The Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 30, 1967 Page: 3 of 8
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ORANGES, 5-lb.bag......
GRAPEFRUIT, 54b. bag...
TOMATOES, pound......
POTATOES, 8-lb.bag.....
WASHING POWDER
SUNSHINE RINSO
gt.box.. .59c
LUX LIQUID
FOR DISHES
gt.sizebtl. 49^
NORTHERN BATHROOM
TISSUE
4 roll pkg.. 35^
GALA
ASSORTED TABLE
NAPKINS
50 IN PACKAGE
2 for....45*
ROSEDALE—NO. 300 CAN—CRUSHED
PINEAPPLE, 2 for.......35®
FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES
DELICIOUS
APPLES, 2 lbs. for......29®
BANANAS, 2 lbs. for.....25®
I
ROUND STEAK, lb
STEW MEAT, lb
BACON JOWLS, lb
31c
23^
23<
Household Items
iE$mm
FOOD STORES
75®
T-BONE STEAK, lb.......69®
LOIN STEAK, lb.........65®
7-STEAK, lb............60®
SHORT RIB STEAK, lb.....55®
CHUCK STEAK, lb.......49®
HAMBURGER MEAT, lb.... 45®
CHILI MEAT, lb.........45®
39®
39®
BAMA—(In New 24-oz. Server Jar)—PEACH
PRESERVES, 24 oz. [ar.... 39®
STALEY’S OLD FASHIONED
SYRUP, 4-lb. jar........59®
NIBLETS—12 OZ. CAN—WHOLE KERNEL"
CORN, 2 cans for.......43e
TRELLIS—NO. 303 CAN
PEAS, 2 cans for.....
UNCLE WILLIAMS—NO. 300 CAN
PORK & BEANS, 3 for.....29®
O.B.—7 OZ. BOX
SPAGHETTI, 2 for
O.B__7 OZ. BOX
MACARONI, 2 for
MORTON HOUSE
BEEF STEW or MEAT BALL STEW
24-oz.can.............49®
JELL-O—Banana Cream, Pineapple Cream,
Vanilla, Chocolate, Chocolate Fudge, Lemon
Butterscotch
Pudding & Pie Filling, 3 for.. 29e
^ervke^o^emember^
PREMIUM ? J
SALTINES
NO. 1 INSPECTED
Fryers ■> 3F
Bl
% lb. box. 39®
CARNATION MILK
2 tall cans. 33®
WESSON OIL
24.oz.ML'.' 45®
PLOCHMAN
MUSTARD
20% oz... 23®
DUNCAN HINES
PANCAKE MIX
2-lb.box. .33®
L E A D W A Y
HALVES or SLICED
PEACHES
No. 2% can 25®
HUNT’S
APRICOTS
No. 2% can 25®
Hi-C
ORANGE DRINK
46oz.can. 29®
^Qucdit^hoEnjo^™^
1
AMERICA^
.WRITE
> J
PATEK’S
GROCERY F MARKET
LOCKER PLRNTf COMPLETE PROCESSING $EWIC£ -DELIVERY SERWCE
PHONE LY. 4-3171 r, iz.iiT
RIGHT ON THE CORNER — RIGHT ON THE PRICE
ga We Give Buccaneer Stamps
Double Stamp Day Every Tuesday
ifejj With Purchase of 82.50 or More
Specials Friday & Saturday, March 31—April 1
PREMIUM
new "GOLDEN
GLOW"
tastier... crisper... flakier! g
CRACKERS
lb. box... 31®
LIPTON TEA
Thursday, March 30, 1967
Shiner Gazette—Shiner, Texas
GLADIOLfl
FLOUB
’1.95
e
49®
5-lb. bag
GOLDEN HARVEST
$179
FLOUR, 25 lb. paper bag..
FOLGER'S
INSTANT COFFEE
$109
(OS10-oz.jar
FOLGER'S
COFFEE
• ;
75®
1 lb. can
SNOWDRIFT
SHORTENING
Snow^rifti 3 n>.can.6$C
cljr.nTENlN6
shorten^
DAIRY CASE & FROZEN DELIGHTS
Specials for Weekend of Mar. 31, April 1
Coricidin Cold Tablets, 25’s, 81.19 for 79c
MEADOWLAKE
White Rain Hair Spray .... 81*49 for 98c
..25®
OLEO, 1 lb. carton..
