The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1959 Page: 7 of 8
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1959
THE WEST NEWS — WEST, TEXAS
- ______■'<i;*'!J£t
Classified Advertisement Rates
Minimum rale 83c; 4c per
Word for first issue, 3c per word
lor each consecutive issue.
Card of thanks, minimum
Charge of $101'
For Sale:
FOR SALE: E. H. Grimm home
place. See Henry Heitmlller
or Otto Heitmlller. (dze)
FOR SALE
rwo lots 75 x 180 ft. each in new
.•esidential Addition of Elm
i/Iott on paved street, all utilities
ivailable. Will sell one lot or
>oth.
ROBERT CERVENKA
(dzel
ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS
MEETING
Dec. 11, 1958
Notice Is Hereby Given:
That the annual meeting of
the stockholders of THE WEST
NATIONAL BANK of West,
Texas, will be held at the
office of said Bank on Tuesday
January 13, 1959 at 9:30 am.
for the purpose of election of
Directors and transaction of
such other business as may
properly come before the meet-
ing.
Respectfully,
Edward A. Deiterir»an
Cashier (32-360
OPPORTUNITY
Man or Woman This Area
To service cigarette machines.
No selling. Car, references, $600
to $2,095 cash investment re-
quired. Full or part time. Income
starts immediately. We finance
expansion. For local interview
give phone number and partic-
ulars. Write Coast Wide Distri-
buting Co., Box 1824, McAllen,
Texas. (35p>
TOR SALE: Old Farm House,
Frank H. Wiedemann, Rt. 2,
Box 206. West, Texas. (30-35p>
WHITE SUPREME
ANTI-FREKZE — Permanent-
Type — with Rust Inhibitor
Special at $1.88 gallon
WHITE AUTO STORE
(dze)
FOR RENT. 2 or 3 room furnish-
ed apartment. Call 6-5687.
(dze)
HOUSE FOR SALE In Abbott.
Frank W. Dolezal, Abbott, Tex.
(33-35p)
FOR SALE: 1954 model Chevro-
let */2-ton pickup. See Louis
Lovecky, at H. L, Heitmiller
Store, Rt. 1, West.__(dze
FOR SALE: 21 inch television
set with antena and table,
1956 model Silvertone, price
$75.00. See Joe W. Matus
White Oak, West. (35p)
For Rent:
Lost and Found:
FOUND: Ladie’s or girl’s eye
glasses at City Hall. Plastic
frames with black ear pieces.
Owner please claim at West
News Office. (dzx)
FOR RENT: Unfurnished mod-
ern garage apartment. Call
Mrs. J. F. Holasek, at West
News, 6-2282 or after 5 p.m. at
6-2273. _ __
FOR RENT: 4 room furnished
garage apartment at 105 N.
Davis St.,. West, Texas. Call
collect C. P. Vickery PR 3-6173
Temple, after 4 p.m. if inter-
ested. (dze)
FOR RENT: Unfurnished four-
room garage apartment. Sec
Henry Urbanovsky, West.
(dze)
FOR RENT: Good House in the
country with all outbuildings.
2 miles from West on good
road gas, lights. Clovis Russell
(35p)
OPPORTUNITY AVAILABLE
FOR QUALIFIED MAN OR
WOMAN
to service and collect from
cigarette machines in this area.
Part or full time. Excellent op-
portunity for qualified person.
$592.56 to $1,975.00 cash required
to enable you to begin imme-
diately. Company finances ex-
pansion. If you have serviceable
car and 8 spare hours weekly
write, giving particulars to Na-
tional Sales & Mfg. Co., Inc.,
3508 Greenville Avenue, Dallas
6, Texas (35)
IT’S THE LAW
-fr /Ats’T&fru- Vr
Stall Bat of lt»ot
NOTICE:
ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS
MEETING
Notice is Hereby Given:
That the annual meeting of
the stockholders of THE STATE
NATIONAL BANK in West, Tex-
as, will be held at the office of
said Bank on the 13th day of
January, 1959 at 2:00 p.m., for
the election of Directors and the
transaction of, such other busi-
ness as may properly come be-
fore the meeting.
