De Leon Free Press (De Leon, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 24, 1966 Page: 6 of 8
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1
I
I
Use The Classifieds For Fast Results ! I
ii
4
&
* VIRTUALLY INDESTRUCTIBLF
NO
MONEY
DOWN
UP
TO 5
Address
YEARS
City
Phone
TO PAY
free repuca- easy home test!
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Octal
SMALLEST HEARING AID EVER MADE BY SONOTONE
Mrs. Ellie Quinn.
WORN ALL IN THE EAR
De Leon Telephone Co.
still
idle With
! SONOTONE — the house of hearing |
19c
SUGAR
/O
I / J
SUITS
1
59c
i<
V
39c
Z
r.
%
4
fl
)
■ r
DRESS SHIRTS
PAPtR BACKS .. 10c ea.
MELLOR1NE
^•nerj,
SONOTONE
MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY —
Your best anchor
SOUTHERN SAVINGS & LOAN
I
M in.i"(*r
each
88c
J
5 lb. Pure Cane, With $7.50 Grocery
Purchase Except Cigarettes, 5 lbs.
No need with this
within reach
Feeling
out of touch?
Sonotonets AMAZING NEW
all-in-the-ear HEARING AID
NOTHING WORN
OUTSIDE
EAR
Annual Pre-
Easter Sale Of
J&F, Mohara,
Cricketeer Suits
New White
Arrow
Trump Cluh
The deepest hurts are somewhat assuaged by
sincere sympathy. Knowing this, your local
mortuary attempts in every phase of its rev-
erent service to convey the spirit of under-
standing and care.
BE
WIL)
AWYE
Your bedroom telephone is
good for your spirits even when
you’re not sick, It’s comfort*
ing just to have a telephone
by your bedside to give you a
sense of security. There’s so
much convenience at so little
cost Have one installed in your
favorite color today.
Sliced Free
... 39c
921 Cherry St.
Fort Worth
Texas
dean her nil
us.' of a pd
Bui. workin
I Jis inhaled I
fumes that si
Lturer of til
[ liable for hl
tr a court tel
ndeed held lia
[of a mislead!
The brand nal
strongly im
Kt was safe
r. the only wa
conspicuous,
[mage suits 1
ng frequency
luct liability."
responsibility
to warn the el
danger.
Each
77c
Water Boys
3 gal .. $2.39 5 gal .. $2.95
each
39c
each
99c
11
Vusually $4.00
Popular
Glen Collars
Special Sale
$2.99
Nabors Funeral Home
Phone 2331
15c
CANDY BARS
fa
set of 8
. 97c
each
9c
Ladles* Zori
SANDALS
in any financial weather:
IS A SAVINGS ACCOUNT
WHERE YOUR MONEY EARNS MORE?
New Wembley
Paisley
TIES
All Silk
$2.50
Good Assortment
FUNNY BOOKS .. 5c ea.
each
$1.29
2 pr.
79c
1 Gallon, With Spout
GAS CAN ..
pair
25c
Gooch Short Shank
PICNICS - lb
18 loot Mechanics
DROP CORD
Ladies 180%
NYLON HOSE
186G Model 'Alger
WATER GUN
each
$1.39
GladioU’s YeUo Bose
FLOUR - 5 lb.
Reg. 79c each
BURMA SHAVE .... 19c
Skinless
WEINERS
Large Plastic $ P*-’-
KITCHEN WARES $1.00
KASHWAY SUPERETTE & DISCOUNT
107 Bivar Phone 5431
Open from 7 a.m. till 11 p.m. Seven Days a Week for
Your Saving and Shopping Convenience.
3 lbs.
$1.00
Deckers
BACON - lb
30 qt.
ICE CHEST
Large Oval
MIRROR
Giant 15 oat. riasiic
TUMBLERS
Tan gee, Keg. $1.00 each
DUSTING POWDER 59c
AH .ueat
BOLOGNA
For Cooler Dining — Auto
SEAT CUSHIONS
W1U Be At —
TRAVELERS HOTEL
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6th
8:30 a.m. till 10:30 a.m.
Batteries And Service
For All Makes
IF YOU CAN’T COME IN — <
CALL 2855 FOR APPOINTMENT
W.H. SMITH DEPT. STORE
Green Stamps on all Osush Purchasee
lb.
19c
Office
h
III >\\ II I
Bring an olti Coat and
Pants for De Leon Wel-
fare and get . . .
