The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1964 Page: 8 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 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:
'AGE TWO
SAW DUST DAY
OCTOBER
Wright saws
wee
RUGGEDIZE
Wright chain saws
INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR AT 1964 STATE FAIR
t
i
h
window
K s 888 38
3333338
But her 11 year old daughter,
23
j33
8
Mr. Wolford the Christmas plans
Insurance for Every Need
€ •)
LIVE TELEVISION AT 1964 STATE FAIR
I
Our Commercial Printing ।
I
, K 808
-)..............,
Roy G. Roberts Ins. Agency
207-B N. Kentucky St.
Phone LI 2-4433
C R
Department..
Solicits Your PRINTING ORDERS
3
E 2 34006c
gggagggeggg
a •)
Offset
Letter Press
Engraving
I
CALL LI 2-2332
■
*3
For The Best In..
Business and Commercial Forms, Letterheads, Envelopes,
6-.
Booklets, Receipt Books, Circulars, Direct by Mail Advertising,
LIKE MAGIC
Brochures, Labels and numerous other printed items.
}
RAY BEWLEY
PROMPT SERVICE --
Electrical G
REASONABLE PRICES--
Phone for Free Pick Up
Plumbing
A- 24 HOURS SERVICE -X
CALL
Largest Circulation . . . Best Advertising Medium
LI 2-5791
McKinney, Texas
S. & H. Green Stamps
F
A
<
1 .
358063
-
Tunnell Finance Co
114 WST LOUISIANA ST,
PHONE 2-2252
McKinney
Laundry & Dry
Cleaning
Phone LI 2-4411
NOW 12 MONTH
WARRANTY on all
C-70 7.06 cu. in. Direct
and Gear Models
Wright
POWER
BLADE
But he got along well in the end.
Joan, who has learned about
wildlife creatures in her maga-
V
R
X
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
X
o8
e
ALAN HARRIS BECOMES JR.
MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN
ANGUS ASSOCIATION
X
o8
o
a
2
S
co
c
•
3
tal management as “real partners
in providing better mail service
at all levels.”
“place” which resembles the Gulf
Coast flounder.
—$12,237,916,000—came from sal-
aries and wages.
On a nationwide basis, some 99
million Americans signed tax re-
turns, showing an adjusted gross
income of $348,706,723,000—some
283 billion of this from salary and
wages.
Q
CD
(D
3
•
9
5
*0
0
y
Ro
X
* FIRE * CASUALTY ¥ BURGLARY
¥ ACCIDENT * HEALTH
8 A.M. to 5 P. M
A
• RUGGEDIZED die castings throughout
• RUGGEDIZED crankshaft-selectively
hardened, precision balanced
• RUGGEDIZED hard-coated pistons
• RUGGEDIZED cast iron cylinder sleeves
• RUGGEDIZED ball and needle bearings
I
I
I
I
■■■■■
FISH ‘N CHIPS
STILL THERE ,
I
THE EXAMINER, McKINNEY, TEXAS, OCTOBER 1, 1964
0
8
3
t
3
3
6
y
Ro
X
1
I
JULIE’S BACK! Julie Benell’s popular show on
WFAA-TV, Channel 8 in Dallas, will be telecast live from
the Gas Exhibits Building again during the 1964 State
Fair of Texas, October 10 through 25. Fairgoers will be
able to watch the program in progress for an hour begin-
ning at 12:30 p.m. each weekday. Additional entertainers
and programs from WFAA-TV will be telecast live daily.
Other features of the Gas Exhibits Building will include
a display of four all-gas national magazine model kitchens,
plus an extensive display of gas appliances.
II
3
X
o8
o
CX
I
-3
in
c
4)
3
Direct and gear C-50
4.7 cu in. models
-----------o-----------
One ton of alfalfa hay contains
as much protein as 50 bushels of
corn, reports Ohio Farm & Home
News.
WELCOME TO Wh/eht.
6414040 402020 848”
V. L. THRELKELD
Pharmacist
- 7
PREPARE FOR TRADE FAIR Getting ready for the
1964 State Fair of Texas, October 10 through 25 in Dallas,
the three cosmopolites above meet for a look at some
products to be displayed by France, Italy and Belgium,
three countries prominent in the State Fair’s interna-
tional exhibit center. Isabelle Corbet, left, of French
descent, holds a Napoleon plate from France; Mrs. Joanne
Manicchia, center, of Italian descent, and Thierry Riek,
of Belgian descent, look into an Italian brass container.
