The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 111, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1958 Page: 2 of 12
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PíOt 2
Í.--OÍ
AUGUST 7. 1958
Pick-up Men Are Important Part
Of Rodeo - Save Horses And Men
TV r mex. ride op rx.
tti w .« «í i still -bactsiif arotir
k'jsr ta «zucú* jm they're
Prescriptions
at
CHAPMAN
PHARMACY
there to utt* th* warn Bss that's
only half their job.
7Víj"'re jas: ta about
savin? '.he horse.
There art tó2 plenty oí hrtur
nAer« these days hot good cc &-
Ksstesn budting inane* thorn- sisnt-
cí getting scarce a¿ t e e t i is t
trust. Tht pickup men mare it
fató u ?e*. the riser down because
nothing éisewurages t hone quick-
er thas. *_nt fet-hzg ht-'t beet beat-
€SBL
Ta* qtzicker *Jm- brant ?eti that
cussed cfwhoy off kit back, the
Everyone
Knows That
It's Good Business
. . to finance your
ew cc of low bonk interest
rotes. F&r prompt Joans, with
monthly repayments suited to
your budget, come to this bank.
CITIZENS STATE
ÍAember FDiC
Rusk, Texts
Phim V.J 3-2277
better he feeit about rt And th?
better he i«ii the better he
back*.
fxknig up ü nc jk¿i fur a grtes-
hora, A; bes: Á t a riún mi>neia-
ver, ndiag fiar.k u flat:k wrfc i
skittish. spring-joined outlaw that
holds no Iwe* few jet ether crea-
ture Most pecfcsp e.íx ire ricll-
ec experienced bands. some oí
them harring ie-aroed tie trade
wheo barnr.g horses wer* antbb-
ed down in the tret^a. is the d.£?"s
bedew* B*k deiier?1 chotes aert-
drteioped
Occasionally rooll Bee i irme
curt bucking at the whistle The
ro dee aoawBcer wüi psvhafc}^
cal L ,rr. i nmc® horse tha* dís-
l.L*- overtone It's nut the whis-
tle that stops the brunc bin the
apj roach ai tie pickup horses.
W.th those í&ir-:';ar íeSkwi iaO-
ki£ 222 beside him the backing
horse loses i If. oi his resent-
ment.
The first thmg the pidnqs rider
does is take the bucking rein *rons
the broac rider, draw it Bp tight
and iitib it around the saddle
ham With his head held up. it's
harder for i horse to back.
Ttü also holds the two hemes
ckisie together allowing the branc
rider to grab tie pickup mac's
shooiden and pull himself out of
the saddle. The cowboy faringe ae-
ro the ratsp of the ger.tie horse
ar¡d drops to the ground oa the
safe ssde away iron, the still dan-
gerocts h'/jrei oí the backzsg
horve
Thea the pídeup zíe looseos
the Cank strap, ti^rieaed as the
brone left the chute, and leads the
buc'ting borne out of the arena.
The pickup horses are among
the best—a&d best trained—hcrwe-
Oeah roaH s e in the xrena all
evening. First they tare to be
faster thaa az.y bronc in the string
it the picking up process wi'l de-
generate into a horse chase of sev-
eral Lap-s around the track.
Teaching a horse to pick up
•ike1 a lot oí patient training.
Horses are no more inclined than
Jsu.r.ir.- to dose quickly with a
high kichin? comrade. And tbe
horse rc.uit itand stead/ «hile his
rider is bury snubbing the rein
and t h e spurred bronc rider is
scrar.bling aero?-, his rump.
Just a slight misstep at that
critical moment and the cowboy
would be cropped under the b jov-
es
Accidents like that happen oft-
en enough as it is.
Local Member Of Key Chib Enjoys
Recent Tour Of Air Force Academy
Small Tree Farmer
Í* Very Important
In Timber Industry
The small tree farmer J n prH
Ity important person in lh«- timber
industry In fact, he make up <i
■ dominant part of the- total number
of farm end other private owner
ships of commercial forcat Inri'ln
According to a revi<*w of t h <•
Xatioo's timber resourc<*i by the
U. S. Department of AgricMtlure'H
Fores! S«en-ice CTirnfier !<<• ourc
es for America's Future"), hold-
rngs of lesv than 100 acres ac-
count for 86 per cent of all pri
vate holdings.