Jerome J. Lednicky, Cashier
(32-360
■WE REPAIR and tune-up an
types cf ’awn mower motors
West Service Station, Albiri
Dvoracek. (dze)
Help Wanted:
WANTED: White girl for gen-
eral housework and cooking
to live in home. Family of 4,
good wages. Write 2116 North
33rd St., Waco, Texas.
(35-38p
Services:
HOUSE MOVING AND
LEVELING
W. L, GREEN
Phone 902-F33
1 cnelope, Texas
(dze)
For the Best
YOW! (HOW?)—Rodent
bites cat in this tail of woe from
photographer Gilbert Barrera’s
studio at San Antonio, Tex. Be-*
fore you get as cross-eyed as
kitty over the picture, let’s be
unhelpful. Barrera says he
didn't use mirrors to make the
picture. He COULD have shot
from underneath a glass table,
except for the fact that the rat
would be standing on a wall of
the box. . . . You figure U out.
Barrera’s not telling.
Buy
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Dial-A-Pack will establish route
in this area for reliable operator
to service and collect from new
type cigarette dispensers. Ex-
cellent income possible for part
time. $600.00 to $1,975.00 In-
vestment Required. If qualified
write Dial-A-Pack for local in-
terview. P.O. Box 1052, Okla-
homa City, Okla.
(35)
' • ' ...
KOZELSKI
MOTORS
C#)
SALES and SERVICE
Fh. 6-5314
FAST, COURTEOUS
SERVICE ON ALL
SMALL ELECTRIC
HOUSEHOLD
APPLIANCES
AIL WORK GUARANTEED
Rydel’s Magnolia
Service Station
WEST, TEXAS
, (32-35C)
Fast, Dependable
TV REPAIRS
W* fUnd ready to P<»* wtn
Me In your TV eel with* new
Pjctww Tube. Can Uxiwr to
CASH, CHARGE or TERMS
F. G. GERIK & SON
—Appliances—
Phone 6-5452
WEST. TEXAS
all the traditional good will and
warmth of the Holiday season, we wish the best
of everything to our loyal patrons and thank them most heartily
for the opportunity of serving them during the past year.
HENRY'S GROCERY & MARKET
Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Popp and Sons
West, Texas
Think Before Signing
Whenever you are asked to
sign something, your signature
should be a warning signal that
in some way you may become
legally obligated by what you
sign.
Usually you are asked to sign
something as a result of a busi-
ness transaction, such as a con-
tract, a receipt, an order, a re-
lease, an option, a mortgage or
a deed. For your own protection,
you should clearly understand
what you sign, why you are
signing it, and what the conse-
quences may be. It is rarely pos-
sible for a person who has sign-
ed a document to avoid its legal
effects.
You can decrease your legal
j risks by always taking these
precautions before you sign any-
thing:
Know what you are signing
and what the document con-
tains. Understand clearly what
it means. Don’t be confused by
its title — a “statement” may be
a release of all your claims, or a
"contract” may be a negotiable
promissory note. “Co-signing’
a note may result in your hav-
ing to pay it.
Read Everything in any doc-
ument. Clauses in fine print may
be important. Remember, too,
that oral promises not included
in writing may be unenforce-
able. Take nothing for granted.
Check and verify the docu- j
ment Be sure the dates, prices
names and conditions filled in j
are correct. You are bound by |
what it says, not by what you ,
thought it said.
Ask questions. Inquire about
conditions and items of import-
ance to you. Don’t sign unless
you understand what it means.
Language clearly stating what
you want can be inserted. If
substantial sums are involved,
consult with your attorney.
Retain a copy. Be sure the
proper persons sign. Request
and retain a copy. Record it,
if necessary, with the proper
public official.
Like your fingerprint, your
signature is unique. No one else
has one exactly like it. Only you
can sign it, and affixing it may
set into motion events of great
legal consequence. Treat it with
the importance it deserves, and
do not bestow it carelessly. If
in doubt, seek information and
advice.
(This column, prepared by the
State Bar of Texas, is written
to inform not to advise. No per-
son should ever apply or inter-
pret any law without the aid of
an attorney who is fully advised
concerning the facts involved,
because a slight variance in
facts may change the applica-
tion of the law.)
