The Sanger Courier (Sanger, Tex.), Vol. [78], No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 29, 1976 Page: 7 of 8
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THE SANGER COURIER
Sanger Public Library News
By EUNICE GRAY
“PREACHING THE CROSS OF CHRIST”
VISITORS WELCOME
PASTOR GRADY H MOORE
4TH AND CHERRY
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Thought for the Week:
SALE
23 CHANNEL
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he said he didn’t need
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advertising!
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When business was bad
CARPET
PECIAL
he said he couldn’t
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afford
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For the life of us
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can’t remember
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Call 458-7429 for help with your advertising program.
AM
The Sanger Courier
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VAI AES YOE WON’T WANT TO MISS!
READY-TO-WEAR
AUSTIN—In the House the General Ap-
propriations bill was taken up. Salaries of
several clerks were reduced and the usual
number of speeches on retrenchment and
reform were made.
volves a good deal of cooper-
ation and shared know-how,
won’t you send me your ideas
for family inflation planning
so I can share them with
others?
GALVESTON—In Recorder’s Court, Willie
Moore, a boy about 10 years of age and one
of the news brigade, was fined $1 and costs
or three days in the city jail for abusing,
striking and threatening James Eakerly.
The cause of the present charge was a fight
the accused had with the complainant who
is a boy about 12 years of age and in which
Eakerly came out second best.
HOUSTON—Silver is getting to be the
currency, that is, taking the place of
fractional currency in Houston. The city has
been paying off its employees and officers
for the month of June in the last day or two,
and the railroads are paying their depot
hands in this coin.
M«*» Communications
Texas Tech University
Judith G. Rhoades is asso-
ciated with a New York Stock
Fixchange member firm.
Questions may be sent to
Judith G. Rhoades, Copley
News Service, in care of this
newspaper.
wish you luck and hope these
few ideas will be helpful to
you.
We have all been told that
we should wave 10 per cent of
the money we spend My
family is trying to do just
that. As 1 went through my
refrigerator a few months
ago, I realized how much food
1 seemed to throw away be-
fore my family ate it. I made
a New Year’s resolution that
this was one family which
was going to buy less food.
I’ve noticed the refrigerator
seems to be no less full, but
we have managed to eat all
the leftovers and our food bill
is down.
We are doing other things
differently this year also. We
have gone on a complete cash
basis, which means we use no
credit cards, not even for
gasoline. It’s amazing what a
difference there is in the
monthly mail. The only bills
we’re paying by check are
our household expenses and
insurance.
My husband has a happy
look on his face when he bal-
ances the checkbook at the
end of each month. WeTe one
family who has been fighting
inflation. Maybe we’re not
enjoying the fight, but it does
seem to hurt less.
NOW V2 OFF ORIGINAL PRICE
PANTSLITS • LONG DRESSES • SKIRTS •
SWEATERS•JEANS
mightiest supership, letting
its immense and life destroy-
ing cargo bleed black under
the wind.
With its Conradian drama
ul men and ships in conflict
PARTY & BANQUET
fUttU
Pilot Point Livestock
Exchange, Inc.
(FM455)
HI_olPoint 686 2240 or 686 2215
IS’
Sale
Saturday
rtvUuAklR.
MNK3M
num!)
3
KITCHEN-DEN
CARPET
* Twgpds 1 Prints
* Spicud-Dyed
* Installed
$C49
FROM
le JA51876
JULY 23-2B
• Dial: 382-1133 •
216 West University Drive * Denton
HOumt 9 a.m. TIN 4 pan. Mm.-to*.
MODEL 63-259
$9.98
When business was good,
LANDMARK
BAPTIST CHURCH
I
NO WAX
VINYL
* Armstrong
* Congoloum
♦GAF
* Installed
M79
$895
PAGE SEVEN
the elements, and its
•tanlly clear exposition of
lhe imperatives of money
and oil. Supership is a book
ul monumental fascination,
it is called an epic narrative.
SAN ANTONIO—There are persons now in
this city desirous of building, but they have
not the means to put up stone residences. If
we did not have a miserable and damaging
fire ordinance to keep down the con-
struction of frame buildings, the city would
improve fifty percent more rapidly than it
does.
AUSTIN—The Senate passed unanimously
a joint resolution of sympathy and con-
dolence to the family of General Custer,
killed recently by the Sioux.
DON’T BURN IT DOWN.
tSES
A Public of This Nswvw A Th# Advertising Councrt
100% Nylon
Multi-Color
Turn Key (c«rj>.< • r.<i • toborj
THIS IS AN
OXYGEN FACTORY
IHUUIUAY. JULY Z9. 1»7«
Widow, children
fight inflation
By JUDITH G. RHOADES
Copley News Service >
CB Converter
FOR ANY CAR RADIO WITH AM BAND
15%
Q. I am at my wit’s end. My
husband died a year ago and
left me with many bills. I
have a son, 14, and a daugh-
ter, 9. I sew and that has
saved on clothing expendi-
tures. Right now there is so
little money for emergencies,
it frightens me. How can I
and the chikken earn more,
or spend less, so I can save at
least a little for emergencies?
— V.E., San Diego, Cal.
A. I can well imagine that
your financial situation is a
frightening one, especially
when you have to depend on
yourself for your income. One
thing you might consider is
sitting down with your two
children and all three of you
preparing a budget. They are
old enough to understand the
hard economies of life Ask
for their assistance m helping
you to make ends meet
First, confer with your lo-
cal Social Security office to
see that you are receiving all
the Social Security benefits to
which you may be entitled.
