Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 182, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1961 Page: 4 of 6
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Wu IT! rVTfijPCNT IT
USED CARS
54 rlymouth 2 door, mist green,
radio, heater, deep tread tires, me-
chanically A-l, take this one home
tor 395.00
57 Ford Fairlane 500, four .loor, V-8
engine, factory air conditioner, cus-
tom radio and heater, vvnite tires
?iC* from stem to stern 995.00
53 Plymouth 4-door, radio, heater,
100 pounds of rubber, second car
£?lu*p • 295.00
a® Ford 4-Jon pickup, ^cylinder
engine, heater, cattle frames, f>
tires, mi 1 tries on rear, ready to
Bo to work 195.00
#7 Bulck 4-door hard top station
wagon, white tires, radio, heater,
factory air, power steering and
"'****• " you want to be happy
My this wagon at 1296.00
8® Chevrolet 2 door, Powerglide
transmision. V-8 engine, radio.
Mater. If you are Chevrolet mind-
ed, Jump in and take off for 595.00
McCATHREN MOTOR CO.
B0 W. Elm Phone HI 9-4449
I
USED CARS
USED CARS ^
2—Announcemen
JIOWEV CAN BK EASILY MADE
yollr "Spring Cleaning
rlNDSj in our classified columns
under FOR SALE, FOR TRADE
etc.—HI 9-4413.
I 'X i f > t
ALEX RAWLINS lb SONS
and builder* at
Monuments since 1884
WEATHERPORD, TEXAS
R. A. SMITH
■reekenridge Representative
US X. Hull urn Dial HI M141
8—Florists Nurseries
29—Houses For Rent
Service Special
Front end alignment, Set toe-in,
caster and camber. Regular $7.50
This week only
Use Car Special... on our side lot
1957—CHEVROLET V-8, 210, 4-door, heater and overdrive. On*
owner, sold new from our dealership ONLY SI 145.00
1959—FORD Galaxie 4-door, V-8, radio, heater, tinted glass, white
tires and big hub caps, exceptionally clean. Only 1495.00
McDowell Chevrolet Co., Inc.
YARD SAND
LEAF MOLD
DRIVEWAY GRAVEL
John Holt
107 N. Panther Ph. HI 9-28(3
201 West Williams
MINNOWS
-1 Hour StTvicv
A J. SIMPSON S
718 E. Walker HI 1-913?
9—Situations Wanted
Phone HI 9-4455
16—Laundry & Sev
'UNFURNISHED, Nice 3 bedroom.
I Washer connection. Carpet Clos-
ets and cabinets. 501 N. Parks
. HI 9-2948.
I
4—Breckenridge Americai —TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1961
HOUSES & APARTMENTS FOR
RENT. Call Park-In Grocery. Hi!
9-4664. 1
S BEDROOM HOUSE. Washer. I
dryer connection. 1202 W Walker.
Call Ruth Perkins at IQ 9-3305 or I
HI 9-3757.
POO D
. i-WMraWT W
u PON
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. I
Washer connections. Convenient to
schools. Phone HI 9-2340
. , FOR RENT
? 3 badroom houses, fflo
both and kitchens, on pavement,
In Qood condition, In Miller A*
Agricultural Abuniteact
EXCEPT UNDER CONDITIO**
DO NOT POLO
A. M. MILLER
HMitbter Families
HI
OfNn
HI
2 BEDROOM HOUSE. Conveni-
ently located. Reasonable rent. Call
HI 9-2322 alter 6 p. m. week days,
all day Sunday.
mrm of AfifticuiTunE
oo NOT SPINOLC
S°°d. asucashr(or those qualifying, this is a one-dollar coupon
erarn Thp nrnil^ lS;,;A.g„ncHlt"re DfP*-m connection with the new food stamp pro-
^ iP °j®9 IS designed to put the nation's food surpluses to work in aiding
needv families I ruler the program, a family can buy 75 of these dollar coupons for
So0 and be able to get S75 worth of food at a retail store. Banks will redeem thl
food °stamp 'coupons"0 lr°'n the retailers- families having no income will receive free
32—Houses For Sale
^n^ffiSSmiarg^ga^
rage. Storm cellar. All hardwood I
floors. LOW DOWN PAYMENT.
