The Wylie News (Wylie, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1973 Page: 4 of 10
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Page Four-Thc Wylie News-Thursday, November 1, 1973
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Values Are A Weekly Occurence With Wylie News Want Ad*. Shop Them . . Use Them. . Phone. 442-5515
Business#
Professional
Directory
Miscellaneous
Services
For Rent
Child Care
For Sale
Daily
Child Care
Jackie's
beauty Shop
FURNISHED
APARTMENTS
One Bedroom Only
Brick, Paneled, Carpets
$100.00 per. month
Gaa & Water Paid
Help Wanted
UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
AGES 2-10
SUPERVISED CARE
HOT LUNCHES
PHONE 442-5835
212 N. Birmingham
Phone 442-292
SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS NEEDED
JOHNSTON INC. 442-2211 or
apply in person. 10-tf-C
(studill s
Shoe Shop
General Shoe Repair
106 N. Jackson
44
EAT COVERS and AUTO
GLASS. Willie Stibbens, 1023
Lavon Drive, Garland.
BR-2-1802. 34-tf-C
Repair work; Carpentry, brick,
painting, tile, plumbing,
electrical.J.E. Martin, Wylie,
442-5602 after 6:00 p.m.
30-tf-C
EAST FORK
LODGE NO. 650
Bobby Brundidge;
Worshipful Master,
Don Thomas, Sec,
Slated meeting first Tuesday
night each month at 7:30 p.m.
Visiting Brethren Welcome
l.ife-Health-Burial-Cancer
VELMA COKER
INSURANCE AGENCY
|Ph. 853-2442 Nevada. Texas|
P.O. BOX 11
1AULING FOR THE PUBLIC:
Sandy Loam, Gravel Rock,
Black Dirt, Fill Sand. Call
anytime. C.M. Blrkett.
442-5337. 6-tf-C
Horse stalls for rent with
pasture. Registered Paint and
Registered Quarterhorses.
APHA STUD Services. J&M
Stables. Wylie. 442-2422. Call
anytime. Home of the Country
Riders Riding Club. 7-tf-C
SAVE MONEY
Check our prices on all
major appliances
PAYNE FURNITURE &
APPLIANCE
ROCKWALL,TEXAS
I Dallas Phone 823-23531
Announcement
ItKI'.MK SERVICE
TELEVISION
AIR CONDITIONING
FREEZERS
REFRIGERATORS
WASHERS & DRYERS
^SMALL APPLIANCES
Writlen estimates given prior
to repair Call 424-4848 Day or
Night
CITY WIDE APPLIANCE
SERVICE
1516 Ave. J., Piano
Clean, oil and adjust any make
sewing machine in your home.
Special $5.99. Piano Sewing
Center. 424-1113. 15-tf-C
Garage Sale; 302 E.Stone-442-
3137-Starts Friday, November
2, at 5 o'clock p.m. and all day
Saturday, November 3. Baby
clothes, dinette set, curtains,
toys and miscellaneous items.
19-1 t-C
Wanted
Will pay $2.00 weekly for
d"pendable trip ride from
V, j lie to work in Garland. Call
Jean 442-2282, 272-9531.
l9-2t-C
Private Duty nursing care, in
hospital, nursing home, or in
your home. 442-5952. 19-tf-C
Need Something?
ill
Come to
Rockwall
& Save
Pianos Si Organs
Cost plus 10%
TV's & Stereos
Cost plus 10%
Davis & Payne
Piano Co.
On the Square-Rockwall
226-1117
(not a toll call)
JcomeT) ROOC W A^Tor'thel
"best buys and the best|
I services on TV's, Stereos,|
|M^Jor Appliances and Fur-_
■nlture of all kinds.
PAYNE FURNITURE &
APPLIANCE |
'On the Square Rockwall|
■Dallas Phone 823-2353j
I
I,
JRE-S'EASON
SAVINGS ON
I Fedders. General Electric
| and Friederich Air Condi-
tioners,
PAYNE FURNITURE &
APPLIANCE
[On the Square Rockwall
IDallas Phone 823-2353
Repossessed I • 1 >11 Home
14x70. Like new. Never lived
in. A transfer lee Call
Credit Manager 434-1213 or
692 1032. 17-4t-C
Will make your drapes from
your material and measure-
ments or select from our wide
assortment of samples. Alma-
Sue Drapery Shop. Ill E.
Main. Richardson. 238-0538.
18-4t-C
For your Tupperware needs
call Sandra Ford. 442-2074.