Next, perhaps you could take
in simple sewing, for,
whether you work or not, ex-
tra sewing could bring in
more income. Some people
are taking an adult education
class in preventive main-
tenance and care of an auto- x Since winning any battle in-
mobile. Learning how to
change the oil in your car will
save you a few additional dol-
lars a year You might check
with your local library about
cookbooks containing recipes
of inexpensive but nourishing
food.
Finally, make savings a
habit — even |l a week. Save
those dollars by depositing
them in a savings account.
Don’t set it aside, as you
might spend it. I certainly
• Across Stroot From Eckard Drugs •
carroll collins carpets I
GALVESTON—This climate is the
healthiest on the Gulf coast and the
delightful south breeze not only serves to
cool the atmosphere but to dispel miasmic
vapors which in less favored localities are
such potent causes of disease. With all the
old buildings filled under, and a stricter
attention to the condition of many of the
alleys, disease would be comparatively
unknown.
BROWN COUNTY—Governor Coke has
issued his proclamation declaring Brown
County no longer a frontier county and
liable to incursions of hostile Indians, and
that on and after August 19 the law
regulating the keeping and bearing of
deadly weapons will be enforced in that
county.
GALVESTON—The difference between the
jury scrip issued by the District Court is
thirty cents on the dollar less than that
issued by the County Court — the latter
selling at eighty cents on the dollar while
the former sells for about fifty cents on the
dollar.
K SHOE
'w> SALE
BI!Y THE 1st PAIR OF SHOES AT
REGULAR PRICE & THE 2nd
PAIR OF EQUAL VALUE OR
LESS, FOR U.
___--x3?6’
ADVERTISEMENTS—St. Louis Law
School (Law Department of Washington
University). The regular annual term of
this Law School will open on Wednesday,
October 11,1876. Full course, two terms, six
months each. Students admitted to the
senior class, on examination, by application
on or before October 10. Tuition $50 per
term, including use of library. For par-
ticulars, address G. M. Stewart, Dean of
Law Faculty, St. Louis, Mo.
(ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED)
ACROSS FROM N.T5.U.
? the Shoe Shac
123 Ave. A, Across from NTSU, Denton
ports ol call, and lhe strange
psychological pressures such
a lite places on officers and
men. From lhe Ardshiel’s
imposing captain, a veteran
oi lhe old traditional ways,
lo lhe newest landlubber
engineer, none is immune,
lheir standardized posh
quarters aboard in piercing
contrast lo lhe ever present
danger oi death by collision,
lire, gas poisoning, lhe force
ol the sea. Especially lhe
»ea—lor as lhe shop moves
implacably, inflexibly, round
me tip ol Africa, we discover
tile terr dying nature of
these walers, of the huge,
gathering swells known as
Cape rollers, of lhe storm
waves rising like cliffs sixty
icel High that can lall upon
and break even lhe
People once believed that
if their palms itched they
would receive money. ,
AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTS
CB
REPAIR
3 DAY SERVICE
[in most ca^ea] LIST S29.95
CONSUMER
LECTRONKS
1731 W. UNIVERSITY 383-3516 Denton
A gift lo lhe book fund of
the library has been made
by Mrs. Mary Caruthers of
Denton in memory of Mrs.
Zaiue Ainyx Davis. This
book will be carefully
selected and will have a
memorial plaque affixed
when placed on lhe shelves
ol lhe library lor you to read
and enjoy.
Gasoline is so very
important in our lives; we
cannot imagine what it
would be like lo be without
transportation as we know it
today. A book we have
received this year as a gift of
Dr. Ray Stephens of lhe
History Department al
North Texas University
deals with this vital subject
and tells lhe story of how
the oil is brought to us from
ioreign countries. In our
daily papers we read of lhe
imbalance ol foreign trade as
we depend more and more
on oil produced abroad. Here
is Noel Moslert’s book,
Supership, which tells lhe
story oi how lhe oil is
brought lo us, so we can
race about and use it
carelessly, as we are all
guilty ol doing.
A brochure from Texas
Mid Continent Oil and Gas
Association, Dallas, tells us
that American energy con-
sumers are paying world
market prices lo foreign
nations tmoslly lo the
OPEC, cartel) lor 40 percent
ol the oil used in lhe U. S., a
supply subject lo cutoff.
Back lo lhe book, Super-
ship, which tells us how we
gel the imported oil. With
careful lidelily Lo fact, yet
with novelislic immediacy,
Noel Moslert lakes us with
him aboard the Ardshiel,
nearly a quarter of a mile
long, wider than a football
held, and still by today’s
standards only a medium-
sized supertanker, as it
makes its periolous way
from Bordeaux around the
Cape of Good Hope to Mina
al Ahmadi on the Persian
Gulf and back again with
more than 200,900 tons of
crude oil, enough to supply
lhe total energy needs of a
city of 40,000 for an entire
year. Within the framework
of the voyage, he explores
lhe cruel and debasing effect
of lhe giant ships bn the
very nature of seafaring. He
makes palpable the eerie
Flying Dutchman" exis-
tence of crews with no real
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Cole, Ralph. The Sanger Courier (Sanger, Tex.), Vol. [78], No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 29, 1976, newspaper, July 29, 1976; Sanger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1282300/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sanger Public Library.