Burleson Dispatcher (Burleson, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1959 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Burleson Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Burleson Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
SPECIALS FRIDAY & SATURDAY, JUNE 12 & 13th
Bacon
42*
Lb.
Oleo
29*
Wilson’s
2
Lbs.
Franks
49*
PORK & BEANS
3
25<
KIM BELL S
CORN
KING
No. 300
Cans
NEUHOFF’S
Pound
-
KIMBELL'S SHORTENING
59c
Q -Lb.
W Can
(
11, 1959
JUNE 11, 1959
The Texian Editor’s
Frontier News Flashes
I
5.
esterni
uto
R
)
1
Atsociata Store [
ill
•RILL, HALF-
SOC1031
6GC6340
j
tv
¥
i
u >
playground ..
‘otherproofi
Spit Defathe*
I Bugged steel
Safe-D-Roi1*
Deluxe 24 " Rotisserie-Grill
i Now at Sensational Low
Anniversary |
_ Price!
Department of Journalism i Graphic Arts
University of Houston
Kansas produces one-fifth of
the nation’s winter wheat.
■ ■ o....... - ■
Iowa has 25 per cent of all
Grade-A soil in the U.S.
bar. mul-
non-tip
Take odvan-
fog« of thoso
won d trlvl
Anni vtriary
f»r^aintnow
Handy faucet,
gal. now 4.19
WESTERN FLYER
12-GAME |
.Playground Sot
7OKIJ
HORSESHOES
No-chip steel
2-pr. 6.19
6GC2200
FAST LIGHTER
Fast, Safe,
pt. can 22c
7C5242
PICNIC JUG
wan? 1
doubt- curved
Save !
Reg. 34.95
29.88
Annivortoqy
Special Value
Save !
Reg. 16.95
1448
Set of four
13.95
w
HA
I ' V
ervice in
he began
“Buried
I on an
Office
lenry, in
ase Park,
re 5)
SIGNS OF THE TIMES
The crests of dictatorial edi-
tors are lowered, office-hold-
ers are moderating their tone
so as to prepare a soft place
to fall back on, street poli-
ticians of the caucus school are
quietly expressing their convic-
tion, when privately asked, that
the ticket of the Buchanan,
anti-secession, anti-slave trade
Democracy stands a pretty
good chance. Fifteen thousand
majority for Gen. Sam Hous-
ton is anticipated as matters
now stand.
A Complete
Backyard
From?
All This: 9 ft.
swings, si .
IcW.’AlVweather pTated.
(Advertising)
Don’t flatter yourself that
friendship authorizes you
say disagreeable things
Federal Hill, Ky., was in-
spiration for Stephen Foster’s
song, "My Old Kentucky
Home.’’
/
pwify]
r^-i
V
OGC2000
BAG CHARCOAL
Quick ! Full
10-lbs. 66c
to
to
your acquaintances. When they
talk with you, if it should be
their misfortune to be troubled
with a foul breath! take our
advice, and don’t exclaim
whew! and hurry off too soon,
but quickly remark that a
liquid dentrifice has lately
been introduced called DR.
ING’S AROMATIC TANNINO
MOUTH AND TOOTH WASH,
“The Rusk Enquirer says
that “It seems strange to see
the Intelligencer soft-soaping
Gen. Houston, and it cannot
help asking the reason for it.’’
The reasons are very evident,
and they are that the Intelli-
. doubl- curved steel dide. 2
limber Ruggco, Now,
Special Anniversary Year Value • • •
STORE ’N CARRY CHAIR SET
4 chain & carry case!
Easy-to-tote . . . easy-to-
store ... so easy to
lounge in! Lightweight
square bent aluminum.
Smart red & green Sar-
an plaid covers. Save
Now!
Parents! »uy Now
on our Rosy Ter"**
for Sate Healthful
Vacation-Time fu"’
MR. AND MRS. A. H. LOY-
LESS returned home Sunday
from a two week visit with
their daughter, Mrs. B. B.
Hayes and Dr. Hayes, in Lake
Jackson. They returned by way
of Edna, Tex. and were ac-
companied home by Mr. Loy-
less’s brother and sister, J. M.
Loyless and Mrs. Neena Hen-
sley.
gencer is so bitterly opposed to
the Democratic party in Texas
that it is willing to shut its
eyes to all mattery in Gen.
Houston’s career of which it
has been so loud in its de-
nunciation, and stultify itself
by supporting his because it
hopes thereby to defeat the
party with which it formerly
acted.”
—HOUSTON TELEGRAPH
It is a source of gratification
to the Intelligencer, not to be
in the luckless category of the
Houston Telegraph, a paper
that “goes it blind” and stulti-
fies itself whether willing or
not. —AUSTIN SOUTHERN
INTELLIGENCER.
100 Years Ago In Texas
June 7-13, 1859
(State news)
AN UNDERTAKER
A friend in the country
having been asked by one of his
neighbors why the editor of
the State Gazette embellished
his paper with a picture of a
coffin, replied that there was
no telling, unless it was be-
cause he felt a melancholy
presentiment that the anti-
Buchanan clique were going to
be beat, and their organ sold
out, and hence was getting
ready to set up the honest
calling of undertaker.
