The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 110, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1957 Page: 11 of 15
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PAGE 4, SECTION 2
The Rusk Cherokeean, Rusk, Texas
NOVEMBER 14, 1957
THE RUSK CHEROKEEAN
ASSOCIATION
PRESS
ESTABLISHED JULY 5, 1847 AS THE PIONEER
Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Rusk, Texas
under Act of March 3. 1879.
g> WHITEHEAD ■ Editor and Publisher
MRS. E. H. WHITEHEAD Office and Business Manager
Any erroneous reflection upot the character, standing, or repu-
tation of any person, firm, or corporation which may appear in the
columns of this newspaper will be gladly corrected upon being brought
to the attention of the publisher.
44 STATES NOW
HAVE PRIVATELY-OWNED ,L .
TAX'-PAYING TREE FARMS T ' "...
COVERINS MORE THAN
42,000,000 ACRES OF WELL-
MANAGED WOODLANDS/ WITH
TCEE FARMING, WE HARVEST
WOOD FOC TODAY WHILE
GROWING TIMBER FOR
TOMORROW/
M
(m
=j
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
M
wll TREE- FÁ7MS RANGE IM SIZE FROM
: ■ THREE ACRES TO NEARLY
' V- MILLION/ ORGANIZED AND
> ¡ FINANCED BY OUQ W009-UCING
''i' INDUSTRIE6/ THE AMERICAN TREE
'* FARM SYSTEM BENEFITS THE
ENTIRE NATION/
-rr
Six Months, in County
One Year, in County
Six Months, Out of County
One Year, Oui County
$1.35
$2.50
$1.85
S3.50
Classifieds and Cards of Thanks charged for at the rate of 3c per worv«.
F
looking
ahead
W fc c«gi i ■■■—
hard became Economic Minister.'
Adenauer the Chancellor.
Bolh believed uncompromising'!
Iy in t h e advantages of private
ownership and the competitive
market; both coldly rejected the
claims, the urgings and pressures
of the Socialists.
Two Historic Steps
The first step toward stability
and reconstruction was an iron-■ Jiryan
listed halting of inflation. Over-!
night a new Deutsche mark was'
is.sued and every monetary asset'
in W e s t Germany • currency,;
coin,
etc. •
Glenn Green continues his dis-
patches from Europe —G.S.B.
GERMANY AND PRIVATE
ENTERPRISE
FRANKFURT, G E R M A N Y —
Ik'ar I)r. Benson: The events hap-
pening here in Western Germany,
a wedge of geography about the coin, mortgage, private contract,, w'th
size of Kansas reaching down etc. — was reduced by law to one-! Clyde
from the North Sea southward in- tenth of its former value. Tin
to the heart-center of Europe, art:
mZ<
Cu COMMERCIAL FORESTS NOW ARE
GROWING MORE WOOD THAN Wc AQZ
USING-THANKS TO TRLa FARWEtfS
W\NP 07HEK FAR-SIGHTED PRIVATE
LAND-OmiER5-URGfc' AHD SMALL/
of great educational value to the
world. This is the only major na-
tion of Europe whose people are
giving the private enterprise sys-
tem an unfettered chance to work.
And it is working miracles.
In less than 10 years the pow-: move b\ the government was to
erl ■; 1 incentives and dynamic im-; give capital and private enter-j
pulses inherent in a private en-! prise every possible aid and en-
terprise system have lifted Ger- j eouragcnient in building back thoj
nian> "Ut of the rubble and stag- ¡ production establishments of Ger-:
na:: n <>f shattering defeat to an | many. Quickly production for ex-'
.. :ic position far stronger j port and domestic use began to
n,i,re promising than that of• create new wealth and now the
of the socialistic European wealth is literally building a new
iart Slates which Mirround nation.
Thus here in the center of Not only the enterprisers but
.¡v is j dramatic lesson for the wage earning men and women
not in>m teNtbiink. of Germany, in large majority.
Stovall, Sunday. (Friday.
Corporal Donald Wayne White Mrs. Richard McLarnon and
stationed at Holloman Base, New jchildren of Dallas are visiting her
Mexico, spent the weekend here parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Banks,
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ¡this week.
White. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Benton vis-
only j Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Weldon left iteel wilh their son-in-law and
exception in the nine-tenths cut¡ Mon<lay for their home at Rock- daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
was hank deposits; they were re-!spring, Texas, after spending last Itanria and daughters Susan, Jean
duced to 6.5 per cent of former! week here with Mrs. Weldon's and Carol at Dallas Sunday.
value. This severe step stabilized j mother, Mrs. J. It. Simmons. j Mrs. Felton Banks visited rela-
tho currency and put buying pow-' Mrs. S. I\ Williams of Tyler vis- lives at Houston first ol this
er in better relation to available,itcd with her mother, Mrs. Sim- week.
goods. The second history-making mons, and other relatives here Mr. and Mrs. Idc Hall returned
move liv tlu
last week from vacation trip to
Union City, Tenn., also visited
points of interest in Arkansas,
Birmingham, Alabama, Mississip-
pi, and Louisiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Davidson of
Beaumont and Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Pearman and son of Alto were
weekend visitors with their moth-
er, Mrs. I). T. Cavaness.
C. L. Butterfield and daughter
Jan and Miss Beaulah Allen at-
tended the Texas A&M-SMU foot-
ball game at Bryan Saturday.
Mrs. Riley Maness and Mrs. B.
J. Moreau w e r e Tyler business
visitors Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Trevathan
and sons Randy, Terry and Ron-
ney of Lufkin were weekend visi-
tors with Mrs. Trevathan's moth-
er. Mrs. John Long.
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Elliott of
Hobbs, New Mexico, Raymond Al-
len of Mt. Pleasant, and Mrs. Sam
Manning, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Man-
ning and Cleve Looney left Sat-
urday for Refugio to visit Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Manning. They will ac-
company them to the coast for a
week of fishing.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Guinn and
son Kevin of Irving were weekend
visitors with his aunt, Mrs. Bryan
Stovall.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dean Thomp-
son and Cathy of Tyler spent the
weekend with Mrs. Thompson's
mother, Mrs. Lawrence Smith.
Air. and Mrs. Edwin Campbell
were Tyler visitors Monday .
Mrs. James Long and son Duane
of Irving visited Mrs. Vera Wis- ¡ Mr. and Mrs. C. J. H a r k i n 9
ner Sunday. | spent the weekend at McAlester,
Mrs. Mercer Sims of Crockett |okla., with Mrs. Harkin's mother,
was guest of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert j Mrs E. E. Colvard and other rela-
Osborne Sunday. ]tives.
LIQUID OR TABLETS
DOES RO&E TO STOP
C0L9S Mi SERIES BCiAUSE
IT HAS MORE I
VOU CAN RELY ON 668
No More Fussing With Pins, Clips
Tacks, String, Tape And Glue
Now! Use ABOSTICH Persona!
Stapler
USE IT TO . . . Staple, Seal or Tack,
hundreds of handy jobs
IN . . .OFFICE, SCHOOL and HOME
because it fastens hundreds of things
better, faster, neater !
There's nothing like this BOSTITCH
B 8 STAPLER for stapling papers, seal-
ing b?gs and wrapping, posting notices,
tacking up pictures and decorations, re«
pairing curtains and screen, etc. Compact,
rugged powerful — will last for years. Get
it today
Our Regular Price $2.25
RUSK CHEROKEEAN
ect
any
AY el;
Ivr.
Eur*
all i
in k
nd
or e!n>.-room. or lecture platform,
but in actual being.
The Lesson
The nations which have a com-:
i! >n. boundary and a war experi-
ence in common with West << r
i . i,v T h e Netherlands l'el-
j.: . France. An-? r: C/echslo-
\ v; ¡ ('nm:nu:üst Ea-i Gertiifmy.
and I'olaml all are socialistic
States oi varying de
ith Socialist> or Cuinrmi-
the helm of their govern-
n each case the living
of their people is below
the West Germans. the
l a re
at
Vi
m!
ni:
mcnt.s.
staiidarc
that oí
economic strength of each is low
in comparison, and the promise
that can be held out for the fu-
ture is indeed dim compared to
West Germany's.