$10.00 off
on a New Sult
ff
...IN TIME OF
DEEPEST SORROW
Our sincere sympathy
and understanding does
much to console.
each
LAWN RAKES .... 77c
Snap Out each
ICE CUBE TRAY .. 37c
Popular Brand*, King Site each
TOOTH PASTE .... 69c
3 for
$1.00
.1
Assorted each
GARDEN TOOLS .... 66c
Men’ll Assorted each
SUMMER CAPS .... 25c
Association
Comanche. Tex<v
mi \ \tistin
(OHB
1/2%
COMPOUNDED
SEMI-ANNUALLY
Low Every Day Prices on ctn.
CIGARETTES .... $3.09
3 pkgs.......$1-00
lESl-iwE
••
alt!*-
’"J*
Only seeing is believing with Sonotone's great hearing
triumph—the smallest hearing aid we ever made.—worn
completely in your ear. It’s our amazing new SONET'.
Come in, phone or write for FREE actual-size replica
(non-operating). Find out for yourself how easy it is to
wear the SONET. This exciting aid, the smallest ever
made by Sonotone to fit all into the ear, can help mil-
lions with new focused hearing inside the ear canal.
You just slip it in and out of your ear. NO ATTACH-
MENTS OF ANY KIND OUTSIDE THE EAR.
From Sonotone —
the trusted name in better hearing for over 35 years.
ot Midland and their daugh-
ter, Mrs. Bruce Skaggs and
children, recently visited Mr.
and Mrs. Byron Skaggs and
BROWNWOOD ALUMINUM CO
1029 SAN BENITO
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS
I im Interested in vinyl »ldint ind under-
Band I am not oblicated to buy.
Name ..............................
Can you tell this man Is
wearing the all-in-the-ear
SONET in this real-life,
unretouched photo?
This li how FOCUSED HEARING works mud.
the ear. The SONET hearing aid slips into the
ear. The flexible eartip adjusts comfortably to
the ear canal, directing sounds to the eardrum.
DEALERS for
• Lifetime Aluminum
• Composition Sldinj
• Vinyl Storm Window
And Screens
• Aluminum Storm Windom
Sercene and Doors
Matching Silk
Handkerchiefs
$250
Ork the mi
Yair Wal
""'H'supl
*«n £rv,c*
. UUHUIUHli —— IIIC IIUUJS VI IlVfll Illg |
Send me FREE actual-size replica (non- i
I operating) of smallest hearing aid Sono-
! tone ever made — worn all in the ear. 1
! I
I Nami_______________________________________ -
I Address_________________________________________ .
• Mj----------------------- State-----j
- ■ *
the battle starts!
Some fishermen prefer two
or more hooks in their worms,
orte Alp front and the other
bqrk, close to the tail. This
tall .'hook is added lieeause
fish sometimes strike short of
the head hook.
A simple method of “hook-
ing up” for this type of worm
fishing is to thread braided
line almost the full length of
the worm with a needle. Then
attach an extra hook near the
tail. This braided line then is
tied to the head hook and the
main line.
Idea is that braided line is
so limp that when threaded
through the worm it will not
change the action of the bait.
But the braided line must al-
ways be just the right length
or the action will be aborted.
Muth of the present-day
success of the worm also can
be attributed to new concepts
in bass fishing. A modern-day
discovery is that most grand-
pa bass hang out near the
bottom. So, to successfully
catch the big ones, you must
put a bait in this vicinity.
Most popular method of
working the worm is to cast
out and allow it to sink to the
bottom. Then taking up slack
in the line, you barely lift the
bait, make a couple of turns
on the reel handle then allow
the worm to flutter back
down. Repeat this procedure
slowly, letting the worm go
up and down to really make it
flutter.
When a fish first takes the
Mimes the n
Fu|k Mattmx
f' marking p<i
(’‘""hones B
P-tifie reqtiiri
F generally
*arnmg. u|
inherent ir
[ m this age
M products,
Mahlc to dett
Im self,
kh a depend!
W. "must c:
more simpl
’c from manu
’nereased in
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1 an‘l well-he
^nheless, th
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,p which h
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(is
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E notice on ’
F 11 cun mg
4 needle, juf
”lre Your skin
ls 'he mail
1 *arr>ing, all
[’’ "<»t propj
'■a man wH
l,an’mahle J
I'M to dj
,4C'urer. Hd
an 1
" '*’e conil
,4nd Pointed!
the worm head.
Some prefer a worm with a
lip. This gives it a seductive
wiggle in the water. Others
simply add a small, split-shot
sinker to the leader just above
the worm.
Another method is to thread
the hook in the worm head,
attach the hook to a piece of
monofilament about 15 inches
long and add a swivel on the
other end of the leader.
Above the swivel, on the main
line itself, a sliding sinker is
added. This main line of
course must be run through
the sliding sinker before the
line is attached to the other
end of the swivel. Sinker pro-
vides weight for casting and
for carrying the worm to the
bottom. But should a fish pick
up the worm, the line will
slide through the sinker and
the fish will detect no hin-
drance.