81*03 for 79c
Vitalis Hair Tonic
98c for 49c
35®
79®
SWIFT’S
39®
MELLORINE, % gal
DEPARTMENT
DRUG
Wh
J
SPRAY DEODORANT—
69®
ARRID, 4-oz. can..
LY 4-2262
25 pound
Paper Bag
Doctor and Pharmacy
Teamed for Your Health
MORTON’S
Peach & Apple Pie, each... 33e
LUSTRE CREME REGULAR
HAIR SPRAY, 13-oz.can...G9®
PILLSBURY—Country Style or Buttermilk
BISCUITS, 2 cans for.....15®
“The
from
5 lb. bag
With Each $5.00 Purchase, thereafter 5 lb. bag 55c
to $20.00;
$22.50.
Cows:
49 c
LIBBY’S—6 OZ. CAN
ORANGE JUICE, 2 for
!{X
B-B
ICE CREAM, % gal
OJ.’S
BEAUTY LOTION, 89c btl... 69®
O. J.’
Like your physician, we
are always available in
emergency. Call us for
any need — anytime!
DOUBLE STAMPS EVERY DAY ON
PRESCRIPTIONS or REFILLS.
Double Stamps on Tuesday with any purchase.
QUALITY PHARMACY, INC.
WILLIAM DAVID PATEK, PHARMACIST
LY 4-2262 (night or emergency, call LY 4-3876)
Free Delivery Service in City Limits
The City of Hallettsville
proper received about two and
one half inches of rain in the
past week, with larger amounts
being received in some rural
sections of the community.
-:-o-:-o-:-o-:-
^8-
—"^5^9
s Beauty Lotion
Gonzales-Flatonia
Market Reports
Gonzales, Texas March 25, 1967
On Hand: Cattle 685—Hogs 200
The market was very active
and strong. There was a lot
more activity on cow and calf
pairs. Packer cows were about
50c and $1.00 higher. The hog
market was about steady with
last week.
Butcher Calves: Good and
Choice $23.00 to $25.00; Stand-
ard $22.00 to $23.00; Com-
mercial $20.00 to $22.00; Utility
$19.00 to $20.00.
Stocker Calves: Good to
Choice Steers $26.50 to $32.50;
Common to Good Steers $21.50
to $26.00; Good to Choice Hei-
fers $22.00 to $25.00; Common
To Good Heifers $20.00. to
$22.00.
Bulls: Heavy Weight $20.00
to $23.50; Light Weight $18.00
Yearlings $20.00 to
Due to Wedding in the Family Sunday morning,
April 2, we will close at 11:00 a.m.
amount of the minerals requir-
ed to grow the crop, Bruns adds.
The successful cook does a
good job of planning before the
cooking process is started. The
things called for in a recipe
should be checked with the
supply on hand before the
cooking is started. Likewise, if
the farmer determines all the
plant foods he needs to grow a
crop before he plants the seed,
he can supply the necessary
plant foods. The farmer cannot
know what is needed in his
land to produce a crop without
a soil analysis, Bruns empha-
sizes.
Several samples of soil from
the same soil type in a field
should be mixed together and
sent to a soils laboratory. The
lab will determine the type and
amount of plant food that
should be added to produce the
crop, adds Bruns.
A properly fed crop not only
produces the highest quality
food but produces it more
abundantly.
By using a soil analysis in
growing food crops, the farmer
will make a profit and we will
remain the best fed people in
the world.
IMPERIAL
WSUGAR
or LY 4-3876
Grown
THANK YOU
It is with deep and heartfelt
appreciation that we try to ex-
press thanks to everyone who
helped in any way and for the
many kindnesses shown during
the illness and at the time of
the death of our loved one,
August “Gussie” Haslbeck.