504 S. Miller. HI 9-4609.
I? • se" • • • or trade, us*
the Classified ads. Phone HI 9-4412.
ALTERATIONS - - - Men, women
and children's clothes. Button
holes and mending. Mrs. Wood-
fin. 115 S. Parks HI 9-4806
3 BEDROOMS—906 W. Dyer 21
BEDROOMS—1213 W. Dyer; 8061
E. Williams, 207 W 3rd (onlyl
|$3,000) and 311 W. 6th (only
0).
EXPERIENCED Chrisiian ladv
"Jills baby siting, night or day.
See Mrs. Kaymond Harlty. 1400 VV.
Elm.
LADY NEEDS housekeeping, baby
sitting, ironing or companionship
for someone during day. Bv hour,
day or week. HI 9-4140.
11—Business Services
4—St
Notices
REED Oil Company Stations in
Breckenridge now author bed PRE-
MIER dealers honoring all PRE-
MIER Credit Cards.
WILL SWAP RENT AND UTILI-
TIES in trailer on P.K. Lake to
someone -'ho will iook after my
cabin. Write Box 934, Oraham,
Texas.
NOTICE—Small short-time loans.
Reasonable interest on selected I
articles, especially good diamonds.
Call HI 9-4333,
FREE DEMONSTRATIONS—Merle I
Norman Cosmetics. S. Newton St
HI 9-3095
INVISIBLE REWEAVING
Repair_damaged clothing
Suits — Dresses — Coats"~
115 W. 5th HI 9-4382
Mrs. Gayler
kAHJUoo renovated. Save np t
S0%. Guaranteed. Cholca _
Brmnese. Box springs made by
WeateiuMattreaa Co., San Angela.
Write Company or call Ragrra
Court. Phone HI MMC.
LET US DO YOUR
LAUNDRY CHORES 1
YOUR Sawing NEEDS
Singer Sewing Machine Co.
from Graham
Repair and Sales
City Contact — HI 9-3553
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
P. O. Box 195, Breckenridge. Texas
1956 DODGE TEXAN. For sale by
owner. HI 9-2598.
i—-Automotive Service ~
Cell m Way . . TWa have
| finest equipment and tt* moot
export help.
! CISCO STEAM LAUNDRY
Phone HI MSIS
SINGER
Sewing Machines—Vacuum
Cleaners.
SERVICE ALL MAKES.)
D. L. Morton, Rt. 2. MA 9-2084
EASTLAND
20—Livestock, Pets
WHITE RABBITS - Three females I HI ^277 J
and one male. Call HI 9-4467 I Breckenridge,
$3,500
BLAKE JOHNSON
INSURANCE AGENCY
HI 9-4477
I NEW . . Two Bedroom CABIN
on Caddo side of POSSUM KING-
DOM. R. V. Carey.
BRICK HOME, 2 bedroom, den,
wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, cen-
tral heating, fireplace. 200 S.
Graham. Call HI 9-4068.
TO BE MOVED—New 2-boJroom
house. Hardwood floors, metal win-
dows, including 4x7 picture window.
$3,750. Call LI 9-1092, Graham, or
Classified Ad
Information
Automation Playing Big Part
In Sea Food Research Efforts
GALVESTON —Automation is
HI 9-4412
Words
16
ao
195
J*
M
—or— HI 9-4413
1
Time
.18
JO
1.00
1J0
UN
1
4
Times
Time*
1.50
1.00
S.00
1.75
S.60
M0
S.00
•JB
1.50
PLEASE
CHECK
21—Poultry Products
Groves Egg Farm
2 miles South of City
Highway 6 — Phone HI 9-2972
Quality Eggs: Guaranteed
Fresh Infertile
Large White
cz- 5oc
Medium Eggs
3-1
23—Household Goods
by John Dodds
, • e
SAND & GRAVEL
Sandy Loam—Fertilizer
Driveway Materials
Dump Trucks & Loader
I Houston Cbzart HI 9-4912
JANIE TAYLOR'S SURPLUS
CENTER .