Anglera adopting this meth-
od let the baas run with the
worm. When the fish stops to
turn the bait over in its mouth
(in order to swallow the
worm head first) the fisher-
man seta the hook hard. Then
LIFETIME GUARANTEE-
B. F. GOODRICH (GEON) VINYL-TEX
SOLID VINYL HOUSE SIDING’
MOW C°" Ru,cho»ed •" Brownwood
W You Don't Hove To Go Out Of Tow*
in Concord...
By Jewell Kimmell
Claude and Bessie Pair’s
children were all home for
the week end to celebrate
Claude’s birthday Saturday,
including the Arnold Pairs
and Chesley Atchersons of
Fort Worth, and Fayne Pair
from here.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Kim-
mell had lunch with the Dar-
rell Kimmells Sunday.
Mrs. Ressie Kimmell
has a cold.
Earlene and Lanell Kim-
mell have colds.
Ressie Kimmell's sister,
Miss Tennie Kilgore of Dub-
lin is still on the critical list.
Jewell is staying with her
mother, Mrs. Evia Flatt in the
De Leon Hospital. She had as
visitors over the week end her
son, Lonnie Brewer and fam-
ily of Graham, two brothers
and their wives of Abilene,
Clebem and Loren, Jay and
Rena Wallace, and her moth-
er, Georgia Wallace.
Bran ■’
I’lKiiiy
By Vem Sanford
Probably the fastest-selling
artificial lure on the market
today is the plastic worm.
These colorful, soft plastic
imitation worms have been
around for years. But they
have gained universal popu-
larity only in recent years.
Much of their new-found
success can be attributed to
modem engineering tech-
niques. So limp and lifelike is
today's plastic worm that it
actually looks alive in the
water.
At first, most plastic worms
were manufactured in basic
black and red colors. But late-
ly they’ve been showing up in
fishermen’s tackle boxes in
off-beat, vivid colors. And,
surprisingly, most of them
work.
One of the hottest worms
in Central Texas is fluores-
cent orangish-red.
At Caddo Lake along the
Texas-Louisiana border, the
blue worm is very popular.
But at Lake ’O the Pines in
Northeast Texas, purple
seems to get the best results.
Most anglers experiment
with different colors—black, •
brown, red, yellow, polk-a-dot
—until they find one that ap-
peals to the bass.
Worms can be fished in
many different ways.
Some fishermen use worms
sans any weight. They cast
them with spinning tackle and
work them slowly through
moss beds and other vegeta-
tion close to shore.
Others use a weight to put
them right down on the bot-
tom, retrieving them in slow,
stop-and-go jerks.
Like any other angling
method, the proper technique
in worm fishing on any par-
ticular body of water requires
experimentation.
There are many ways to rig
worms for bass fishing. Some
fishermen simply thread a
hook through the head of the
worm and attach it to the
business end of their lines and
use it without any weight.
Others buy weighted worms
with the lead concealed inside
Brownwood Aluminum Co.
F. R. TALLEY, PHONE 64’-M?4
HAIL PROOF
* FIREPROOF
* TERMITE PROOF
+ NO PAINT-EVER
worm, the tendency is to im-
mediately set the hook. Don’t
do it! Instead, keep the line
tight, but not taut. Let the
bass amove off with it. After
a few seconds, to allow the
bass time to get the worm
entirely inside its mouth, lay
back on the rod and drive the
hook home.
As you work a worm along
the bottom you’ll continually
Im' fouling up on obstructions.
This is to be expected. But to
catch bass you must work
your bait where the fish
habitually hang out. Many
worm fishermen use a wood-
less hook—one with some
type of weed guard above the
point of the hook. This pre-
vents a lot of snagging.
One way to free a snagged
hook is to use a simple device
made from an old sparkplug
Attach a paper clip on one
end of the plug. When the
bait fouls, tighten your line,
clip the pin on the line and
drop the sparkplug. Let it run
down the line until it falls
against the bait.
Usually, the falling weight
will jar the hook loose. If it
doesn’t then wiggle the line,
making the weight rise and
fall, and soon the worm will
come free.
Just because you’re fouling
up occasionally, doesn’t mean
you should move to another
spot. Usually, the more ob-
structions on the bottom, the
better are your chances of
catching bass.
Fouling up is just one
handicap you learn to accept
in this kind of fishing.
' 1?-
■9“
■
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De Leon Free Press (De Leon, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 24, 1966, newspaper, March 24, 1966; De Leon, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1262074/m1/6/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Comanche Public Library.