The Celeste Courier (Celeste, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1964 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
t
I
I
I
~ IE
f&" ■' 23
■nflBT
IIf?
K'' % -
to
y|
DON’T BE A LITTERBUG!
Don’t leave a litter mark in your favorite park. Land every litter bit in the nearest litter basket. Or take
ftp
n
i
'XZCZ
r
h
hi
5^Z r
lyz~
F w*
r/7//wMwii
rWf u
a i
d11 6 :x2&<
- MjlwsSgfM^^
C <4 R
, J 5U: ■
7J
E^gAySM
i
; ( "
C^i^O|k^CVz<4^/^a *•
<<
Jf^:
Ay&k:^x
-<Wh.
IB® Mffi
^!S,.,. _ - <<. >7^ .; . .. '
-' A-isr^’
- <
Z;’'■-')
aMF7
fl
W; Dee Hunter,
told with an accurate figure.
Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Horton
and children of Mesquite visited
her father, Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Glasscock, Saturday.
Jss good for getting things done— it.
_ - - . - „' NOW — is a good time to try
OUR TOWN THIS WEEK...
tUsBfc have taken lawns and in
“jgmte-'a’l to get things moving
>wtsile the weather cooperates—
:t*«K&er too hot, too cold nor too
C^83P
week should make
‘-jshW^ie in the appearance of
■^wwjs if plans made by
received enthusiastically.
<^teftnup—Fixup and Paint
;;fe^s r ' ‘ -" ____
y* of the promoters the prove the looks of "the old grounds.
THEN—a “promised” rock road 1
ume mt neips ■—• ana we| me cemetery is kept in reason-
be surprised that we look a ably good condition the year
round due to the time and in-
terest given to it by C. C. Mc-
: Guire. He transports a man, usu-
ally Preston Lake, with a mower
OV3C AROUND the old Lane > from town to do the mowing. A'
^Kb®dl and church yard things • - - 1
lot better. One day recent-
Dee Hunter, Demp Clinton J lecting money for the upkeep of i until noon, when the story was
Ronnip Clinton nmierht th a _____xi ...-xv ___
whod from the north and
<he old wilderness.
■£Jt&SS30te a. good burning. It
-Ifeard work keeping the blazes and Mrs. C. C.
■contained and saving the pastures 1 care of the cemetery fluid"
"This wonderful spring weather and the fence posts, but they, did
'ss good for getting things done— it.
'We planting the gardens, slaying I”"" 1__
jpesky purple flowered weeds to get that road change.
Those who travel that way and
those who are interested in the
Lane Cemetery see a need to make
the road along the south side of
the cemetery. This change would
a eliminate two sharp corners, haz-
our ards to traffic with the road side
some are growth. Orginally the road was
The there, we were told. This change
Week would also be beneficial to those
a business like ring and with using the cemetery and would im-
THERE IS a way to “lam ’em”
and again there is a way! Two
long legged fellows were seen
striding around the perimeter of
the school grounds last week. It
was a nice warm day but it was
evident that the walkers were not
| out for a leisurely hike.
The two guys were Derrell
Smith and Wayne Rogers, two
fellows in the eighth grade class.
At noon they told me the rea-
son for their walk. They could
not remember how many yards
there were in a mile in Mr.
Weatherley’s math class. (For
that matter, who can???) Don’t
you find it by dividing 5280 feet
in a mile by three, long divi-
sion???
| Anyway back to the story. So
their teacher told once more
there were 1760 yards in a mile.
To impress the fact they were to
step it off 1760 paces making a
mile. So they did.
Is that the much talked about
method in math instruction, Mr.
Weatherley?
Old or new, it worked, at least
great civic service!
No concerted mehod for col-1
Ronnie Clinton caught the . the cemetery is in operation and
atjth fwtm gave some times the fund gets pretty
looking low. Then some donations are
was sent in and the work goes on. Mr.
blazes and Mrs. C. C. McGuire take
should get a face lifting. T"”'’ „ _____;___; ___
Mj&t us all work to shape our own ! on the new route would certain-
pJace for a better appearance— ly help.
^aTvexy little bit helps ‘—< and we I The cemetery is kept in
__-S Al__X.___1__
deal better.
© BUSINESS FEATURES
1
!
S'
Re-
CO.
nolds at Campbell Sunday.