Used furniture for sale: chests ofl
drawers, bedroom suites, cook I
stoves, refrigerators and washing [
machines. WE TRADE. 205 W.|
Hullutn. HI 9-3472.
went m on me first dev.
The Bracken rldgo American h
responsible for mistakes only on
tho first day. If any mistakes not
Hi? -- .?* advertiser, lessens
me ■ffectiveness of tfM Want Ad,
one extra Insertion will b* given
at no extra charoo.
FOR BEST RESULTS
be rate to write a good ad and to
order your ad for aeven times.
Ton may cancel your ad any ttmi
■nd pay only far the number af
days It appears in the paper.
THE PUBLISHER
reserves the right to reject or cor-
root any Want Ad to meet the
standards of high morality and the
Breckenridge American will not
taowtagly accept any fraudulent
advertising.
. „ deadline
I *^1 cancellations or cor-
[rections must be ordered by 10:30
Is. m.. to be effective the same
| day; 12:00 noon Saturday for Sun*
day Edition.
^ LEGAL NOTICES
Over 500 words 2e per InsorHon,
I under 500 words 4c.
28—Misc. Wanted
WANTED: INDIAN HEAD PEN-,
NIES. Will pay 15c each for those
in good condition. HI 9-2244.
WE BUY and sell used furniture.,
R. V. Carey Transfe rand Storage.
Phone HI 9-2720. 1
28—Apartments For Rent
12—Instruction
GILES TIRE CO.
330 E. Walker
7—BoaHTrailere
FOR RENT: TRAILER SPACE 1
45 x 100 with concrete patio. Near I
South Ward school. Phone HI 9-4461)
days, or HI 9-2i*)8 after 5.
8—Help Wanted
MEN AND WOMEN NEEDED
Ages 18 to 55
CET A CIVIL SERVICE JOB .
WE PREPARE YOU FOR EXAM
No experience necessary. Gram-I
mar school education usually suffl-1
cient. Permanent jobs. No layoffs, r
Short hours, high pay, advance-
ments: Send name, home address,
if rural give directions, phone
number, time home. Write Box 7.— I
Breckenridge American.
MONEY CAN Bi: EASILY MADEl
by listing your "Spring Cleaning!
FINDS" in our classified columns |
under FOR SALE, FOR TRADE,
-tc.—Hl 9-4413.
AVAILABLE AT ONCE . . . . .
Rawleigh business in Stephens Co..
Good opportunity. Experience help-1
ful but not necessary. See Mrs. f
Marie McKinney, Route 2. Box 160,
Breckenridge or write at once:
Rewleigh's Dept. TXE - 810 -102,
Memphis, Tenn.
CAFE COOK WANTED. Male orl
female. Call at Chamber of Com-
merce.
MEN
Learn to Operate
Haw
EOUIPIEHT
DRAG LINES
BULL DOZERS, SCRAPERS
PULL SHOVELS
CLAM SHELLS, ORADERS
I Trained men are earning $165
per week and up. Thousands of
additional men are needed right
now to operate the heavy equip-
ment used In building roads,
bridges, dams, airfields, etc.
Complete training gives you
actual experience on heavy
equipment at our resident train-
ing center, with employment
assistance upon completion.
For complete Information, send
name, address.age, telephone
| number and working hours to:
UNIVERSAL EQUIPMENT
OPERATORS SCHOOL
1402 Electric Building
Fort Worth, Texas
MONEY CAN BE EASILY MADE
by listing your "Spring Cleaning I
FINDS" in our classified columns |
under FOR SALE, FOR TRADE,
etc.—HI 9-4413.