Thierry is wearing a Belgian sweater and has a miniature
Belgian cannon in front of him.
a fish or
the shops.
L
l I
8 3
32 ■ 3
t lifetime membership in
I Association.
Angus Association at St. Joseph,
Missouri, announces Glen Bratch-
er, secretary.
This new junior membership
entitles the member to register
purebred Angus at regular mem-
bership rates and to the privi-
«•
Game and Fish” magazine staff,
has just returned from a visit to
her England home folks with-
out seeing any trace whatever of
I
8
k "E
L 7
t
I
I
I
i
■
Alan was one of 205 young
people in the United States to
receive junior memberships last
month.
a , • -
1
gvg g
83855 s£
88 8
m, ’
4,4 3
gmbaslas 5
9
a
C
3
u |
g
THE McKINNEY EXAMINER/
333333333333233233288332233 8
& 888
2 go”
__ ---—a----
Pinkeye affects cattle of all
ages and breeds, though white-
faced cattle seem more suscepti-
888888/88; , f . • • $ 33 22 222 2:3888888
gz-. :'; W
92*882828888886288:232332323222222322322326222899;
:33333333232383333
F s s 88
:323323232323333233332330333232322338973
Air-Cooled Engine Supply
R. D. [DICK] LAYTON
owner
We want you to know the outstanding features of Wright Chain Saws and Wright Power
Blade Saws, and we’ll make it worth your while to let us demonstrate.
fish called
-
! ... J
— 2
E: 22 329033 3052 28
' 2888888
i A 885188288882888
A
Postal Plans
For Christmas
Shaping Up
Longer post office
&EE LS M
—
n7)
4 L/
r
ularly relished a
, monger. It’s still fish and chips
are part of a nation-wide pro- ' around the clock and kippers for
gram to bring postmasters into breakfast, said Joan. She partic-
more responsible positions in pos'
g
Madeleine, is glowing with re-
leges of the Association until the
ae of 21. At that time junior .
members are eligible to convert 1 ports on the Beatles. In fact, their
1 ■ ° - • • the | influence is so pronounced on the
English boys that the Beatles do
state per capita income.
This federal money helps ele-
mentary and high school stu-
dents get wholesome lunches at
the lowest possible cost, for it is
used to pay the school a certain
sum for every Type A lunch ser-
ved a student.
Rate of payment for each lunch
is determined by the state agen-
cy, but it usually represents 10
to 20 percent of the cost of the
lunch to the student.
On the national average, fed-
eral assistance in cash, plus
plus foods donated by USDA,
make up slightly more than 10
percent of _ the cost of school
lunches. Payments from children
account for nearly 60 percent
while state and local sources pro-
vide the remainder.
Only schools serving Type A
lunches under the national school
lunch program will share in this
$6,645,429 cash allotment to Tex-
as.
88*:
898
duction and rapid loss in weight,
of from one million dollars to
five million dollars.
In addition, many other sec-
tional center offices with smaller
receipts will have the program
in operation by early December,
in time to help speed delivery of
Christmas gifts mailed with zip
code.
The Postmaster General told
. 20
Alan Weichsel Harris, 9, Me- NOTES EDITOR
Kinney, has been granted a jun- AUSTIN _ Joan Pearsall, edi-
ior membership in the_American torial assistant on the “Texas
y 3^7/^
—.....
, 1
ITexas Gets Larger
■Share Of School
ELunch Funds
I Texas schools will get a larger
share than last year of national
■school lunch funds allotted to
the states by the U. S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture.
1: The increase amounts to $214,-
264, which runs the total state
llotment for he current school
lyear. to $6,645,429, according to
A9hn J. Slaughter, southwest
area, food distribution division,
Agricultural Marketing Service,
Dallas.
I This USDA office works with
the school lunch division, Texas
Education Agency, in handling
the school lunch program.
The increase in the Texas al-
lotment reflects the $9 million
increase in national funds which
total nearly $130 million for the
current school year, explains Mr.
Slaughter.
Each state receives school
lunch funds on the basis of the
number of USDA Type A lunch-
es served during the 1963-64
school year and adjusted by the
SU M
p. a
A,
5g : ; ggsg
I 1 11
538 ’ 95
E828983 *888
8*88333 :
not even look like Beatles any"
more. That is, their hairdo is con-
servative compared to the ex-
travagant trend among the Brit-
ish urchins.
When her son, Robert, 15, no-
I ticed the first English boy coif-
feur at the airport, he tried to
S. & H. Green Stamps
hours, expanded delivery serv-
ices and large scale extension of
the Zip-coded parcel post speed-
up are planned for Christmas,
Postmaster General John A. Gro-
nouski has advised Postmaster
W. Phil Wolford, here at McKin-
ney.