Special thanks go to the doctors
and entire hospital staff of the
Frank Wagner Memorial Hospi-
tal for their untiring efforts and
also to Miss Emma Bruns and
Mrs. Wm. Gerum for sitting
with him. We are grateful to
Rev. Father Charles Carolan for
leading the Rosary and Rev.
Father John J. Hanacek for his
consoling words and services.
Thanks to the members of the
American Legion, Kolar-Stanek
Post No. 201, for serving as
nallbearers and participating in
the military rites. To all who
sent food, flowers, memorials,
spiritual bouquets and helped
in any way and to Buffington
Funeral Home staff we say
thank you. May God bestow his
blessings upon each of you.
Margaret S. Haslbeck
and Monica
Jackson County
Historical Pilgrimage
Jackson County will be the
scene of the first Annual Tex-
ana Historical Pilgrimage Fri-
day and Saturday, April 7 and
8.
Open for the Pilgrimage will
be five old Jackson Co. homes,
and three newer homes with
fine collections of antique fur-
nishings. Three of the old
homes have already been
awarded medallions as Record-
ed Texas Landmarks by the
Texas State Historical Survey
Committee and the medallions
for the other two are pending
final awards.
One old home in Ganado and
another on the Bonnot Ranch
near La Ward will be open for
the pilgrimage.
Several other old homes will
not be open, but will be shown
on the pilgrimage. One of the
open homes and several of the
others in Edna were originally
built at Texana, Jackson
County’s first county seat, and
moved to Edna in 1883 by mule
and ox teams, with logs being
used as rollers.
The town of Texana, the site
of which will be included in the
tour, was founded in 1832 as
part of Stephen F. Austin’s
Colony, became a thriving port
on the Navidad River, and was
made county seat of Jackson
County in 1836. It was original-
ly named Santa Anna, but with
the advent of the Texas Revo-
lution was renamed Texana for
obvious, patriotic reasons, and
became an active military post.
The Allen Brothers of New
York, in their search for a
“dream port” on the Gulf of
Mexico, were turned down by
Texana landowners, and ac-
cording to local legend, one Al-
len ascended a handy liveoak
stump and pronounced a curse
on Texana. The brothers then
purchased a tract on Buffalo
Bayou and founded the thriving
port which made Houston the
metropolis of the Southwest.
As for the curse, legendary
or not, Texana was later by-
passed by what is now the
Southern Pacific Railroad and
the county seat was removed to
Edna; now only grazing cattle,
racoons, and armadillos reside
in what was once Texana.
The event will open with a
banquet at 7:30 p.m. Friday,
April 7, in the Fellowship Hall
of the Methodist Church in
Edna. Tickets for the pilgrim-
age, which will include bus
transportation throughout the
tour, are $2.00 and may be
purchased either in advance or
on the day of the tour. Tickets
for the banquet, at $2.00 per
person, and motel reservations,
must be obtained in advance by
writing to Texana Pilgrimage,
Box 401, Edna, Texas 77957, no
later than April 5. The head-
quarters of the pilgrimage and
departure point for the bus
tours will be the Meriwether-
Simons-Farquhar House at 801
S. Allen Street in Edna; there
will be an information booth on
the County Courthouse lawn at
the junction of U. S. Highway
59 and State Highway 111 in
Edna.
The pilgrimage is being spon-
sored by the Jackson County
Historical Survey Committee,
the Texana Chapter—Daugh-
ters of the Republic of Texas,
the Texana Chapter-Sons of the
Republic of Texas, the Texana
Museum and Library Associa-
tion, and the Jackson County
Chamber of Commerce and
Agriculture.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Miller and
family of Tyler were Easter
visitors in the home of her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Matula.
They also had their name added
to the list of subscribers to the
Gazette.
Winners of the Two Easter Bunnies which
were given away Saturday9 March 25 were:
Karen Chumchai and Adeline Goetz,
yruAEasy open NO-KEY CAN
n L W \ ONE POUND SIZE
NEW/W 1 lb. can.. 69®
Area Youths
Participate In
Science Symposium
Five students from this re-
gion were among twenty-two
students from all over the state
who presented reports on scien-
tific research at the annual
meeting of the Texas Academy
of Science. These students were
selected to participate in the
state meeting by giving out-
standing reports in the oral
presentation contest
held in March of 1966
during the Regional Science
Fair at El Campo.
