The Celeste Courier (Celeste, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, May 14, 1954 Page: 3 of 4
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Friday, May 14, 1954 4
Page 3
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Baby, It’s Cold Inside!
SPECIAL
HOME FREEZER OFFER
$100.00 Worth of Frozen Food
GIVEN FREE!
With Each
s^.'. < - ’’M
HOME FREEZER
■4
MANNING’S
.-‘‘Phone 16
LEONARD
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TRY IT AND YOU’LL TELL US THAT YOU GET THE BEST OF ALL 3—PERFORMANCE, ECONOMY, PRICE
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PHONES 291 and 292
Mir:
Corn Meal and Cheese
Flavor Salmon Patties
Political
Announcements
See the new refrigerated room
air conditioner* at your .appliance
dealer'* or aur office. There'* a
else for every requirement.
fresh, filtered air, cooled to the degree you like best.
A refrigerated room air conditioner is easy to Install,
fits any window, requires no water. See about
the proper size for your home today. Enjoy summer-long comfort
worth many times its cost... ELECTRICALLY!
12, 16 or 20 ft. Capacity
International Harvester
The Mack Pierson’s visited in
Whitewright and Leonard last
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Gibbs
of Grand Prarie visited here with
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Passons and
Mrs. Gibbs during the weekend.
SOFT COLORS BEST
BAIT FOR HUSBANDS
NOTHING LIKE A WRENCH
FOR RELUCTANT DATE
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. M.
Compton Sunday; Mr. and Mrs.
L. T. McGuffey, Linda Rita and
Kathy of Garland, Mr. and Mrs.
James Compton of Dallas, Billy
Compton of Ardmore, Okla, and
Mr. and Mrs. Howell Day Mc-
Carley,
WHAT ARE FATHERS
MADE OF?
For Commissioner, Prec. 1
MERRICK (Mickey)
MONEY
For County Clerk:
O. V. JOHNSON
BLOOM JOHNSON
For District Clerk:
MIKE BAKER
HOKE HOLBROOK
J. IVE HOLDERNESS
I
For Tax Assessor and Collector:
LEE F. BOSTICK
For County Superintendent:
. JESSE MILLER
For Sheriff:
TOM WARREN
FRANK LANE
zr- /As
__
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Heflin and
Mrs. Mildred Barnard were in
Dallas Saturday, shopping.
RIGHT NOW Is the time to prepare for summer comfort. With a
refrigerated room air conditioner in your living
Hauling
Anywhere
Ship by Truck
Day or Night
Insured and Bonded Trucks
Phone 265
Carlton Henslee
— Wolfe City —
power
OF ANY LEADING LOW-PRICED CAR
KISSINGER CHEVROLET CO.
WOLFE CITY, TEXAS
RESIDENCE PHONF 274
(COMMUNITY
PUBLIC SERVICE
Mrs. D. L. Johnson has gone to
Newton to visit Mrs. W. T. Con-
natser, who is recovering from an
operation.
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As low as 1
4295
» SMI RskKSsI an<t you**
r BHHHB tirw
6.00 x 16 1
71 MARATHON
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O HIGHEST COMPRESSION POWER O BIGGEST BRAKES
• FISHER BODY QUALITY O FAMED KNEE-ACTION RIDE
• SAFETY PLATE GLASS • FULL-LENGTH BOX-GIRDER FRAME
A -
■ room, den or bedroom, you can forget the heat...enjoy clean, dry,) I
MOUNTAIN RESORT COMFORT
AT THE TURN OF A DIAL
Goodyear Tire Store
Phone 77 A. R. Stapp, Owner
—GOODYEAR TIRES AVAILABLE IN LEONARD AT—
Grady’s Whisenhunt
Service Station Service Station
Highway 69 East Side Square
Horton Service Station
Southwest Corner Square
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The modern trend in engine design is to higher and
higher compression. That’s to wring more work out of
less gas. Chevrolet gives you the highest compression of
any leading low-priced car. Come in, get the facts and
a demonstration. We're sure you’ll tell us that Chevrolet
out-performs and out-saves its field!
CHEVROLET
“ill
You're Safer
and You Save
1
% cup boiling liquid (salmon
liquor and water)
1 egg
% pound canned salmon
% cup grated American cheese
Sprinkle corn meal into boil-
ing liquid, stirring constantly.
Cook over low heat until thick-
ened. Cool slightly. Combine
beaten egg and salmon, add
thickened corn meal, and shape
into six patties. Brown in small
amount of fat on both sides.
Sprinkle top with grated cheese
and serve with Mushroom Sauce
or Tomato Sauce. Yield: 6
patties.
iy
Native American Indians taught
the early settlers the excellent
taste combination' of fish and
corn meal, leading to the de-
velopment of many excellent
recipes combining these two good
foods.
Canned salmon is a favorite
quick meal ingredient every-
where. Combined with corn meal
into patties, flavored with grated
American cheese, this conven-
iently packed fish makes a tasty,
satisfying meal.
CORN MEAL SALMON
PATTIES
. % cup self-rising corn meal
t
1
GRATITNDE IN STRIPES
PRESOTT, Ariz. — Even a
skunk can be grateful for a help-
ing hand.
When Margie Williams inves-
tigated strange noises behind her
house, she found a skunk with
its head caught in a jar. The
skunk was trying to shatter its
glass mask against a rock wall.
Margie called the skunk like
she would a kitten. It came to
her and she broke the jar with a
hammer.