NICE TWO BEDROOM, furnished I
apartment, with kitchen and living I
room combination. Close to town I
and school. No pets allowed. C. F.I
|Offleld, Jr.. 200 W. 1st. HI 9-4277. f
I FURNISHED apartments and bed
Cloae to. Phone HI MTOt
ONE ROOM efficiency, one and
two bedroom apartments. All furn-
ished. Adults only. 304 W. Lindsey.
Phone HI 9-3703.
FURNISHED garage apartment.
315 W. 5th. Phone in 9-3010.
SMALL furnished apartment for
rent. Call HI 9-3641
o« lou PtrictP Mouses
*****
* JSPfc yr Cjotwar
tmouf MTUCTiON
FOR SALE
Extra nice 2-bedroom home.
Wall to wall carpet. 906 E. Elm.
Beautiful 2-bedroom home. 203
S. Iowa SL
Two Bedroom Home, 1504 W.
1 Elm,
j Two bedroom home fc 2Yt acre*
of land.
2 Bedroom. 206 W. Third.
3 Bedroom. 510 N. Rose.
2-bedrodm house. Exceptionally
I nice. Priced to sell. 803 W.
Wheeler.
BILL BLACK
REALTY CO.
m N. Court Phone HI M4M
giving faster and more accurate in-
sights to mysteries of the sea.
Paradoxically, the sea is not
giving up its mysteries at any
great rate of speed.
This is the feeling of the director
of the Texas A&M College Marine
Laboratory here, one of the state's
most active centers endeavoring
to determine whether the sea is
exploitable for another food source
second to land.
He is Albert Collier who directs
projects which make ud basic parts
in the total picture of a possible
expancU.I fcod source for mankind.
Although research at the A&M
laboratory shows promise. Collier,
and several of his colleagues are
mindful of more and more public
interest in marine science as a
reality toward another food frontier
FOR SALE
OR RENT
205 N. HARVEY
New FHA Loan Available
■ Only $300.00 down plus closing
I cost, $74.00 month.
I We will build you a FHA, GI or
| Conventional home. Call—
L-W CONSTRUCTION CO.
I and ask for BILL BRABBIN
or NORMAN BREWER
Phone HI 9^3755
34—Farms & Ranches
LOUDDER
TV
SERVICE
TV & RADIO REPAR
Picture Tubes In Stock
No Carrying Charges
All Work Guaranteed
HI 9-3252
I We Give Gold Bond Stamps
S. Rose & W. Williams
29—Houses For Rent
4 ROOMS & BATH. Partially furn-j
ished. $30 month. Near school. 410!
W. 7th. Call HI 9-3478 after 6.
637 ACRES OF FARM AND)
RANCH land south of Ranger. Vi f
mineral rights included in price.
Good pasture land. $60 per acre.
See John A. Blackwell, 1 mile south i
|of Lake Leon Rt. 1, Gorman, orl
E. E. Blackwell. Raneer Route 2.f
NICE 4 room unfurnished house. |
109 N. Miller. Call at 107 N. Miller.
!Garage, washer connections.
FOR RENT, Last of May—5 room
house. Clean, good location on I
pavement. Phone HI 9-2880.
2 BEDROOMS, furnished and un-
furnished houses Reasonable rent, i
Hose to schools. Call HI 9-2701 or
HI 9-2585 after B.
Spot Ads
[Are wen read
■ You're reading one
Complete choice of fabrics
MATTRESSES
RENOVATED
Jones Mattress &
Upholstery Shop
823 N. Breck Ph. HI 9-4891
CSfflfl
UPHOLSTERY
Chances Favor
Meeting Between
K. And Kennedy
(By ASSOCIATED PRESS)
There's a definite possibility of
a meeting between President Ken-
nedy and Soviet Premier Khrush-
chev. It has been learned that such
a meeting is under consideration
but that no firm decision has been
reached. The answer may come
wU'nin one v/eek. But chances of
such a meeting are being rated
favorably at 3 to 2.