18-2t-C
SOUP'S on . the rug that
is, clean with Blue Lustre.
Rent electric shanipooer
$1. Wylie Pharmacy.
19-1 t-C
Your C.I.C. cosmetics Aloe
Vera dealer. 442-2740. l9-2t-pd
Rebuilt 65 Super Sport
Chevrolet. New paint and
tires. $695.00. 442-5354.
19-21-C
18 foot Red Fish cabin cruiser
with 1971 Evinrude, 115 Horse
Power Engine. $1,695.00.
442-5354. 19-2t-C
\lobile Homes
Check Our Classified
Ad Page
1974-( 14x80) 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, never lived in Beauti-
fully furnished. Assume $117.
monthly. 357-4665. 19-tf-C
1974 (14x80) 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, never lived in.beauti-
fully furnished. Assume $109.
monthly. 357-4665. 19-tf-C
1974 two bedrooms, 2 baths,
never lived in. Beautifully
furnished. Assume $89
monthlv. 357-4665 19-tf-C
CLASSIFIED
ADS BRING
FAST RESULTS!
300 COTTONBELT
CALL 442-5819
SJozsit 0-^aiHt
Mobile Home Park
Kreymer Lane, Wylie.Texas
Lavon Lake Area
442-2766 or 442-2769
SHADED LOTS ARE
AVAILABLE
For Rent one bedroom
apartment unfurnished. In
MEL-CHAR APTS. Call
442-5596
tt-tf-Cl
Unfurnished apartment 204'
Birmingham. Adults only.,
442-5952. 16-tf-C
EFFICENCY apartment. 209
Citizen Street. Phone 442-2740
19-1 t-pd
CANDY'S 4,000-YEAR
STORY:
Few things in history have
spanned the ages and cultures
of the world with such
consistent popularity as candy.
In one form or another, candy
has found itself carried by
warriors through the Crus-
ades, by GIs to the front lines
of world wars, by bleacher
fans in baseball parks and on
into outer space by astronauts.
According to the National
Confectioners Association, the
earliest recorded history of
confectionery goes back 4,000
years with the Egyptians.
Hieroglyphic inscriptions ex-
cavated from the sites of
ancient citics show that in 1566
B.C. Egyptian confectioners
were selling their sweetmeats
from baskets in the market
place. Honey was used as a
sweetener in those days and
was combined with nuts,
chopped fruits, sweet herbs
and spices.
Candy eating habits were
passed along to the Greek and
Roman civilizations, where
physicians started the candy-
coated pill tradition by
smearing with honey the rims
of cups filled with medicinal
concoctions to induce patients
to drink it down.
The conquering soldiers of
Alexander the Great,, how-
ever, liked sweets for their
flavor and not for any
medicinal reasons. A favorite
of these soldiers (around 325
B.C.) was a Persian delicacy
called "Kand," a sweet reed
garnished with honey,spices
and coloring. The word
"candy" may well have come
from their "kand," or from the
Arab word for sugar, "qand."
ENTER SUGAR
Candy, as we know it today,
really developed with the
emergence of sugar on the
world scene. In the Middle
Ages, the Arabs spread the
cultivation of native sugar
cane westward and developed
a sugar refining process. The
Crusaders, who had acquired a
taste for sugar in the Far East,
are credited with popularizing
candy and starting a demand
for the new sugar plant in
Europe.
Uses of sugar and candy
Will do babysitting in my
home. Call Mrs. Mary Ellis at
,442-2542. 13-tf-C
Leave your children with me
while you work or shop.
Monday thru Friday. Depend-
able. 442-5856. 19-tf-C
Would like to keep children in
my home. 442-2071. 19-tf-C
flourished, with Venice be-
coming the sugar capital of
Europe in the 13th century.
The Venetians' skill in
producing sugar with a very
fine grain gave birth to a new
art form-sugar sculpture.
Explorers carried the sugar
plant with them on their
voyages and sugar cane soon
was growing in all the tropical
and semi-tropical areas of the
globe. Columbus launched the
plant in the New World and by
1800 sugar was an important
article of world commerce.
A SPANISH DISCOVERY
Chocolate, now the most
popular type of candy, was a
comparatively late entry into
the confection world. In the
early 16th century Hernando
Cortez discovered the impor-
tance of the dark brown cocoa
beans when he found the
Aztec Indians of Mexico using
them in the preparation of
their royal drink, "chocolatl."