The skunk took off without
leaving its calling card.
The folic wing announcements
are made subject to the action of
the Democratic Primaries of July
|MH 24 and August 28:
For Congress, 4th District
SAM RAYBURN
For State Senator:
RAY ROBERTS
For County Attorney:
BILL PEMBERTON
HOLLYWOOD. — As if girls
didn’t know the tricks of gett-
ing men to propose to them,
here comes an art director with
another one:
Serge Krizeman, art director
for Meridion Pictures, advises
that a girl who dresses in pastels
will get more proposals than
one who uses sharp colors.
Soft colors and lights, he con-
tends, work better than bright.
• THE CELESTE COURIER, -
riggg
THE AIR MAY BE HOT, the sun
may bake—but inside that fishing
basket it’s co-o-o-ld! The fish will
stay fresh for hours, A revolu-
tionary container gives off as
much cold as a 15-pound cake of
ice. It’s dripless, meltless and
everlasting. Put it back in the
“frig” and the zero cold is re-
newed for 24 hours. Wonderful
for picnic baskets, too. It’s called
“Frigee-Freeze.”
CHICAGO.—Police found Carl
Mannelli and John Thomas
both 25, standing on the roof of
the Wisconsin Packing Company
Sunday night.
Beside them was an assort-
ment of wrenches, hacksaws and
other tools.
But both men denied they had
anything like burglary in mind.
“Honest, officer,” said Man-
nelli as police led him away, “we
were just looking for girls.”
Stop taking chances on
smooth worn tires . • •
get new, dependable
Marathons by Goodyear.
Only Chevrolet in the low-price field
gives you all these "Best Buy” values
0I1IH
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IL^TRICITTY DOES SO MUCH---COSTS SO LITTlB
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Love Lures |
Teachers From
Classrooms
WASHINGTON.—Teachers, so
the old story goes, stay at their
relatively low-paying jobs be-
cause they love the work. Ap-
parently, however, their affec-
tion for teaching can’t match
the power of the old-fashioned
love.
The National Education Assoc-
iation estimated today that 40
percent of the 75,000 teachers
who left their classrooms during
the past year were pushed by
Dan Cupid.
They resigned because they
were getting married, moving
with their husbands to some ot-
her locality or having children.
The estimate was based on de-
tailed analyses made in some
ireas of the country of the turn-
3ver in the country’s 1,000,000-
wor-ker teaching force.
In one area, Richmond, Va.,
the problem of love sweeping
the classrooms of teachers was
attributed to GI Bill of Rights.
Assistant Superintendent of Sch-
ools W. H. Deirhoi said the
“love-resignation” problem was.
one “we. did not face until the
} GI Bill in recent years enabled
young men and girls to marry
earlier in life.”
Another superintendent, C. R.
Holsinger of Henrico County,
Va., complained that an increas-
ing number of young women are
“seemingly using teaching only
as a stop-gap until they get mar-
ried. Many teach only a half
year or a year before they re-
sign.”
Teachers who really are wed-
ded to the profession don’t split
with it so that the turnover a-
mong older teachers was very
small.
Compare and you'll agree,
)hl$ rugged tire is way
ahead of other tires in Its
class. It features full tread
depth for longer wear . . «
extra tread width for bet-
ter traction . . , strong cord
body for highway stamina.
You can't get a better tire
at this low price.
/______
Super-Cushion by GOODYEAR
This low price is all you pay for
this wonderful low-pressure
Marathon. It soaks up highway
|olt«/ gives a more comfortable
ride. C<?me In . . . get yours
NOW!*-'
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Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mon-
roe Passons Sunday were Mr,
an dMrs. Gaston Alexander of
Garland; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Gibbs and Pattie of Grand
Prairie; Mr. and Mrs. Nolan
Doyle and daughter of Hous*
ton and Mr, and Mrs, Rayford
Nichols,
3S
Purchased from us during the month of
May
A father is a thing that growls
when it feels good, and laughs
loud when scared to death.
A father never feels worthy of
the worship in a child’s eyes.
He’s never quite the hero his
daughter thinks, never quite the
man iris son believes him to be,
and this worries him, sometimes.
So he works hard to try and
smooth the rough places in the
road for those of his own who
will follow him.
A father is a thing that gets
very angry when the first school
grades aren’t as good as he thinks
they should be.
He scolds his son, though he
knows it’s the teacher’s fault.
Fathers are what give daugh-
ters away to other men who
aren’t nearly good enough, so
they can have grandchildren,
who are smarter than anybody’s.
Fathers make bets with insur-
ance companies about who’ll
live the longest.
One day they lose and the
bet’s paid off to the part of
them they leave behind.
I don’t know where father
goes when he dies. But i’ve an
idea after a good rest, wherever
it is, he won’t just sit on a cloud
and wait for the girl he’s loved
and the children she bore. He’ll
be busy there, too, repairing the
stairs, oiling the gate, improv-
ing the streets, smoothing the
way.—The Rotarian.
i Mu WMjp
f/ /t (n on new, low priced
GOODYEAR
TIRES
BUY A NEW CHEVROLET-TODAY’S BEST BUY IN PERFORMANCE!
highest
compression
— ' f'j I
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A refrigerated room air conditioner
takes the simmer out of summer
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The Celeste Courier (Celeste, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, May 14, 1954, newspaper, May 14, 1954; Celeste, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1217880/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Leonard Public Library.