Thes* snail holdings include
about 121 Million reiireserií-
mg one-io-rih o: all commercial
forest lands -• aj'i r'.iiintely as
much as all pubác holdings com-
bined.
The study shows C-Í per cent of
the holdings of le; a than 1<J0 ac-
res are found in the Northern
(¡lull's Only H | !r « ' '•
itiiiull fui'inn tin' I a ii ii il In III'
Wewl,
Medium and law farm forest;
liolilltii/w of mure tlian fi.'MKi acre*
are coiieetilrali'il III H"' WiM
(I
CARD OF THANK#
We wluli l<> lliank each of you
f<>r every I<iim' word and deed «aid
and done during tlm lllne** and
death of o u r | reclou* daughter
and sl*U-r Alui for tbe food and
lieautiful flowers. W« al.so apprec-
iate the ^raiiousness of the nurs-
es and fir. Cobble. May God bless
every one is our bumble prayer,
Mr and Mrs. Wade Tannery
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Murphy
and family
Mr and Mrs. Earl Stafford
and family
Mr. an/1 Mr*. Gerald Murphy
and family.
fttfll? Tour Car's Crankeose with
Motor Oil
ITS GUARANTIED
15c.
Babcock Bros Auto Suoply
TW k«il Ml fwt m mty tmm
boy CmihIiI h mu! m
fmt mmif batk Wkf Ml
•wi tm m l««i
EBailey of Rusk, a top officer of ICoy Club l«rt m«tional is
shews hww wftfa Captain G. W. PooHon, USAF, Special Assistant to
ffca Superintendent, posed before an air force jet on the «rounds of
Hie temporary U. S. Air Force Academy, Lowry Field, Denver, Colo-
rado. Bailey was or* of 37 Key Club leaders and adult advisors who
visited the temporary and protected ü. S. Air Force Academies in
July as fleets of the Air Force immediately following the 15th An-
nual Key Club International convention in Chicago. THe young men
are members of the incoming, and retiring Key Club International
Officer group.
The trip, which lasted two days, began and terminated at O'Hare
Air Force Base in Chicago. While in Denver and Colorado Springs,
the youngsters with their adutt advisors and supervisors were guests
of the Air Force. Guided tours through present academy facilities
and those which are under constructior, were the features of the
trip.
Eddie Bailey, a student at Rusk High School, was elected an in-
ternational trustee at the convention.
SPECIAL PRICES
For Thur«. Evening, Fri. & Sat., August 7, 8 & 9
FELTON BANKS
GROCERY & MARKET
USE YOUR ESTABLISHED CREDIT
PHONE MU 3-4145 FOR FREE DEUVERY
KIMBELL
Texas Schools
Get 5.5 Million
For School Lunch
v
& 7
Why not save money
on FOOD BARGAINS?
An Electric Freezer tRElS HER!
Your UxA dollars will go farther —
when there's an clectric freezer in your
home. It's like having your own private
supermadxt—and you can teaily take
advantage of sal« and specials', with
plenty of safe, convenient storage space
always available.
You can buy seasonal foods in quantity,
when they're plentiful, at low prices —
store the excess for future use. You can
buy in larger quantities, and pay less
per pound.
See the new electric freezers and refrig*
erator-freezers at your dealer's. Let him
show you how the freezer frees YOU
froen budget worries, how it helps you to
LIVE BETTER Electricdlly
...he'ps her to
LIVE BETTER ...Electrically
Extension Service
Releases Leaflet. 'The
Bible & Agriculture"
The Bible !s filled with refer-
ence®. laws and advice eoreemin?
agriculture. Prophets of the Old
. . „ . , 400„.- Testament taught and recorded
First installment of $3.488545 , ... . . . ,
manv ba*>r agricultural principies
of federa! funds for Texas schools .nd UMf<1 agriculture as a
in the national school lurch Dro" basis for many of H i s parables,
¡gram will be released by the food Ne w Te?Um^t ^ters also ex-
distribetion division Agricultura! Mbiíed a keen Everest in aericul-
Marketin? Service. Dallas, around ture
September 1. reports John J. ' Texzs Agricultural Exten-
i Slaughter chief of the Dallas AMS sion ^ released a leaflet
°^ice entitled "The Eible and Aaricul-
Tsxa^ puWic school? will get ture- ^ au.hor u Reagan
$5.166.017. an increase of $661.449 Brown, extension rural soriolo-
over last year and private schools
will eet $322.228. an increaw of leaflet states that today far-
$72.970. according to Slaughter mers talk and practice manv of
Funds appropriated by Congress the principles found in the Bible,
for th* program are released to The law# of nature are the laws of
the states according to the ntun- CtKj a n j 5^(^55 ¿n agriculture
ber of children between 5 and 17 mav m¡] depend on how thor-
years of age. inclusive, and the 0UghJy these ,aws are und#rsto#d
; relation of the per capita income &nd gppjj^ it adds
I in the U.S. to the per capita in- pub!ication pobn, out a
icome in the state.