AUSTIN SOUTHERN
INTELLIGENCER
The Opata Indians were
committing great ravages in
Northern Sonora — shooting
men, ravishing women, and
laying waste the country, it
is impossible to travel with
any degree of safety through
Sonora.
24" GRILL, HALF-1
hood, electric spit
I,’, a Grill end • Rot‘v
serie both at th* tow • •
low Anniversary Pri«. t
<r. deep I8 ga ««>
hnwl 4% Steel .
easy • roll rubber wh^ls*
Ea$y-crank chromed grid.
Bjestem gjuto
BURLESON, TEXAS
Satisfaction Guarantied Ok Your Money Hack
GLADIOLA
DIAMOND
3
25«
3
29<*
25<?
Cans
Cans
LUX TOILET SOAP
3
29^
►
Burleson, Texas
Open 7 ’til 7, Mon. thru Sat.
Phone 251
SCOTT’S food store.
Reg.
Boxes
Elberta - Yellow Bow
BISCUITS TOMATOES PEACHES
O Of/) O No- 303 OOa No. 2*/2 j
Can 25^
5
Mrs. Jean P. Best Attends
Bransom Family Reunion
Garden Club Meeting
Held Last Sunday
Mother of—
Mrs. Frank Ferguson
Breaks Leg Recently
sons
of
with
a very pleasant artifice, sold [Mr. & Mrs. Clinton Collins
by R. D. Carr £. ?...
cents per bottle.
AUSTIN SOUTHERN
INTELLIGENCER
visit with Mrs. Jordan’s mother
—Mrs. J. A. Reed, who is
seriously ill in a Matagorda
hospital. Mrs. Reed has been
making her home with her
daughter, Mrs. Joe Williams
who is a member of the school
faculty there.
Mrs. Jean P. Best attended
the District Board meeting of
Texas Garden Club, Inc. The
meeting was held Wednesday
in Dallas.
Mrs. Best is a member of
the Burleson Garden Club and
is district correspondence Secy.
----------------o . -
Mrs. Nettie Dato, 86, fell,
hanging out
garage, and
recently, while
clothes in her
broke her hip.
Mrs. Dats is the mother of
Mrs. Frank Ferguson, of
Burleson. She is in Providence
Hospital in Waco. She lives on
Robinson Road, just out of
Waco, with her daughter. Miss
Lorraine Dato.
Mrs. Ferguson and her
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. T. J.
Bransom visited Mrs. Dato last
Sunday.
I GIVE YOU TEXAS
(Continued from Page 4)
“Bexar Script No. 2692” is
another story which had its
origin in the recollections of
the Land Office. “Witches
Loaves” is indirectly derived
from that source. And
"Georgia's Ruling,” we are
told, was so frankly biographi-
cal of Land Commissioner
Richard M. Hall that the
author forbade its publication
in book form and it was not
until after his death that it
so appeared.
The Bransom family reunion
was held last Sunday at the
Union Hill Church. About 200
members of the family attend-
ed. The oldest man present
was Jim Bransom, 83, and the
oldest lady present was Mrs.
Ninnie Bransom Been, 80.
Youngest Bransom child was
Donnie Sue Cunningham.
They had group singing,
accompanied by Mrs. Frank
Huas at the piano. They made
plans to meet aguin the first
Sunday in June next year.
o
Visitors In . . .
MAE JONES’ HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jones
and their three sons David,
Steven, and Paul of North
Chicago visited with his
mother, Mrs. Mae Jones, last
week. Kenneth and his wife Pat
went on to Houston and the
children stayed with their
grandmother.
- o
& Co., at 50
Return From Fishing Trip
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Col-
lins have returned from Cor-
pus Christi where they spent
2 days fishing. They took Mr.
and Mrs. A. F. Biuce of Cle-
burne with them. Mrs. Collins
caught the only big fish that
was caught. It weighed 15 lbs.
She caught the 15 lb. drum
on a rod and reel in the chan-
nel.
The Collins' have had as
their company for the past
week Mrs. L. W. Fuller of
Altus, Oklahoma, sister of Mrs.
Collins. Donald and Darrell
Collins returned to Altus with
Mrs. Fuller to spend a few
1 wvuks
MR. AND MRS. C. S. JORDAN MR AND MRS. W. O. COLE-
left Tuesday morning for Mata- J
gorda, Texas, where they will MAN of Burleson attended the
funeral services of Carl Yates
at Grrapvine, Texas last Sun.
Mr. Yates, 80, passed away
last Friday. He was a lifetime
resident of Grapevine. He was
a cousin of Mrs. Coleman.
— o—---
C3
L l l ll t
E S, W E
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.
Matching Search Results
View eight places within this issue that match your search.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.
Deering, R. G. K. Burleson Dispatcher (Burleson, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1959, newspaper, June 11, 1959; Burleson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1256038/m1/5/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Burleson Public Library.