Cortez brought the beans back
to his native Spain where a
profitable industry was de-
veloped and chocolate became
widely acclaimed throughout
the continent.
The first confectioners in the
New World were the Dutch
bakers of New York, who in
the 17th century made sugar
wafers, marshpanes, maca-
roons and other sweets for
celebrations. The first Ameri-
can candy shop opened in 1712
in Boston.
MASS PRODUCTION
The introduction in 1851 of the
revolving steam pan, a
contraption much like the
drum of a concrete mixer, sped
up the candy making process,
paving the way for mass
production. Penny candies
flourished toward the end of
the century.
It wasn't until 1911 that
Americans got their first taste
of today's candy giant--the
candy bar. Fans at the nation's
baseball parks were given the
first individually wrapped
candy bars, made of combina-
tions of almond nougats,
chocolate-coated marshmallow
and peanuts.
But the candy bar didn't come
into its own until World War I
when manufacturing methods
were revolutionized and candy
bars were mass produced for
military use.
Today, Americans consume an
average of 19 pounds of candy
annually from a selection of
over 2,000 varieties. That first
sweet tooth of the Egyptians
has created an industry that
speaks all languages and
knows no age barrier.
INVESTIGATORS
WE NEED PART TIME MEN
with cars to inspect houses,
talk to debtors, collect money,
pick up credit cards, investi-
gate, skip trace, etc. No
experience necessary. No
selling, pleasant work, good
pay. You can be our agent for
the area where you live. For
application & full details send
your name, address & phone
number to: TRAYCO, P.O.
Box 2177, Kansas City, Mo.
64142.
19-1 t-pd
Need one truck driver for in
town deliveries. Phone 442-
5431. 19-1 t-C
TEXAS REFINERY CORP.
offers high income opportunity
to mature individual in Wylie
area.PLUS regular cash and
vacation bonuses, fringe
benefits. Regardless of ex-
perience airmail A.N. Pate,
Pres., Texas Refinery Corp.,
Box 711, Fort Worth, Texas
76101. 19-1 t-C
Billy Wooley's
Wylie Carpet
Cleaning
Free Estimates
442-2464
McKissick, Slack,
Chambers Opts.,
Inc.
Professional Visual Care
Contact Lens
201 E. Virginia Street
Jhone 542-0331 McKinney
Mayor and Mrs. Cecil Hackler
have returned after a trip to
Hot Springs and other parts of
Arkansas. Near Winnsboro
they ran into the trail riders.
Thinking he had spotted Judy
Owens, the mayor waved
diligently. After his return
home he found Judy had not
even attended th? trail ride.
Dr.Edward Cope.jr
Optometrist
1406 Forest Lane
Box 1467
Garland, Texas 75401
Telephone BR6-5050
"WEEKDAYS 9 a. m. - 5;30
CLOSED SATURDAY
M.D.Mona^lian
O.D.
Practice of Optometry
808 Avenue A
jarland Texas
Office Hours: 9:30-6:0(
Tuesday through Saturday
Closed on Monday
Telephone: 276-5736
Use Want Ads
Wi \ j®
Si
X 1 ¥ ' 2
> *■
I:
GO NUTTY WITH APPLES
Succulent spiced apples bak-
ing on brisk fall or winter
days...they'll fill any house-
hold with their aroma and add
flavor to a meal.
Mix them with some roasted
peanut candy and a few other
'tasty ingredients and you'll
create an easy-to-make Peanut
• Candy Apple Crisp dessert
that's sure to please dinner
guests and brighten a blustery
day.
Unexpected visitors who pop
in over the fall and winter
holidays also can be treated to
this peanut-apple combina-
tion. It can be prepared and
served with so little effort, but
will have a big and flavorful
effect.
Here's a recipe for Peanut
Candy Apple Crisp developed"
by the National Confectioners
Association:
1 5 oz peanut candy bar
1 cup crisp dry rice cereal
2 tablespoons melted butter
4 cups peeled sliced apples
Vi cup brown sugar
'/jcup melted butter
1 teaspoon cinnamon ,
Crush the peanut candy bar
into bits. Mix candy with the
rice cereal and the 2
tablespoons of butter. Blend'
the brown sugar, Vi cup
melted butter and cinnamon
with apple slices. Fold the
apple mixture into a I0x6-inch
baking dish. Cover this with
the candy-cereal mix and bake
in a moderate over (350
degrees) about 30 minutes, or
until apples are tender. Serve
hot or cold, plain or with
whipped cream. Makes four
servings.