few Biblical references to agricul-
iivi lining
SOUTHWESTERN ELECTRIC SERVICE COMPANY
á tUAi (MW>A«y - Ml* 11$ It IMAM - UfVMM ttlil (ITl/t*1
C3
, The public school allotment for ture and üiscus9es them. It ma>-
Texas will be used by the Texas obtained fr om local countv
Education Agency to reimburse agenU or from the Agricu!(ural
schools in part for the food bought Inforn)aüon office. College Sta-
irom local merchants. Texas pri tion Texas ^ for ^14C
vate schools secure their allot- 0
ments directly from Slaughter's INTERESTING FACTS
office. Last year about 3.000 pub- back to pre.kis.
lie and 131 private schools operat- toric
ing under the school lunch pro- u the lhir4 pluxet ^ or.
gram spent about $20.780.935 with der q{ disUnce from ^ mn
local merchants for food, Slaugh-j word "¿<,1^. comes from
ter said. The>- served 90.860,139 ^ "daler" er "thaler"!
meals, nearly all with a half pint flrgt ^ in 1519
of milk and the average cost was; ^ fjunous Cullinan Diamond
about 25.4 cents during Novem-1 found „ 190S weighed 3;106 ^
ber, the peak month of participa- ats ú, ^ r u«h.
tion last year.
"With the use of USDA funds
and foods, schools can keep the
cost of lunches at the lowest pos-
sible level," Slaughter said, em-
phasizing that each school deter-
mines the oost of its lunches on a not been in the program but wish
About 20 .miles wide, the Strait
of Dover is the narrowest part of
the English Channel.
Edward VIII abdicated the Brit-
ish throne Dec. 11, 1938.
non-profit basis.
Th« program is designed to im-
prove the diets of school children
to participate this next year sho-
uld contact Charles M. Hicks, Tex-
as Education Agency, Capitol Sta-
and to enlarge the market of far-1 tion, Austin. Private schools sho-
mers. At tbe same time, it creates uld contact the Food Distribution
local business and jobs. Division, AMS, USDA 500 S. Er-
Texas public schools which havejvay Street, Dallas 1, Texas.
OPEN
Lowell's Miniature Golf Course
Vary Modern. II Exciting Helas.
Good Clean Eniartainmant.
Located Highway 69 South Jacksonville
Lowell Hutson
Ownar and Man«#ar
tlcM
Shortening
3 Lb.
Can
69<
ANGEL FLAKE
EAGLE BRAND
ALL FLAVORS
COCONUT
MILK
JELL0
4 Or. Can lj0
Can 29C
nc
Box §
ADMIRATION
Coffee
Lb.
W
Southern Daisy • Guaranteed
FLOUR
25 I"
Libby's Crushed
Pineapple
No. 1 Ca 25'
Sunshine Macaroon, Black
Walnut or Chocolate Chip
COOKIES
Lb. Pk. 3^
Sugar
10
LBS.
99*
MIRACLE 6 STICKS TO THE POUND
MARGARINE Lb. JJ«
AUSTEX SPAGHETTI A
MEATBALLS 489'
GLADIOLA
Cake Mixes
3 Boxes
93*
VEGETABLES
J
FANCY SLICING
Tomatoes "19*
YOUNG TENDER
Okra
LB.
19*
NO. 1 RED
Spuds 10 Lb« 49*
SUNKIST
Lemons
C222
ÍHQKE MEATS
w
MORRELL'S READY TO EAT PICNIC
LB.
Ham
45<
NO. 1 DRY SALT
Jowl
LB.
35«
ALL MEAT
Bologna l> 49*
CHOICE GRAIN PID BIIF T-BONB
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Whitehead, E. H. The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 111, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1958, newspaper, August 7, 1958; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth150247/m1/2/: accessed May 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.