Mt. Vernon Optic-Herald (Mount Vernon, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1973 Page: 5 of 10
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fHt. ilernon
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BIG VALUE
4
1
BREAD
$1
4
1’/i LB.
4
LOAVES
L. A. Hale
BONNIE BAKER
Rites Held
BISCUITS
5
REG. CAN
FOLGER'S
PARKAY
Red Ward, Max Rutledge and
COFFEE
OLEO
SOLID, MAN, SOLID!
3 x *1
ZEE PAPER
LB.
TEXSUN
KENTUCKY WONDER
Orange Juice
BEANS
QUART
22
LB.
3
STALK
5
*1
BONNIE BAKER
LBS.
5
CORN MEAL
2
LBS.
c
A TOWN
SUPER TASTE
6-0 Z. PKGS.
ALL MEAT
I
WIENERS
THAN ITS
F
Liver - Cheese
■t
/a
35'
Prospectin' for LOW PRICES?
SUKI Your Claim
di Piqqly Wiqqlq!
Mrs. Phelps
And Two Sons
Services Held
Giant
Rolls
no STRONGER
DEL MONTE
Sweet Peas
DEL MONTE
Pineapple Juice 3
f
DEL MONTE
Golden Corn
303
CANS
303
CANS
10
COUNT
CANS
Newspaper!
It Pays To Advertise I
6-OZ.
CANS
303
CANS
PKG.
OF 12
MOZ
CTN.
ROUND
BOXES
OZ.
JAR
8-OZ.
CANS
*0 CT.
PKGS.
LB.
BAG
Limit
1 Pound
With
55.00
Or More
Purchase
2-LB.
BAGS
MORTON'S
SALAD DRESSING
BAMA
APPLE BUTTER
FIRST-OF-THE- SEASON
PRODUCE
PURPLE TOP
TURNIPS
CALIFORNIA
CELERY
PATIO
TORTILLAS
BONNIE BAKER
SALT
BONNIE BAKER
FLOUR
YELLOW
ONIONS
FLORIDA NEW
POTATOES 2
(©ptir-Heralh
Thursday. April C. 1973 >7
Mt. Vernon
Franklin County, Texas
Page 5
STOCK-UP PRICED
FROZEN FOODS
/■
46
OZ.
CANS
49c
LB.
BAG
39'
29'
49'
29'
19'
29'
29'
I
19'
29'
49'
25'
39'
29c
39c
DOUBLE S&H GREEN STAMPS ON WEDNESDAY WITH
PURCHASE OF »2.50 OR MORE EXCLUDING CIGARETTE
ZEE
PAPER NAPKINS 3
PIGGLY WIGGLY
TOMATO SAUCE 3
5
RICHES
COFFEE RICH
KRINKLE CUT
POTATOES 3
Quantity Kights Roerved
79'
n
thcmxelvm, are a major cauxe
of service need.).
And, like many good things,
it seems to be getting belter
all th. time.
Thia ia best illustrated by
the fantastic new solid state
color television sets now being
made by General Electric. De-
spite the fact that color TVs
are very complicated, innova
tionx inG.E.’» solid Mate color
TV designs have made them
easier to service than many
solid slate black ■ and - while
sets. In fact, they're mi easy
to service, they've won the
highest serviceability rating
ever awarded by the Nation-
al Electronics Associations,
which is made up of inde-
pendent professional TV serv-
ice organizations and techni-
cians.
The high rating was due,
in pert, to the use of such
things as plug-in transistors
and integrated circuits which
can be simply replaced if they
fail, and by partitioning into
readily accessible modules for
ease of diagnosis and repair.
The technical reasons for
I hr high ratings arc heller
left to a G.E. dealer or your
TV serviceman to explain. Let
it suffice at this point to say,
they nrr solid, man, solid.
12-02. PKG. 59'
I
&
I
Vowels 3
*W*ZvS*v*V*^\
-I
1
STEVE STANLEY, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stanley
of Mt. Vernon, was winner of
the Franklin County spelling
bee held on Wednesday,
March 8, and will represent
the county in the statewide
spelling bee sponsored by
the Dallas Morning News in
Dallas during May Stanley
is in the eighth grade at Mt.