Mr. Gronouski has outlined to
the McKinney postmaster three
major new steps which he has
taken “for the best Christmas
mail service the Postal Service
has ever had:”
1. Expanded post office win-
dow hours December 5th to De-
cember 26th as deemed necessary
by the local postmaster.
2. A six-day week during the
period December 7-December 31
for parcel post deliveries, instead
of a five-day week.
3. Completion by November 1
of Phase III of zip code parcel
handling at about 130 more “see"
tional center” post offices (stra-
tegically-located mail massing
points), providing faster delivery
up too 24 hours or more for par-
cels with zip code.
In Phase I and II, approximate-
ly 75 offices with receipts of five
million dollars annually and a-
bove activated faster zip code
sorting and dispatch by Septem-
ber 1. The 130 offices in Phase
III include offices with receipts
Tax Man Sam Says
The Internal Revenue Service
Statistics of Income contains
these interesting figures: During
1962, almost five million Texans
signed their names to individual
income tax returns. The volun-
tary taxpayers reported some
game bird except in $15,439,451,000 in adjusted gross
income. The biggest part of this
ee,
e—- ■
L --
— e
ggemce, R#-El,
594AQ r Atr
” —-Ah ' 1
------------0------------
Hogs are more sensitive to heat
than any other farm animal, but
shade arrangements don’t have to
be elaborate to keep them gain-
ing, reports North Dakota State
University College of Agriculture.
Yes, the natives still ride to
the hounds, the opulent ones ga-
ther at the seashore for surf ang-
ling, and the grouse season has
opened on the Scottish moors.
But, Joan’s folks live only twelve
miles from London at Sidcup,
Kent, and she was too occupied
with multiple obligations to in"
terview the game keepers or the
inevitable poachers.
Outside of seeing her grand-
parents, the three children—Rob-
ert, Madeleine and Kit—were im-
pressed that hamburgers and
hot dogs were available. But not,
all agreed, as good as the Texas
variety.
Those “Good Old Days”
were often BAD DAYS...
when you had to rely on
just ‘any old remedy” or
upon self medication
when illness struck.
But GONE ARE THOSE
DAYS - AND GOOD!
Today you can get the
•professional help of a
good physician when
you need it.
zine assignments and who au-
thors the Junior Sportsman page
in the magazine, said the only
indication she noted about wild-
life was a “demure sign in a lit-
tle shop window” advertising
“rod and line licenses.”
But the seafood and salt water
fish supplies were adequate since
every hamlet still has its fish-
", i
Your washday woes
disappear when y o i
send your laundry to us.
: -
e
£
8
c * ............
9
9
c
344 EAST LOUISIANA McKINNEY, TEXAS PHONE LI 2-3311
, , . . - hide his Texas crew cut. “They’ll
ble than others. It can cause a think I‛m a freak,” he moaned,
drop of 25 percent in milk pro- - - - - -
< oi
FREE CHAIN OR BLADE!
On this date only, every purchaser of a Wright Saw will be given FREE a $35.00 kit of extra
chain, blade, hard hat, and or other parts.
gjh.
Fl Nh
F -7
{.a Sssanean RBG
—0g p—
! - ATegom")
A /pmwim
59 Ssmwg85
If you own a chain saw, bring it here on October 8th between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. and
compare its performance with one of our Wright Saws. We will sharpen your saw chain free to
show our appreciation for your making the test. Refreshments for all.
3 SAWS IN ONEIe
. FIREWOOD SAW. Fells and cuts up trees —20"
. PRUNING SAW. Smooth-cutting blade
doesn’t damage trees-single cutting edge
• CARPENTRY SAW. Follows a line like a
handsaw! 10,000 strokes a minute
SAFE! Only power saw safe enough to use on a ladder!
I "g AGeA
sMf/7
t •
I ■
< •
EW,
“T—mA
Magazines Wanted
¥ WE SELL, BUY AND TRADE ¥
Wilcox Magazine Exchange I
221 East Louisiana McKinney, Texas
Auto Loans
New and used
UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY
4 o
al
I
Bl
8
“THE FRIENDLY DRUG STORE”
213 East Louisiana St. Phone LI 2-5571
Pi
0. ■
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.
Thompson, Wofford & Thompson, Wofford, Jr. The McKinney Examiner (McKinney, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1964, newspaper, October 1, 1964; McKinney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523679/m1/8/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.