As Long As You Pay
Them, Deduct Them
Political
Announcements
Announcements in this column
are subject to the action of the
Democratic Primary, May 2, 1964
Congress, 4th District
RAY ROBERTS, re-election
Judge, 62nd Judicial Dist.
RALPH R. RASH
TEXAS TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH
CELESTE, TEXAS
Mrs. Mary Owen of Greenville
visited Mrs. Gladys Clinton last
week.
I
earns its keep almost daily
A barn telephone can be one of the lowest
cost, highest value farm tools you can find.
Install this unbeatable time saver today.
State Rep., District 24
JAMES D. COLE, re-election
LOWELL LEBERMAN, JR.
CLARENCE JONES
District Attorney, 8th Jud. Dist.
CAMERON MCKINNEY,
election, Second term
Sheriff
JOE FANNIN
FRANK GOEN
Commissioner, Free. 1
H. F. (Jake) JACOBS,
Term
CLYDE WILLIAMS
Constable, Prec. 3
T. E. WHITE
Mi', and Mrs. Fred
and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Linton tor, ?179.95 for
- 1
< ' 1
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ’.
Lewis Easley of Mesquite visit-
ed his mother, Ml and Mrs. Sam
Glasscock, Sunday.
----------------_ ” i
$159.95 and roller I
J. R. Wilson Co.,
LEONARD, TEXAS.
When you start adding up the
deductions on page 2 of your 1040
federal income tax form, don’t
forget state gasoline taxes. Do a
little adding up and you’ll be
surprised at how much you paid
during the past year.
State gasoline taxes range from
5 cents a gallon in Texas, Kan-
! sas, Missouri, Illinois and Ha-
waii up to 8 cents in Alaska.
I These, of course, are added on
i to the 4-cents-a-gallon federal I
tax which is not deductible.
j A motorist who drives 10,000
■ miles in a year and who gets
115 miles to the gallon on his car,
; Pays between $60 to $80 in gas-
' oline taxes. More than half of
this is paid in state taxes which
are deductible. As leng as you
Second Pay them, you might as well de-
duct them.
) I
li
COME IN AND COMPARE
RCA Victor 21” color and 23"
black and white with any other.
Reynolds make! A 19” New Vista RCA Vic- 1
visited Mr. and Mrs. Perry Rey- stand FREE
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN CELESTE
• Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
t. .......... ■;
EFFICIENT...
ECONOMICAL!
gas range
$149.95
ELEGANT...
j/gg' i
V Z
MODEL 1354
BEAli'TI.-UL LOOKING . . . BEAUTIFUL
COOKING WITH MORE FEATURES . . . AUTOMATICALLY
a
Our bank is as safe as
Fort Knox for all your
financial affairs.
v
WE CELESTE COURIER — Friday, March 20,1964
I
fl
D
i
LOCATED 30 MILES SOUTHWEST OF
LOUISVILLE, KY. IT IS THE WORLD'S
GREATEST TREASURE HOUSE,
HOLDING MORE THAN HALF OF THE
U.S. GOLD RESERVE OF $18,000 MILLION
They worft even listen fo
my *Sh«rethe WeeMi'pien!
FORT KNOX
J. R. WILSON CO.
LEONARD, TEXAS
I
• Glare-free fluorescent
illumination
• Smokeless roll-out broiler i
• Bold Star Award
_
• Z
trash out with you to the litterbag in your car. That’s how you can help keep streets, playgrounds,
highways, waterways always litter-free. That’s how you can help cut the high cost of littering: $50
million last yesr just to clean up major highways. Don’t be a litterbug—ever!
That’s how you can help KEEP AMERICA CLEAN AND BEAUTIFUL.
fou expect.rnore . . . you get more in a modern Roper Gas
riange. For instance, the marvelous Cook & Keep controls for
rZ°JIC.COOki29 in 0Ven • • • set time and temperature, food
■ '■^Y?.mF?eSir®d dor\eness- is he,d serving temperature
$70") until you re ready. Plus all these:
’•Tem-trol automatic burner
♦ Circle simmer speed burners
with click knob controls
' ■ • King-size 25’ oven
ij b',,. My’'S;'
see a// the modern Roper models .. . today
fMUXUSKtgi,
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Celeste Courier (Celeste, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1964, newspaper, March 20, 1964; Celeste, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1224118/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Leonard Public Library.