The initiative for a meeting is
said to have originated in Moscow,
with Khrushchev suggesting to U.
S. Ambassador Llewellyn Thomp-
son that such a conference might
be a good idea. If the conference
| develops, it probably will take
1 place in a neutral city, such as
i Vienna or Stockholm and may be
an extension of Kennedy's visit to
France, scheduled to begin May 31.
The issues of Laos and a valid
ban on nuclear testing could prove
to be tough barriers to a Kennedy-
K'nruschev get-together. But pro-
gress towa:d solution of these ques-
tions could do much to assure that
the two leaders will meet.
Questioned about such a meet-
ing at Palm Beach, a White House
spokesman would say only that
"there are no plans for any such
meeting at present." He refused
to be pinned down as to whether
the words "at present" held any
significance.
The first reaction of Senate lead-
ers to a summit meeting was one
of general approval. Senate com-
ments ranged from a guarded "I
can see no harm in such a meet-
ing" from Republican Senator
Styles Bridges, to Democratic Sen-
ator Hubert Humphrey's: "Sum-
mit meetings are part of diplomacy
and should not be avoided."
Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield gave quick endorsement
to the Me? But the chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mitee. Senior J. William Fulbright
said, that while it would be per-
fectly legitimate for Kennedy and
Khrushchev to meet "it ought not
to be buiit up as a solution to the
world's ills."
scon.
Recent developments in automa-
tion such as the Thermistor Chain,
and in scores of automatic comput-
ers. are helping studies.
The Thermistor Chain, now stan-
.dard equipment on the laboratory's
research vessel, the Hidalgo, takes
temperatures of sea water at close-
ly spaced intervals down to 900
feet. The information is ff i through
an IBM "teletype"-like machine
giving a permanent useful record
for many fundamental studies such
as tracing surface currents.
This is the kind of research which
could not have been possible under
manual manipulations.
Nature itself proposed the major
problems against man's automa-
tion and engineering advances.
Although the ocean areas are
vast. Collier describes only three
general situations in which marine
environment is such that produc-
tivity is possible.
Almost all fishing either in the
Gulf of Mexico or any other water
area on Earth is confincd to shal-
low coastal waters and estuaries.
These are the areas where chem-
ical enrichment and maximum light
intensity are coupled to produce
sea life suitable for man's use.
Next in productivity are the co-
called banks, those areas of ocean
bottom which rise above the gen-
eral level of the surrounding sea
floor. These irregularities provide
increased surface for t'ne growth
of small and large forage organ-
isms and they create a certain
amount of turbulence in the flow
of ocean water over them. When
such areas are shallow enough to
receive sufficient sunlight to drive
the photosynthetic process, the pro-
ductivity is greater than in the
surrounding areas.
Finally, there is the area in
whic'n the hydrodynamic situation
causes the richer waters from the
depths to rise within the range of
sunlight. The classic example of
this is the divergence of masses
of water along the equatorial cur-
rent system in the Pacific. In the
divergence, the deeper waters are
brought to the surface and a pro-
ductive tuna fishery is the result
The Campeche Bank offers an-
other case of fine fishing from
surface irregularity.
Research at the A&M laboratory j
has shown such promise in the in-1
vestigations of basic research to j
determine feasibility of productiv-
ity from the sea that the National
Science Foundation has given a I
$50,000 grant, matched by the col-!
lege, for a $100,000 expansion pro-1
gram beginning in May.
A** of tnis laboratory's studies 'I
Visit Tightens
Links Between V1
II, Tunisia ^
(By ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Tne warm reception given Pres-
ident Bourguiba of Tunisia in the
United States has done much to
tighten Washington's links with
Tusisia. The 57-year-old Moslem
ruler of the North African Republic
about the size of Louisiana long
has been a staunch ally of the
West. A quick-minde<| politician.