Huge Increase
In College
Grads Predicted
A college education in the
1960’s will be a necessity, not a
luxury, according to the annual
Kiplinger report on future busi-
ness growth and population
changes. Furthermore, tile next
decade will see a 75 per cent in-
crease in he number of college
graduates.
Through screening at en-
trance and in freshman and
sophomore years will produce
students of even higher caliber
than today’s for colleges cannot
afford to expand enough to
carry the full load of all who
want to go to college.
Colleges and universities will
face more of the same problems
they face today — expansion
pains in physical facilities,
teacher shortages and payroll
problems. Elementary and high
schools which are overcrowded
now, won’t find the going any
easier in the 60’s.
In the next 10 years —
more jobs, more pay for college
grads. The average college grad
in the past earned $100,000 more
in a lifetime than the high
school grad. This gap is likely
to widen, the report predicts.
What does this increase in the
college-educated mean? Accord-
ing to Kiplinger, “a higher cul-
ture.” Twice as high a propor-
tion of college grads means some
changes in popular tastes. And
the business world is already
looking ahead to such changes.
More books, more music, more
art; more foreign travel; dif-
ferent advertising appeals aim-
ed? at the sophisticated. News,
r—“
the better educated.”
The report states that food
habits will change — less fat,
starch and sugar — a direct ef-
fect of the expansion of grain
power and decline of muscle
power in the automated world
ahead.
Also, there will be a faster
shifting to higher quality cloth-
ing, less rough utility, more
adornment. Formality down, in-
formality up — so more sports-
wear, casual wear.
Even politicians face a new
audience that will want more
facts, less emotion, exaggera-
tions and demagoguery. Voters
will even go so far as to pay big-
ger salaries to attract high cali-
ber men into politics, the re-
port concludes.
The high prices which have
been paid for stacker cattle
makes high winter gains, from 1
to 2 pounds daily, a must, say
U. D. Tompson and J. H. Jones
extension animal husbandmen.
They recommend supplemental
concentrate feeding.
♦ ♦
Prices to farmers for manu-
facturing milk and butterfat
I probably will continue near sup-
I port levels in 1959 and'produc-
tion is expected to continue
I above commercial, says John G.
IMcHaney, extension economist.
m
-
i
i
u-,>tr^ A V ^
F EIE D
MKRKIinRO
We have the feeds to meet
your needs
Are your herds in the best of health? Are they produc-
ing the quantity and quality of milk and cream that
spell healthy profits for you? You can answer “Yes” to
both questions when you give your stock our balanced
feeds, fortified with vitamins and minerals to protect
health and step-up production. The few extra pennies
per pound you spend will come back to you in dollars of
EXTRA PROFITS!
Better feeding pays off to you in
bigger profits from your
livestock operation
PROFITS from Your Livestock in spite of a Low Mar-
ket by using MINERAL ANIMAL CONDITIONER, that
makes the Difference. Use regularly V-MIX that con-
tains all necessary minerals and will aid animals growth
and health. SPECIAL V-MIX that will de> troy worms
and Internal Parasites.
save a life
WEST FLOUR MILL
MANUFACTURERS OF WEST BRAND FEEDS
E. W. PLASEK, Prop
West, Texas
• • •
UNLIMITED
TO MEET THE CHALLENGE OF THE SPACE AGE
. TO MAKE EVER GREATER ADVANCES FOR
MANKIND . • . IT’S 1959, UNLIMITED!
BEST WISHES FOR THE NEW YEAR FROM
ALL GULF DEALERS IN.WEST AND ENTIRE
TERRITORY
Here’s wishing a very happy 1959 to all of you who
have done so much to make our 1958 successful. May
your'New Year abound in good fortune and satis-
fying achievement. If we may add a wish for our-
selves, it is that we shall have many new opportunities
to serve you in 1959 ... and that we shall in every way
prove worthy of your continued confidence.
Gulf Oil Products
— and —
Gulftane - Butane -
RAYMOND KUSH, Dist. Agent
Propane
West, Texas
'
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The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1959, newspaper, January 2, 1959; West, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth590795/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting West Public Library.