4
Becky Ryan, Community FFA Sweetheart, .s p.ctured with a calf
t„ be loaded in the Chapter's new gooseneck trailer.
COMMUNITY NEWS
The Community FFA came
back from Gilmer Livestock
Show, October 25-27, with
several awards. The following
awards were:
Open Beef Breeding
Angus—Grand Champion
owned by Terry Blacketer,
Second Place owned by
Dwayne Blacketer, Third Place
owned by Terry 'Blacketer
Hereford---Second Place
owned by Larry Buckley, Fifth
Place owned by William
Pennal
Junior Beef Breeding
Red Ribbons were won owners
Scott McDonald, Scott Smith,
James Graham, and Brian
Webb.
The regular meeting of the
Community Chapter of FHA
met Thursday, October 26.
Plans for the Halloween
Carnival were announced by
the committee chairman.
Sharon Graham gave the work
schedule, and Cathy Simmons
read the names of the girls
who volunteered to make
cakes for the FHA's annual
cake walk.
Pat Middleton presented a
Unicef program and showed a
movie, "Faces and Places in
Unicef World," which ex-
plained what the money would
pay. Neva Moody explained
how the towns would be
divided and read the list of
town chairmen. The chairmen
are Mickie Rogers, Nevada;
Arnetta Hargrove, Lavon;
Katherline Henderson, Lavon;
Billie Moody, C'opeville; and
Connie Watson, Josephine.
The FHA girls will go "Trick
or Treat" for Unicef, October
29.
A very unique experience
occurred at the Homecoming
activities Friday night of
Community High School. Two
girls, Sally Sudderth escorted
by Phillip Dodson and Robin
Jones escorted by Todd
C'oomer were crowned Queens
by Mr. Eddie Geren escorted
by crown bearer, Miss
Tammie McMurry, daughter
of Reverend and Mrs. Harvey
McMurry of Nevada, and
flower carrier, Todd Hardin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Hardin of Josephine. The
Homecoming Princesses were
Stcphenie Rosenbalm escorted
by Mark Stanley, and Mickic
Rogers escorted by Gary
Coleman.
Brian Webb was presented
Gritiron Council Award given
by the Student Council to a
football player having the
highest scholastic points.
The men who were elected to
the Hall of Fame were Richard
Hargrave, David Bramlett,
Billy Shewbert, Willie Luckey,
and Chub Morrow.
The Community FFA Chapter
has just finished it's Sweet-
heart Race; Becky Ryan won
sweetheart. Rhonda Johnson
was first runner-up, followed
by Sabrina Holt and Leita
Justiss. The contest raised
$350.00 to be applied to the
purchased of a 16 ft.
gooseneck trailer for the
Chapter, and donations of
$300.00 by local men were
made for a calf which was
donated by Becky Ryan and
given away October 15.
Kenneth Sim of Farmersville
won the calf.
The Community FFA Chapter
would like to take this
opportunity to thank everyone
for his help.
fa
How To Sanitize Your Laundry
Under normal conditions,
regular laundering procedures
produce a clean wash, Mrs.
Juanita Murphv, county Ex-
tension agent, noted.
However, illness among family
members, floods or other
unusual circumstances neces-
sitate using disinfectant in the
wash or rinse cycles to prevent
spreading disease-causing
bacteria.
There are four types of
-The Lonely Heart
disinfectants for home laundry
• liquid chlorine bleach, pine
oil, quaternary and phenolic.
When using chlorine bleach or
pine oil disinfectant, dilute in
the wash water before adding
clothes. Check manufacturer's
instructions for recommended
amounts and fabrics that can
be washed in them.
Phenolic disinfectant, on the
other hand, can be added to ^
either the wash or rinse water' J
while quaternary is added only
in the rinse cycle.
Quaternary and chlorine
products sanitize effectively in
hoi, warm or cold water. Pine
oil and phenolic products, in
contrast, are effective only in
hot and warm temperatures.
Available in grocery, drug and
hardware stores, store all
disinfectants out of the reach
of children, the agent
emphasized.
FOR It KM
011 It E SPACE OR SMALL RETAIL SPACE IN MODERN
BUILDING. EXCELLENT IOCATION.
Contact
C. Truett Smith
First Stale Bank '
•;$ u •"* >. a" 'J
CLASSIFIED ODS
ijfc S : : ' SigjS
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The Wylie News (Wylie, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1973, newspaper, November 1, 1973; Wylie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth342520/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Smith Public Library.