Bourguiba often has pointed out
that, by sheer geography, his na-
tion has no choice hut to go with
the West.
Bouguiba is a master of ini-
pemptu speaking, or balconv ora-
tory. He provided an example of
this Thursday at New York's ticker
tape par;de. He spoke quickly, and
without preparation, at City Hall
when newsmen placed microphones
hefcr him. He beamed happily as
I he rattled off this thanks in
| French.
Bourguiba is eloquently persuas-
ive in either French or Arabic and
has tremendous magnetism over
a crowd. Matched with his genius
for grass roots organizing, it helps
explain his rise from a rebel jail-
ed by France lo the leader of his
own free country.
Bour£.iiba himself is the product
of two cultures. He is equally at
home among the mobs of the Tunis
markets or within the refined work-
ings of French diplomacy. In his
early days, he studied political sci-
ence in Paris. The French first
arrested him in 1934 after his na-
tionalist political activity in Tu-
nisia and, for the next 20 years
he regularly was in and out of
French prisons.
Bourguiba waged a fierce guer-
rilla warfare that resulted in lim-
ited home rule after five years
Once France saw the futility of
suppressing Tunisian nationalism
he returned to Tunis in personal
triumph.
Since Tunisia gained its ir.le-
pendence in 1956. the United States
has sent a fortune in economic
aid. Lately, Tunisia has been do-
ing some economic flirting with tne
Communist nations, but the results
have been sail and the United
States is inclined to make no ef-
fort to discourage such trade.
are on marine organisms placed in
controlled environmental condi-
tions. The reason these synthetic
conditions are used, Collier said, is
to assure controls which would
not be possible ur<ler the variable
condition of the natural setting.
The marine organisms are placed
in synthetic sea water, containing
the known chemicals of the sea in
amounts desired. Physical condi-
tions of temeratures, light and food
.nu areL contro|!«l experimentally,
fnis basic method lias alroaeiv
product-! some records of interest"
in oceanography. One was Collier s
study cf the oxygen requirements
of the oyster. His work showed the-
oyster needed more oxygen while
pumping water than was previous-
ly believed.
Pastries To Please Even
The Most Particular Palate
PppREH
AND SO-O-O 0OOO/
JACK'S BAKERY
1503 W. Walker HI 9-3S15
RAMBLER
S \ l.f'S Wl> <1 KVH I
Kimes Motor Co.
10.") S. Ka\li>|
REASONABLE RENTALS: 2 BED-
ROOMS, 901 E. Williams, 909 W.
Lindsey.
BLAKE JOHNSON
INSURANCE AGENCY
HI 9-4477
FIX-IT SHOP
W.--- F.j.T..
Kep.iir \nylliintr
•"WO W. Wild JAMS
NOTICE
final Plastic Siding
In tula ted Siding
Composition Roofing
Aluminum Screens
FHA Financing op to 80 «««"<>>
For Free Estlaate Call
CALLARMAN
Breckenridge, Toxa«
SPECIAL
HOT BEEF
BAR-B-Q
79c lb.
Park In Grocery
409 E. Walker Ph. HI M864
Open Late Evening*
Coll Us For
Carpenters
07
ESTIMATES OBI
Home Repair
LOANS
FHA Title Ong
NO DOWN
PAYMENTS
•0 MONTHS TO PAT
Breckenridge
Lumber Co.
HI 9-3030
700 E Walker
K
Complete
Automobile Trim
TAILOR MADE SEAT COVERS
Worn Sections on Seats Inserted
DOOR PANELS COVERED
HEADUNERS DYED or INSTALLED
CARPETS — CUSTOM MADE
Prices to fit Your Budget
We have added this service to serve you better
Paint - Body - Glass - Air
Conditioning. Radiator & Trim
HIKtSM. AUTO SEHKE
115 W. Elm Phone HI 9.4944
,, v;% " «* **V " '
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 182, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1961, newspaper, May 16, 1961; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth136160/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.