1 came into Germany by train
from the north, down through the
industrial Ruhr and into the
Rhine valley. For mile after mile
we traveled through industrial
communities with thickets of tall
belching smokestacks fanning far
out into the distant landscape.
The industrial concentrations al-
ong this main Ruhr artery were
among the most heavily bombed
by our b i g fleets of BIT's and
B25's — Dortmund: Essen, center
of the biggest Krupp works:
seldorf, and Colgone. Evidence
the paralyzing destruction is ev
crywhere. But the dominating
sight today throughout the half of
Germany 1 have so far seen is the.
rebuilding.
'Out of Rubble
Cologne, queen city of the Ruhr,
was 75 per cent destroyed, large
sections of it flattened into smol-
dering rubble heaps scarcely
more than 12 years ago. Cologne
today is a bustling, thriving me-
tropolis of 700,000. Where the de-
struction was worst, brand newr
streets have been carved out and,
whole blocks of new buildings
erected. Throughout the city,
draglines, towering steel cranes,
bulldozers and construction crews
work unceasingly. The surround-
ing industries were rebuilt first.
This is the picture too in Weis-
baden and Frankfurt both rav-
ished by blockbuster and fire
bomb raids But it is in the indus-
trial sections, out among the
smokestacks, that the basic mira-
cle of Germany's recovery h a s
been performed. T e n years ago
when a dazed Germany was sorely
beset with out-of-hand inflation,
widespread fear, desolation a n d
hunger, two leaders arose to aid
in the formation of a new German
F< Ieral Republic - Ludwig Er-
hard and Konrad Adenauer Er-
have pitched in with enthusiasm.
'I ll elos-than 10 year's results are
amazing Productivity the rato
of a factory worker's personal
product ion has set a (humping
record in Europe: thu.-, the wat: ■
increases that have come steadily
have not been off.sel by rising
i .•rices The living slanilard has
had a whooping genuine improve-
ment. .National production today
is four times greater than the
postwar total! The recent elec-
tion endorsement given by tho
German people should serve as
further stimulation for sound pro-
g ress
What ...
RUSK FOLKS
.... are doing
Recent visitors of Mrs. Henry
Moseley were her brother and
wife, Mr and Mrs. A. G. Durpree,
Kiowa. Kans . Dolores Miller from
TCI . W G. Moseley and family of
Lufkin and Martin Moseley and
family of Beaumont. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Samual Knox have
returned from several weeks vis-j
iting with their son-in-law and
Dus-'da ughter. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fitz-j
()£ gerald and children at Cedar Ra-j
, pids, Iowa, and with their son,1
Priest Knox and family, St. Paul, I
Minnesota, also sightseeing trip
to Wisconsin.
Mrs. Winnie Denton spent the
weekend at Longview visiting hcrj
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and i
Mrs. Hardy Fitts and son Gary.
Mr. and Mrs. Melba Guinn of
Dallas visited his sister, Mrs.
s
-QUICK SERVICE -
RUBBER STAMPS
STAMP PADS • INKS
NOTARY SEALS
SIEN CI IS
THE RUSK CHEROKEEAN
Owen's Pure
Lard
8 Lb.
Pail
L29
Sun Valley
Oleo
Lb.
15
Í
ORANGES
Ruby Red
GRAPEFRUIT
Delicious
APPLES
Fresh Green
CABBAGE
5
5
3
Lb. Bag
Lb. Bag
Lb. Bag
Lb.
29'
29'
35'
5'
Silk Finish
Flour
25 Lb.
Bag
1.85
Betty Crocker
Biscuits
Can
*
¡fe*
MEAT
Hickory Smoked
BARBECUED FRYERS
Tall Korn
BACON
T-Bone
STEAK
Fresh
CATFISH
Ea.
1.00
Lb.
Lb.
Lb.
49"
59'
69"
sM-?-Shatt uck's
SAVE
Home Owned and Operated —Bob and Jewel Shattuck, Owners
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
<!
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d£
sei
ca
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t
SCI
ell
.so
til
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bit
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of
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Whitehead, E. H. The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 110, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1957, newspaper, November 14, 1957; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth150210/m1/11/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.