Vernon Elementary School.
Alternate Is Elizabeth Ed-
wards, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Edwards, who
is a fifth grade student at Mt.
Vernon. Ten students were
entered in the competition.
(Optic-Herald Staff Photo).
r\*i ___
SUPER ■W
SLICED BACON 79
Tube he, or not tube he?
That was the quest ion con-
fronting the electronics world
not too long ago. when the
scientific impact end engi-
neering implication* of tran-
sistors and printed circuits
began to be felt.
The answer, of course, wax
iicudemic since the advantages
of solid stale (mi tubes) cir-
cuitry in TV sets, radios, pho-
nographs and tape equipment
were more than jual a little
bit obvious
For one, solid stale prod-
ucts could be built a lot
smaller and lighter than their
bulky • by • comparison prede-
cessors made with tubes. Sec-
ondly, well made printed cir-
cuit boards potentially offered
uniformity of performance,
desirable in TV sets, for one.
Thirdly, with IDO't solid slate
TVs, for example, the chassia
operates on less current. But
even so, more power is gen-
erated for the color picture
tube. This gives better picture
performance and quality. Last
ly, but certainly not least im-
portantly, solid stale products
run "cool" with no heat-
generating tubes in their cir-
cuits. (More than any other
single factor, heal is respon-
sible for n tubed appliance's
deterioration while lubes.
MOWWM!
4 » ——
89c
A
■te
or rwoo a«*v'
Funeral services were held
for Mrs. Melisa Phelps and her
two sons, Franklin Phelps and
David Phelps, Thursday,
March 29, at Smith-Bates
Chapel in Mt. Pleasant.
Ministers of the Church of God
of Prophecy, L. V. Cameron
and Gary Pate, officiated.
Death for all three was due to a
one car accident Sunday,
March 25, in Mt. Pleasant.
Melisa Phelps, 39, was born
September 29, 1933, in Winfield
She is survived by two
daughters, Alla Mae Sargent
and Hazel Lee Phelps, both of
Mt. Pleasant; one son, James
B. Phelps, Mt. Pleasant; her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bunk
Owens, Mt. Pleasant; three
sisters, Pauline Phelps, Lou
Miller and Nell Smith, all of Mt.
Pleasant; two brothers, Fred
Owens, Mt. Vernon, and Lee
Owens of Douglasville, Ga ., and
two grandchildren.
Franklin Phelps was born
August 26, 1958 and David
Phelps in November, 1962, both
in Mt. Pleasant.
They are survived by their
father, E. F. Phelps of Africa,
two sisters and a brother, Ella
Mae Sargent, Hazel Lee Phelps
and James B. Phelps, all of Mt.
Pleasant, and their grand-
parents, Mr and Mrs. Bunk
Owens of Mt. Pleasant.
DVDCrtMAl of Wichita, Kansas; one I
brother, Cecil Hale, El Paso; I
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Matthews and two grandchildren.
and Mark and Kim of Pallbearers were Buck Irby,
Shreveport visited her parents, L. E. Bryant, L. W. Bridges,
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Red Ward, Max Rutledge and
Bridges, last week Glen Ray.
issue 3
Funeral services were held
for Leonard Aimer Hale, 57,
Tuesday, April 3, at 2 p.m. in I
the Sam B Harvey Funeral
Chapel. Burial was in the
Winfield Cemetery with Rev.
Jamie Duncan officiating.
Mr. Hale passed away in
Sulphur Springs Sunday, April
1. He was bom in Winfield
January 27, 1916, the son of
Asbury and Dee Hale.
He is survived by one
daughter, Mrs. Paul Voorheis
of Wichita. Kansas; one
■ 1 UaIa 1 « A . I
Del Monte Tuna
DELTA BATHROOM
4-Roll
DEL MONTE —
Fruit Cocktail 3
YOUR CHOICE
Super Taste Bologna
SPICED
Luncheon Meat 3-99c
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Bass, James T. Mt. Vernon Optic-Herald (Mount Vernon, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1973, newspaper, April 5, 1973; Mount Vernon, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1277880/m1/5/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Franklin County Library.