Those giving reports were:
(1) Reeves Motal, a junior in
El Campo High School who de-
scribed a device he developed
called a polargraph that can
make an accurate chemical
analysis in five minutes while
more traditional techniques
may take three weeks;
(2) Fred Lazor, a senior in
Victoria High School whose re-
search was entitled “A Study
of Phase Anomalies with Res-
pect to the Plant Venus”;
(3) Steven Lazor, a senior in
Refugio High School gave a re-
port with the imposing title,
“The Cytological Effects of
Adrenalectomy, Orchiectomy,
and Ovariectomy on the
Hypophysis Cerebri of the
Hamster”;
(4) Linda Kay Synnott, a
junior in Columbus High School
gave a report entitled
Extraction of Toxin
Urtica Chemaedriodes;”
(5) Tommy Taylor, a senior
in Calhoun County High School
gave a report he called “The
Perfection of Music” in which
he described an idea he had for
correcting the imperfections in
the musical scale.
The 1967 winners will be se-
lected during the judging of the
Regional Science Fair Thurs-
day, March 30, at El Campo
and will be invited to present
their research report at the!
spring meeting of the Texas
Academy of Science at Lamar
Tech in Beaumont.
First seaplane, the Loon, was
constructed by Glenn Curtiss in
1908.
Stockers $14.00 to
$17.00 Heavy Weight $17.00 to
$20.50; Cutters $15.00 to $17.00;
Canners $11.50 to $14.00.
Cows and Calves (pairs)—
Good $150.00 to $185.00; Me-
dium $120.00 to 150.00; Old
Worn Out Split and Weighed.
Hogs: No. 1 Tops $18.00 to
$19.00 No. 2 Tops $17.00 to
$18.00; No. 3 Tops $16.00 to
$17.00; Sows $12.00 to $15.00.
* * *
Flatonia Texas March 27, 1967
On Hand 450 Cattle, 350 Hogs
Butcher Calves: Good and
Choice $23.00 to $25.00; Stand-
ard $21.00 to $22.50; Commer-
cial $20.00 to $21.00; Utility
$19.00 to $20.00.
Stocker Calves: Good to
Choice Steers $26.00 to $32.00;
Common to Good Steers $21.50
to $26.00; Good to Choice Heif-
ers $22.00 to $25.00; Common
to Good Heifers $20.00 to
$22.00.
Bulls: Heavy Weight $20.00
to $22.50; Light Weight $17.00
to $20.00; Yearlings $20.00 to
$23.00.
Cows: Stockers $15.00 to
$18.00; Heavy Weight $17.00
to $19.50 Cutters $15.00 to
$17.00; Canners $11.50 to
$14.50.
Cows & Calves—Pairs: Good
$150.00 to $225.00 Medium
$115.00 to $150.00; Old Worn
Out Split & Weighed.
Hogs: No. 1 Tops $18.00 to
$19.00; No. 2 Tops $17.00 to
$18.00; No. 3 Tops $16.00 to
17.00; Sows $13.00 to $16.00.
The market was fully steady
to strong and most all classes
sold about in line with last
week. Cow and calf pairs sold
some better than they have
been. There were a lot of buy-
ers on hand. The rains have
made some difference. Hog
market was about 50c higher
than the week before.
High Quality Food
From Healthy Plants
- Properly fed food crops pro-
duce the best quality food,
states Roy Bruns, Soil Scientist
of the Soil Conservation Ser-
vice. If we continue to be the
best fed people in the world,
we cannot consume food pro-
duced on land that is starving
because it is in need of plant
food.
The housewife cannot bake
her best cake if she finds that
she does not have the proper
amount of the things called forf
in the recipe. Th e
farmer cannot produce
the best crop of high quality
maize, rice or corn if he does
not have in the soil the proper
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Sedlmeyer, Angeline. The Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 30, 1967, newspaper, March 30, 1967; Shiner, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304599/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Shiner Public Library.