peo-
ple they criticise.
How many of us realise how.
much we owe “job-makers” who
built not only for themselves, but
for future generations?
Fairbanks bui»t a scale factory
t ist still gives many men a chance
to support their families 1
after the founder's death. Charles
jfioodyear, not only started an In-
dustry that gives jobs to thou-
sands, but practically built the
city of Akron. Henry Ford, and
Others, followed Knox and Duryea
in making jobs for 5,000,060 auto-
mobile workers. John Carpenter,
Oscar Irvin and others conceived
Ute plant at Lone Star and gamb-
led time and money that would
be a Job-maker for 4,500 employ-
z ees It now suports more than
15,000 people.
Ws apses psrrbaaad fc]
ratal the gsnersl
a Way I Sea It" w
W'*4 /« /
You may buy trees through
your District for $5.60 per 1000,
or direct from Marr. The cost of
=
I®*. ‘ m
1
TAFPAN
GAS RANGE......no
WITH CLOCK, BURNER WITH A
MATIC OVEN, GLASS DOOR.
GAS RANGE......no
WITH CLOCK, BURNER WITH A
side of
the life revealed in his TV shows.
She maintained that the public
comes to accept TV perqonalitles
as personal friends, and that Ed
Sullivan is one of those who,
seemingly, is a glum, never smil-
ing man on TV, but who actually
has a smiling disposition. She told
of him recounting some of hie
memorable Christmas experienees,
such as pumping the organ for
midnight Christmas mass at the
age of IS, and leaving home when
he was 16 to join the marines. He
told of his mother* prayers help-
ing him get a job in New York,
after a job on a Hartford paper
failed to materialise.
His Qwn interesting experiences
turned his attention to those of his
friends. His book contain* letters
of a galaxy of TV characters, who
tell of their most memorable
Christmases, some humble, some
exciting, some challenging, some
exalting—all interesting.
Refreshments suggestive of the
aproaching Christmas season were
Sl^S.
7i
to
ANNIVERSARY
gift
STOP BY AND SELECT A GOOD
11
1
w
3 MERCURY 4-DOOR
Ire, Real Nice
SED CAR
1957 FORD ¥-8 4-DOOR
Low Mileage, Radio A Heater, Standard Tranemistdon
*
I 1957 FORD V-8 4-DOOR
LowjMUeage, Radio A Heater, FordamaUc Transmiatdon —
1 1956 CHEVROLET 6-CYLINDER
S-Door, OverAlve, Red * White
1 1955 CHEVROLET V-8 4-DOOR
Radio A Heater ' O, J
• 1957 Ford V-8
• 1956 Ford
Reach Wagest, 9-9, Ovwy
drive, Ixra MHeage
ISHING CAR
953 Chevn
Door A Heater
_' '
PontUw,
NLowPrtced
ODFMUNC
z
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bass, James T. Mt. Vernon Optic-Herald (Mount Vernon, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 10, 1959, newspaper, December 10, 1959; Mount Vernon, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1267862/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Franklin County Library.